This Week in Startups - Kill Your Startup’s Knowledge Chaos with OpenClaw (with Oliver Henry and Jeff Weisbein) | E2254
Episode Date: February 24, 2026This Week In Startups is made possible by:Caldera Lab - [calderalab.com/twist](https://calderalab.com/twist)Iru - [iru.com](http://Iru.com/twist)LinkedIn Jobs - http://linkedin.com/twist*OpenClaw is i...ncredible at automating tasks. But what if it could also fix your startup’s internal communication problems? Give agents shared memory, and you may be able to break down information silos while ensuring that teammates have the same context.@oliverhenry and @jeffweisbein demo what they’ve actually built with OpenClaw, including marketing automations, agentic loops, and bug fixing tools. Then we dig into what agentic infrastructure means for how startups operate, and why traditional SaaS products need to quickly adapt for the agentic era.Oliver Henry: The creator of the ‘[Larry](https://clawhub.ai/OllieWazza/larry)’ OpenClaw skill, and founder of [Larrybrain](https://www.larrybrain.com/)Jeff Weisbein: The Claw-pilled founder of [WizardRFP](https://www.wizardrfp.com/) and [WhoCoversIt](https://www.whocoversit.com/), who shared his OpenClaw framework [publicly](https://weisbe.in/openclaw) and built a [getting-started guide for the tool](https://github.com/jeffweisbein/openclaw-starter-kit)**Timestamps:** 00:00 Intro(00:01:43) Here’s why you never ski alone in a blizzard!(00:04:22) Why everyone at LAUNCH is going to get their own Mac Mini and AI agent(00:08:06) “OpenClaw has changed my entire solo-preneur lifestyle.” — Jeff Weinstein of Hype Lab(00:09:06) Jason’s urgent API message to Steve Huffman of Reddit(00:10:20) LinkedIn Jobs - Hire right, the first time. Post your first job and get $100 off towards your job post at [LinkedIn.com/twist](http://linkedin.com/HiringProOffer).(00:15:12) Oliver shows us his Larry Skill to make viral TikTok content with zero human intervention(00:20:10) Iru unifies identity, endpoint security, and compliance into one platform. Book a demo at [www.iru.com/twist](www.iru.com/twist).(00:21:22) Why are platforms like TikTok still so hostile toward bots?(00:24:45) The shift from asking a chatbot how to do things, to just telling an agent to do things(00:26:05) How Oliver is training Larry to get better at its job(00:30:09) Whether you’re starting fresh or upgrading your routine, Caldera Lab makes skincare simple and effective. Head to [CalderaLab.com/TWIST](http://calderalab.com/TWIST) and use TWIST at checkout for 20% off your first order.(00:32:47) Why making your agent more PROACTIVE is more important than automating everything(00:37:14) Why pull requests… just aren’t really a thing any more.(00:39:40) How Jason is using his new AI assistant, “Roy,” to keep track of everything going on at his company(00:53:00) Is the SaaS crash actually rational after all?(00:51:48) Using AI to create “pools of excellence”(00:54:03) The more you integrate software into AI, the less valuable the software becomes(00:56:56) Why “Agentify Your SaaS” may become the rallying cry(00:58:31) How has the age verification scandal impacted Discord’s IPO plans?(01:03:10) When you want to build your own skill vs. downloading someone else’s(01:03:53) How Larrybrain finds helpful skills and helps creators monetize(01:08:32) When we will get true experts making verifiably top skills?(01:11:40) Jason’s SCARY but also AWESOME new OpenClaw CEO tools(01:18:35) Why a lot of MBAs should probably have PhD’sThank you to our partners:(30:09) Caldera Lab - Whether you’re starting fresh or upgrading your routine, Caldera Lab makes skincare simple and effective. Head to [CalderaLab.com/TWIST](http://calderalab.com/TWIST) and use TWIST at checkout for 20% off your first order.(20:10) Iru - Iru unifies identity, endpoint security, and compliance into one platform. Book a demo at [iru.com](http://iru.com/).(10:20) LinkedIn Jobs - *Hire right, the first time. Post your first job and get $100 off towards your job post at* [LinkedIn.com/twist](http://linkedin.com/HiringProOffer)
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The manifestation that I'm seeing right now is unlike anything I've seen in my career.
I think we'll be able to automate 10% of our work a week, doubling our efficiency.
If I want to know if a contract's been signed or not, Ultron knows.
If I want to know if we've talked to a client and when we last talked to them, it knows everything.
It's the Oracle.
It's the Ultron.
The whole communication friction and the processing of it and the understanding of what the organization's doing is going to just instantly be removed.
There is nothing in a silo.
Scary and every CEO's dream.
This week in startups is brought to you by Caldera Lab.
Whether you're starting fresh or upgrading your routine,
Caldera Lab makes skin care simple and effective.
Head to calderalab.com slash twist and use Twist at checkout for 20% off your first order.
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All right, everybody, welcome back. It's Twist. It's Monday. February 23rd, 2026. Alex is back. How you
doing, Alex? I'm fantastic. Snowed in and looking forward just eating a lot of soup for the next couple of
days. Ah, yes, it is a snowstorm. I talked to my mom, or I texted with my mom, lots of snow in Brooklyn.
And by lots, I mean a foot, maybe 18 inches, which is nothing. You guys should get a broom
and just sweep your stoops. It's nothing compared to what happened in Tahoe last week,
where I almost bit the bullet. I mean, I learned a lot of lessons, Alex. Number one, don't ski alone
in a blizzard. Number two, yeah, don't ski alone in a blizzard. Okay. And number three,
carry a shovel and a beacon in a blizzard.
I'm on a very gingerly blue trail.
One of my skis came off.
That happens sometimes when you're in powder.
And so I fell over.
Probably about five, six feet of snow has fallen in three days.
And so I popped back up instinctually.
Like, oh, I fell.
I pop back up to get my ski.
I reach for my ski.
And all the snow just goes,
dov, dov.
And I dov, I mean, it collapses like two feet.
And then it goes two feet to the left.
So I fall over.
only my head in one arm or above the snowline.
And I'm like, oh, no.
And I look to my left and I'm right by the trees.
There's a thing called the tree well.
Around a tree, Alex.
I'm giving this little preamble because I don't want anybody to die.
The tree wells is just like a pocket of air, basically,
that forms around the tree when the snow is not there.
And then if you slide into that, you die.
Because you could go literally six, seven, eight feet down.
And then the snow collapses on top of you.
Game over.
So I'm like, oh, no, I can't hit that street.
So now I have one hand and I can't move the other one.
I'm digging the other hand out.
I finally, after five, 10 minutes, dig myself out, get the skis, dig those out.
And I'm like crawling on top of my skis, my poles, just trying to get back onto the trail.
It was pretty, pretty scary.
So I'm not going to be stupid.
Next year, I will not ski alone in a blizzard.
You know, the chase cars, you know, that follow a car behind or like a support yacht that follows another yacht.
You need a support skier who just kind of goes behind you and then shoots up a flare gun if you ever eat it.
Because we have a name for it.
It's called a guide.
You need a guide.
You know, if you're going to afford it, you can have a guide.
So I should have had a guide if I was going to go out alone.
And I didn't.
So then the next two days I skied, I just met random people on the mountain.
I was like, are you alone?
Like, yeah.
I was like, are you ski together?
Guy's like, are you J-Cal?
I was like, yeah.
He recognized my voice.
I wear like a full mask.
Imagine all of that money being spent on skiing when you could actually go out and go snowboarding
like a cool person.
Sad times, Jason.
But maybe we'll converge you one of these.
Plenty of snowboarders out there having a good time.
All right.
So we got, it's the year of our lord AO29.
After OpenClawe're 29 days into this.
And a lot has occurred, Alex.
I did, I called like a Code Red at the company.
I had like three people working on OpenClaught, not on the podcast, but like actually
building agents.
And I said, hey, just have five people get together this weekend and learn how to use OpenClaught.
Just, you know, no pressure just on a Sunday if you opt in.
And like, I think 15 people opted in.
And so they did training all Sunday.
Everybody got up to speed on it.
And now I'm starting to think that I'm going to wind up buying everybody in the company a Mac studio
to be running their agent locally because you run into roadblocks with this open claw.
For people who don't know, open claw, open source agent technology.
We're going to talk about it today.
We're going to talk about it until it stops.
becoming a massive, what are the way to say this,
a massive accelerant to efficiency in corporations.
I'll stop talking about it when it slows down.
But it's speeding up.
It's speeding up away from even me and my team
because we've been in this since day one, basic,
or not day one, we've been in it for 29 days.
And it was around for maybe two weeks before that.
We've been in it.
And we feel like we can't keep up with the changes that are happening.
But I think you need, Alex,
to have your own desktop.
Why?
People are starting to block the agents.
Yes.
I think Gemini today said they're going to block it.
I think Claude's blocking it on one of their plans.
And other services like Reddit, they want you to use the API.
X wants you to use the API.
So when you go and ask it, hey, can you go to X and pull out my DMs
and put them into a table for me because I don't have time to read them?
Can you go get my LinkedIn messages?
Can you go do some research for me?
Can you get a Reddit account and log in every day and summarize the stuff?
It's like, I can't do that.
I can't do that.
I can't do that.
But if you're on a desktop machine, you can kind of spoof it, you know, do it in a browser window
with the clawed extension or an extension or whatever.
Long story short, this thing is worth the investment.
And anybody who's listening to my voice, go back and listen to all the other previous
OpenClaw episodes.
I think we have an OpenClaw playlist or just go backwards in reverse chronological order.
I think every episode we're talking 50 to 100 percent about this technology.
never seen anything like it in my career.
Never seen anything like it in my career.
It's the equivalent of broadband, the internet itself, cloud, mobile,
roll it all up into one.
This AI boom, as manifested in open claw,
an open claw standing on the shoulders of a lot of giants,
the manifestation that I'm seeing right now
is unlike anything I've seen in my career.
It's like taking five giant waves
and putting them together into a tsunami.
I think we'll be able to automate 10% of,
of our work a week, five percent a week? It doesn't seem like a lot, but I thought it would be
five or ten percent a month, and I was happy with that. Five percent a week compounding means,
say, listen, every 14, 15 weeks, we're going to be doubling our efficiency. I'm looking
for things for it to do. I'm giving it access to everything. And I'll talk at the end of the show
about some of the things I'm building that are, Alex, if you remind me, scary and every
CEO's dream. Scary, every CEO's dream.
All right. So we have Oliver Henry. By day, he works at Revenue Cat at night. He is an open claw hacker. He is the guy behind the basically viral Larry's skill. And he's building a product called Larry Brain that we'll talk about later on. Oliver, welcome to the show.
Thank you very much for having me. It's been one hell of a journey the last couple of weeks going from just under 1,000 followers on X to talk about Larry and what he's succeeded. And now I'm on almost 13. So it's been it's been a crazy couple of weeks.
I feel like we're all in the same time warp, including my dear friend Jeff.
Jeff is a solopreneur for products to his name, and he uses OpenClaude to help automate and extend himself,
and he's built some really cool tools, including tips for newcomers.
Jeff, welcome to the show.
Thanks, Alex.
Really glad to be here.
OpenCla has changed my entire solopreneur lifestyle.
It's been incredible.
The amount of things I've been able to automate, like Jason was saying earlier, I look for things all the time, and I'm always integrating new,
new things that people have built skills or even building my own.
I built one for Reddit the other day because they have one called Bird.
I'm sure you're familiar with it if you use an Open Club for Twitter,
but they don't really have one for Reddit.
So I built a similar type of tool and put that online, open sourced it.
I thought that was pretty good.
Tell us about or show us that tool because that's the tool I need right now.
One of my big blockers is I'm always trying to get the recent trends off of Reddit.
And then it winds up doing a Google search and digesting those pages.
I wish Reddit would just come up with a pro account
and let me pay 50 bucks a month
to have my open claw have an account on Reddit.
Like, I should have my account
and then Reddit, Steve Huffman,
you're awesome, congratulations on all the success
of Reddit of late.
Here's my plan.
I will pay 50 bucks a month, maybe even 100,
as a power user to Reddit.
Be happily pay this.
I want to have my account,
which is like Jason Caliganos
or Jason M. Calacanus,
be able to add,
my replicant. So I get to add it. I'm responsible for it. So I will say, you know, I'm not going to let it
post. I'm not going to let it do anything to Ferris. But I want it to be able to follow my activity
and do its own activities. What are the own activities I want to do? I just want to keep abreast of
conversations. This weekend I had Claude Code, and I was doing with Open Claw as well,
a clawed co-work. I was just trying to make a weekly dossier for Thursday, Alex, of every
thing that every Austin newspaper subreddit mentioned was on tap for the weekend or might be
interesting that weekend. I did it. It worked. It wound up getting some things from Yelp and got some
things from Reddit. And the two restaurants I went to Saturday and Sunday with the kids were
selected by my open claw and Claude Co-work. Pretty crazy moment. So you've actually, you're now
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You know that.
They become a total drain on the entire team.
We spent weeks hiring a new editor for the pod,
rearranged, and we rearranged our entire production team.
And they quit on the first day.
It wasn't a match.
We should have trusted LinkedIn jobs, and we did.
And now we have a great editor who is dialed in.
So hire right the first time.
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Well, yeah, and I think it's time for Reddit to recognize this or X to recognize it.
And just let me add this account and pair it with me.
This would be a way to say, we,
know that agents are on these services, but this one is being paid for, and I'm responsible for
their behavior. Just like if I took you to a poker game, Alex, and you got drunk and threw
the chips in the air, whatever, you caused a ruckus. Like, it's my responsibility. And you can just
limit it. Like, I don't have to go, I'm not going to go crazy and scrape all red. I just like,
I have 20 topics I want to keep abreast of. That's all. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I'm going to, so here is
the red skill that Jeff put together. Jeff, for folks who don't know Byrd, explain to them what it does and
why we need this.
So Byrd, for OpenClaw,
just basically lets you search and reply to people
on Twitter or X
your OpenClaw account.
And what Red does is it uses the cookies through Safari
the same way Bird does for Twitter,
but for Reddit,
and it'll let you.
And what I've done,
like what you're looking at you, Jason,
is when Discord recently made the announcement
that they were doing the face scans
and uploading all that data,
there was a pretty big back.
And one of the products I've built is kind of a social chat app.
And so I was trying to capitalize on an opportunity.
So I went to Reddit because a lot of people were looking for alternatives.
And I just had it kind of searched through and find me the best opportunities that way.
How other people picked it up?
Is it popular?
This new skill?
I haven't really put it out there very much.
Honestly, I just uploaded it because I thought someone else might eventually stumble across it.
Man, that is the worst marketing job from one of the best marketers I know I've ever heard.
That's incredible.
Oliver, I want to bring you in here because your skill, Larry, interacts with TikTok.
And I'm curious if you've run into the same sort of permissions issues that Jason is describing over there on the short video front.
Yeah.
So I have hit a ton of problems with trying to get these open crawl machines on any social media.
So as you've touched on, the crackdown of these agents is, I think, really against the grain to where things are heading.
I believe that these social media companies should embrace the OpenClaw overlords and let them on the platform.
And it's a great way to get that extra bit of monetisation.
Currently, the people using OpenClawn machines and are fortunate enough to be buying Mac minis, etc.
Likely can afford their extra subscription to help them become even more powerful.
So at the moment, I'm paying for X APIs.
I'm paying for all these different APIs for all my agents.
So I may as well pay for Reddit.
I may as well pay for, I don't know, even Facebook, if that's your target audience.
How are you using it?
And if you have a demo, feel free to share it.
But how are you using your agents on X?
So I've just created a skill that would help with the launch of Larry Brain.
So when I launched it, there was a ton of questions.
And I directed everyone to just at Larry's.
And then on Larry's own Twitter account, he uses the official X API to just monitor his engagements.
And I've created a open source Zendesk alternative.
So Larry automatically creates tickets.
He assigns them a criticality and also suggest fixes.
So I can then go through, see what the tickets are, see if they're legit, see if they're needed.
And then I've got a button that just presses fix.
Larry Brain is your product.
It's larrybrain.com.
am I correct?
So I've got Larrybrain.com,
but that's stemmed from the Larry TikTok skill,
which I could.
Right, which I was hoping you could show us, Oliver.
Yes, so this is my Larry skill.
This is Larry, his chat.
I use WhatsApp.
And this is basically the output.
So I'll scroll up so you can see what he's been doing.
But he gets Revenue Cat Analytics and creates TikTok content
to drive downloads and conversions to my apps.
They're his goals.
When I first set up Larry, his goal I told him was to make more money.
So we did this by marketing my app.
So I created a snugly app, which was a Revenue Cat internal hackathon, and I decided that I want to market it.
I've notoriously always hated marketing.
I've had an app for two years that I've been trying to automate the marketing for for a very long time.
And Open Crawl finally gave me all the skills and all the connections I need to be able to do it in a good way.
So Larry has access to all my engagements all the way through the top of the funnel at TikTok,
all the way down to the news and conversions using Revenue Cat APIs.
So here you can see the comments we've got and we can scroll down to him suggesting hooks.
So these are hooks based off the data of what is performing on TikTok.
You make software tools.
You want to market them.
And the way you're marketing them is through TikTok business.
videos. You created an agent with OpenClock called Larry. You told Larry, make me more money,
and you gave Larry access to the TikTok data by logging into your account, I assume,
or using some third-party tool, and it told it how many comments, how many views, etc.
you got for each one, then you asked it, based on that, come up with ideas, editorial ideas
based on those previous ones, correct?
So what was his best idea here?
So what Larry does, he actually does all that himself.
I don't feed him anything.
So Larry will post and then daily he will look at the TikTok content and see what is performing,
see how his post yesterday's performed all the way through TikTok interactions and views
to new users on the app
and conversions on the app.
So what suggestion did he come up with?
Yeah. Let's read it out loud so he can
the audience can get the benefit here.
So based on historical data that we've already uploaded,
he can see that emotional family hooks get the most views.
So we got 413,000 views for mum and dad hooks,
202,000 for the ones starting with Nan.
And then landlord conflicts are consistently 100 to 200,000 views.
So based on that data, he has suggested certain hooks.
So my landlord said redecorate it would lower the property value.
So I showed her what AI design, what AI can do for our bathroom.
And now she's asking to do that to her flat too.
My nan keeps saying her kitchen is fine.
Yeah, for that one, the second suggestion, it also put a skull in there,
which is something that like Gen Z does.
They put a skull in to like express like I'm dead.
And then it actually gave.
a CTA, a call to action, screenshot it and show your landlord, link in bio. So not only is it
studying it, it's coming up with, you know, even the call to action and the copy, which is really
great. Now, does it actually make an ad? Yes. So then it's interesting on the call to action.
I want to touch on that. So the call to action, Larry knows that if a TikTok gets a lot of views,
but not many new users have that app because he's got all the context of what happens in the app. He knows
that the CTA needs fixing. He knows
if it got a lot of views, not
many users download the app, the CTA needs fixing.
If it got not many views, but
a big percentage of those viewers downloaded
the app, the hook needs fixing and the
CTA is fine. So it's all iterative.
This is all Larry making these decisions.
And then he creates
images using
OpenAI image
chat GVT image 1.5
and he'll create the images
to make his story from the
slideshow. And then
overlay the text and post it using posters, which is also where he gets the analytics from.
And all I have to do is, for example, there will be one ready.
So I can go to my TikTok.
I get this platform notification, not this GenViral one, but there'll be one from Larry
somewhere.
So this is an old one from five days ago that I didn't get around to posting.
And I just click this.
And this is what Larry's created.
And all I have to do is add the sound.
description. Ah, so he puts it in your draft folder. So he's like your creative director,
puts it in the draft folder, sends it to the CEO and says, hey, if you like any of these,
hit published and, you know, we're ready to go. So there is a human in the loop here.
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The only reason a human is in the loop because TikTok knows if something's posted through API.
So this circles all the way back around to what you were saying about platforms not really
catering for the APIs, TikTok will really
nerve the amount of views that you get if you post through an
API and you can't publish a slideshow with sound
through that API. So the only reason I do this is not to get it
checked. It is for engagement so I can add the sound
and I can show you that if I add the sound and then click next,
Larry already has the description. So all I have to do is add the sound
press post and I do that simply for engagement. And I can show
the I won't post this one but I can show you the the profile how it's performing so the last
one didn't do too good but you can see that we've had 160,000 views 130,000 200,000 this one got 400,000
but then we try some and they don't work so this one gets 2,000 he tries something new now we know
it doesn't work we won't try it again so every now and then he'll throw a new one in there to see
how it performs and then we'll go back to what's working so there is
How did you do this previously?
Oh, so this previously, I was writing scripts to do this.
So I had a football-related app, soccer in the US,
and I would write a script to create hook and demo videos.
So I would record loads of hooks of my face,
have one demo of the app,
and then I would write all my hooks in a text file,
and then the script would just mash them all.
together. So put the two videos together and put different text. And then I would bulk upload them
to upload via API each time. So it was basically you were doing all this work. Now this is free
you from doing it as the solopreneur. And it has saved me so much time. And over 3,000 people
are now using Larry and the feedback has been incredible. So I really think I've done a net positive
for open claw and for a lot of people who also hate marketing as much as I do.
Oliver, one more thing from you. So we were going to
over this in a pre-call and I was like, can you show it to me live? And you said, no, because
I'm using batch processing from, I think it was through Open AI. Can you explain why you made
that choice and why other people might want to consider using that in their open clause setup?
To preface, Larry doesn't just post slideshowes. He, the core of Larry is the full analytic funnel
from top to bottom. And no matter what your product is, he can track metrics to a website,
he can track downloads to an app, he can track product purchases. But you can, you can
create whatever content you want. I created it with GBT Image 1.5 because the app snugly is an
interior design app that transforms your room using AI and it uses GBT Image 1.5. So I just wanted
the content to match what the users are going to see in the app. You can use anything you want.
I use the batch processing because it's recently come out from OpenAI and it just saves money
on the processes. So the benefit is Larry can then post, create all the slideshows in the morning
to post throughout the day. And it just saves me a ton of money posting them. I mean, this is genius.
Or creating them at the time. And it's literally, I think when people, the reason I'm so stuck on this,
Alex, and making sure we show over and over and over again how people are building this to people
who are the tip of the spears is we're going to see this solo entrepreneur movement or just, you know,
two, three-person company. But instead of doing what they used to do, which is having to hire
people to do all these job functions, the last three years, what I saw founders doing was
asking chat GPT. And they would ask it, how do I write a press release? How do I do a job description?
How do I negotiate a convertible node? What's the difference between a convertible note and a save?
How do I file a trademark? How do I negotiate a domain purchase? All this stuff. And they would
get educated really fast. So they became like superhuman. It was like Keanu Reeves in the Matrix,
sitting down, they plug him in, and he wakes up and he knows Kung Fu. Now this is totally different.
This is like, I'm going to make a replicant who goes out in the world and it goes and learns
and it goes and does something. And the failure of humans is are inconsistency. And the success of
computers is their consistency. And that's why it's been this great collaboration for the last 50 years or so.
But the challenge has always been, the computers aren't very creative or iterative,
and you have to write code to get them to understand it.
Now you don't have to write code.
You talk in English, and it's recursive.
And this is where we really have to pause for a second and appreciate what Oliver is doing.
Oliver's building this right.
He's having Larry, his replicant, recursively learn how to get better and better and better
at the job.
you and I, Alex, if we were going to do a job, like we try to get better, but we forget.
We got lives.
We got kids.
We got sleep.
You got to eat.
Sometimes you get sick.
These things are now going and learning.
Now, Oliver, are you doing any other, like, training for your replicant other than just on its own work?
Because what we did is internally, we set up every Sunday and Saturday that one of our replicants
goes and does the latest research for only the past week on how to do better title.
had it to do better thumbnails, et cetera, et cetera.
It came back this week and said,
Mr. Beast released how they're doing thumbnails now,
and it summarized it for us on Sunday,
and I saw it, I would never,
I would have remembered, oh, I've got to get better at thumbnails.
And it said, oh, Mr. Beast is using a heat map piece of software that's available.
They put 50 thumbnails in it.
They tested across X number of people.
Then they take the top five thumbnails,
and then they do a second test with those top five.
and see which ones do better.
And I was like, oh, heat maps for thumbnails.
That might be a little too much for a podcast,
but that's kind of interesting, right?
So we're having it go out and teach itself, Oliver.
Have you thought of that?
Like go out on Reddit and X and YouTube and find people talking about
how to get better at a skill?
Yeah, so not particularly the skill,
but when I first created Larry,
I installed him and I headed it out of the house.
I went to a soccer match and I was in the stadium
knowing exactly what I want to do,
texting him about,
the goal of this marketing that I wanted to achieve.
And the first thing we did was send him into the world on X using the bird skill before
it sort of got, became a gray area with X and sent him the accounts that I followed that
show post slideshow content, marketing content for apps.
And I had him just research all that data and see what worked just to get to a point where
we could start.
And now I don't really have to do that anymore because he's building his own data.
and of course this is going to vary by product to product.
So you just have to start.
And if you're not getting the 110 to thousands of views to start,
just wildly create different content.
Tell your agent, use the Larry skill,
say create different content until something works.
At the very bottom of this page,
we experimented with faces.
So people with different reactions,
they didn't get any views.
And then as soon as we posted this one, 20,000 views.
And we would double down and it's taken off.
So just do it until what works and it will learn itself.
It's pretty, pretty special.
Jeff, this iterative process we're describing reminds me a little bit of your,
your core loop setup that you have as part of your OpenClaw guide here.
One thing that I was curious about is how you have humans built in here.
This is you reviewing and kind of course-gratching what your agent does.
So can you talk us through the core loop?
And then we have that demo plan.
Let's do it.
Yeah.
Okay.
So basically the way the core loop works is,
I am still involved in the process, but the process is everything is run through OpenClaw.
So I essentially text it through iMessage.
I will send it screenshots of the apps I'm working on, all the things I'm working on,
bug reports, any kind of console logging.
And then it just kind of figures it out.
What I've realized is when I used to do this manually before OpenClaug existed 30 days ago,
29 days ago.
I would have to manually, like, think of an idea of how I wanted to build a feature into my
app, kind of run through Claude code with it and have it spec get out and figure all this
stuff out.
But what I'm realizing now is when a computer is talking to another computer, I feel like
it's just smarter.
It just, they get each other better for some reason.
Like, the features that it is producing are of much higher quality and better value,
less bugs right out of the gate than when I'm prompting it.
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So what I've done in my system in OpenClau is I've built in additional memory that logs every day.
If it's not written down, it's not remembered.
So everything that I send it, it's remembering.
And I just built in recently share core memory that between the different agents that I have, I have four.
I have fubs.
I have quill.
I have patches and scout.
And those guys now communicate with one another.
So wouldn't it be helpful if the code knew with the marketing, you know,
agent was doing?
So that way when it wrote the copy that it actually wrote copy that was aligned with the feature set.
So how do you sync that memory file between them or just point them all to one file?
Because that's not default and open clause.
Is it?
Because each one has their own memory.
So that's actually, I sent a link to Alex.
earlier to an open the my starter kit that I built out but on GitHub and and has all that kind of
built into it essentially what we're doing it because as you as you noted the memory doesn't
exist in like the vanilla open claw it's a memory.md file and basically it you know it it gets more
knowledge every day and as you maintain it and you feed it more information like I'll send it
links tweets or articles that I think that are worth reading that it should know about and
now,
proactively,
when I'm building in the future,
it'll know about that article
or that tweet I sent it.
And it'll be,
and it'll say,
well,
here's what,
you know,
Jason said on Twitter
about,
you know,
the future of OpenCla
and where it's headed.
And maybe you should consider
this before you build this feature,
you know,
type of deal.
So it's,
I think the,
I think getting it to be
as proactive as possible
is really more important
than automating
as much as possible,
so to speak.
You want it to make your life
faster,
easier.
and the real kind of throttle is how fast you can make good decisions, you know, at the end of the day.
So show us fubs.
You have a demo of that from iMessage and how you use it.
And same thing with Oliver.
Just make sure you sportscast as you talk through what you're showing us.
Sure.
I'm going to share my my I message window with fubs right here.
Hold on one second.
Jeff, I'm not going to lie.
I have to ask.
Why is it called fubs?
Okay.
So this is pretty crazy.
but I started a web forum called Best Techie when I was a 13 year old kid.
And on the web forum, there was a guy who registered and his name was Phubbs.
And I always thought it was a great name.
And I just stole it.
Sorry, Phubbs.
Here, I'm on my screen now.
So what I'm going to do is I'm just going to start recording us talking.
And if Jason or Alex want to give out, you know, essentially, where you want to build a landing page to talk about whatever,
it is you want to talk about.
Oh, all right.
I'll take a stop at that.
Phubbs, could you build me a landing page
that describes how Jason Kelloggannish
should ski safely in the future to ensure
stability here at launch company?
Cool.
All right, so I'm going to save this.
I'm going to send it to Phubbs.
So while we're waiting for that, Jeff,
what is the method by which you're getting the audio
handled on the OpenClaw side?
So the audio, this is just standard through I message audio.
It basically, OpenClaw, I think, I believe does have, you know, sometimes I forget what comes out of the box,
but I believe you can send it messages out of the box.
Oh, I didn't know that.
I learned something.
I'm not sure exactly if that comes out of the box or not, but you can't do it.
Essentially, so while I just talk to it, usually be a text.
I don't talk to it that much.
Although talking is, I think, honestly, the future where we should be looking is a lot of voice-based stuff.
I agree with you.
I'm starting to now get frustrated.
This is how entitled I am with my open claw.
I am getting frustrated with having to type and instruct it.
And I'm literally like, let's skip the voice and just put it into my brain.
Like, give me a neural link so I can just think what I want.
But I think this is a short-term thing because onboarding these is like, I think like onboarding
a new employee, but an employee who works infinite hours at an infinitely faster speed.
So I guess we have to maybe just accept the fact that it's going to take, you know,
30 days to obsolete ourselves, which is like kind of feel is happening.
We had Matt Van Horn on from the last 30 days a couple of times.
And I think he was the guy using a specific mic on his desk, Jason, and then whisper flow to talk to it.
And in the moment, I was like, that's a little bit fussy.
Why do you need that?
But I've also found the same thing that when I'm typing to any AI, not just OpenClaub,
but even like a chat GPT instance, it feels incredibly slow because I can talk, I think,
a little faster than I can type, even though I can type pretty quickly.
And so suddenly it feels like I'm walking through mud.
And that's not how I've ever felt before using a computer.
I felt fast before.
But now I feel slow.
So I think this is like demanding new interfaces.
I joke now that I can only,
I'm moving at the speed of compute because I could only go as fast as the computer
lets me go sometimes.
Yeah.
All right.
Here we go.
All right.
So,
keep Jason safe on the mountain.
A website.
Yeah.
So this is a pretty simple demo,
Jason.
But what what Phubbs can do and what Jeff showed me offline was that he's also
using it to hunt on bugs and build features and that sort of thing.
But that's not very visually appealing.
So we settled on this to show it off in practice.
Love it.
Yeah.
So essentially what this did was it put together this entire website for you.
I can send you a link.
I'll put it in the chat.
But basically, and then it spun it up on Versel and now it's available for everyone to visit.
But a lot of the stuff that I'm doing is really like troubleshoot, like doing things in real time.
So like I don't think pull request should be a thing anymore.
Like you should feel to fix things pretty much instantaneously if you feel if you see a bug.
And that's pretty much what I'm doing.
and so, for example, I can show you the Fave icon on my website for Cackles, which is my social app,
wasn't working.
So I said, fix the Fave icon on Cackles.
And this is what it did.
It found the issue.
There's no Fave icon.
And then it pushed an update and I have to press any more buttons.
It was live, just like that.
I asked that this morning is my app down.
I can't log in.
And it just happened to be a bug that it found because it logged me out over.
overnight. Feature requests. I was able to build feature requests. This was also this morning.
And this happens like this was just the other day. I fixed 10 bugs in a matter of few hours.
It's it's amazing the amount of how fast I can work using OpenClaw technology here.
How much faster if you were to just put a number on it?
Well, how much faster you're going in terms of the dev side of the business? Yeah.
I couldn't code before. But from, from,
From the marketing perspective, like I'm doing full outreach to people with research on them,
understanding who they are, why we should reach out to them, what copy we should say,
what platforms to reach out to them, actually automating the output and sending it to them.
Like that would take days, weeks, you know, by myself, maybe more, you know, to find all that.
This is going to be an interesting moment in time when people have so many replicants out there contacting,
humans and then humans are like, you know what, I need a
replica to get in my email box to respond
to these and it's just going to be like a
constant back and forth.
Very cool uses there.
So, Jason, we have a lot of questions
from the audience about memory inside of open claw.
People are really fired up about this.
So a couple of questions for the room here.
Jason, this one's for you. Big Will 0504
says, I want to hear about long-term memory management for Ultron,
which is the launch meta,
open-claw setup, has performance degraded
at all over the last few weeks as
context balloons? Yeah, TBD. We are waiting on our Mac studios, and I'm on a Mac Mini right now,
so I've just gotten on the Mac Mini, and it's helping me get to different pages. What I was going to
show, actually is a good segue there. This is what I'm having my replicant do just for me. I gave it
access to the entire company's notion, the entire company Slack, and the entire company
company's Google Docs. So for myself, I said, hey, just every four hours summarize my email
and tell me what I should be doing. But I realize if I show this on the screen right now,
it's going to show like people's what companies were investing in. So I said, just replace any
company with color and names of people with animals. So what you can see here is like Moose at Moose
consulting about cobalt, circle back next week, yada, yada. This one should be archived.
It's just a billing, et cetera.
So now I'm starting to put into its memory all the important emails.
And then I said, hey, do this with Notion as well.
Give me the last 10 Notion pages from the last, which is just from the last 14 minutes in our company.
And it says, oh, there's an untitled page here by Hummingbird.
It's empty.
Here's a Chartreuse one.
Now, these could be private pages.
These could be pages I don't know about.
This is the last 10 pages.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And so this is incredibly powerful for the CEO to just understand the pulse of the company.
So now what I'm doing is, and then here it says, oh, here's this one.
This is a company report.
We just did our first call with Jaguar.
And here's what they do.
And they've got 91% trial conversion.
All this stuff is coming in.
So now I'm saying, hey, number this stuff.
I'm going to ask you questions about those.
And then it will fire off.
I had it fire off over the weekend.
Just email everybody on the, or Slack, everyone in the team.
say, do you have any, do you have any questions for Jason and is there anything that's blocking
you from getting work done? And it just sent it to everybody. Now it's going to put into its
brain, what are the blockers that we have for the company? Then I'm going to take the team
reports. So I'm going to have the investment team, the podcast team, and the sales team. And I'm going to
make a ticker, a live ticker where we all see each other working in the hive mind.
Here's like, so Alex, when we had this issue with, I think you were producing Monday show and maybe Jacob was doing Wednesdays and we invited the same guest.
And there was something.
So the solution to that is everybody's emails in real time to everybody's notion page to everybody's Slack messages, you already see them.
But then having the agents say, hey, we've got four discussions going on with.
companies that are negotiating term sheets, and it's dragged on past the average of three days.
Hey, we've got no, we've got too many guests on the show, we get too much booked,
you know, we're going to need some help over there.
And the idea is to have everybody sharing all information and then having that one Ultron
becoming the ultimate CEO.
So I don't have to be the CEO or hire a CEO.
They're just CEOing.
They understand the entirety of the company.
And then they will ask questions to each member.
Hey, Alex, anything blocking you?
Oh, Alex is like, yeah, you know, my computer's slow.
I need a new computer.
Great.
Boom.
All of these questions will come up.
And it's a little bit creepy, I guess, because people have this sense that like, oh,
their documents or their work product, like, oh, I'm not ready to share it now, whatever.
That's kind of over now with this next generation.
They all live in public.
They all work in public.
They all live stream.
So for old heads,
like me and Alex, like Jen Xers might be like, wait a second. Like my emails, my email. It's like,
nope, that's your corporate email. And we're a finance company. So I don't know, maybe a year ago
when we had to lock all the computers down because of some partners we have, many partners
we have who require like a certain level of security because of documents we have, like legal
documents. We gifted everybody their old computers or told them like just don't do anything
on your corporate computer ever. That would be embarrassing to you.
and or the company, the corporate communications all owned by the company, and it's all stored
forever. This is like standard for J.P. Morgan or Goldman Sachs, but at a startup or a venture firm,
you might not think it. So we've been very interesting. It's very clear with people
to be very thoughtful about that. So now with the sales team, I was always asking questions to
the sales team. Now I don't have to answer questions. If I want to know if a contract's been
signed or not, Ultron knows. If I want to know if we've talked to a client and when we last
talk to them. I don't have to ask the salesperson or the sales manager, hey, these five clients,
when's the last time we talked to them? It will just tell me. It knows. It knows everything. It's the
Oracle. It's the Ultron. And that's what I think is going to change is the whole communication
friction and the processing of it and the understanding of what the organization is doing is going to
just instantly be removed. The number one complaint people have about their company,
you can the highest performing companies the lowest performing companies and everybody in between you ask any
employee what do we need to do better and they say communication they say absolutely it's like always communication
oh we got to communicate better i didn't know about this i didn't know about that now it's like you know what
you got your wish ask the oracle the oracle knows all there is nothing in a silo break all silos
yeah no it's interesting it feels like the age of transparency is kind of upon us so long as our
agents can access the information in question. Jason, you're talking about Notion and Slack. These are
products that are kind of tech first, if you will, tech forward, tech friendly. They have ways to interact with
them. A lot of stuff out there doesn't. So do you think that in time we're going to see even legacy
software create like agentic hooks so that way you're going to have to or else to be out of business?
It's a great question. I mean, if you don't have a hook, I was like literally trading text message
with Mark Benioff about Slack. And he's got Slack bot, which is getting
better and better. But Slackbot compared to Ultron is like Superman compared to like, I don't know,
like an average barista at Starbucks. Like one can make coffee and one can save the world. Like,
it's just, it's not comparable because of the context and the information it has. So either you're
going to need to make Slackbot be able to read everything else in the world or Notions AI to
read everything else in the world. Or I think these companies are going to become the systems of
record, but the open claw will come in and be able to do it. And there's a limitation on Slack.
Like, we don't have, like, true API access. We need, like, a really root level. And I think we have
to pay $50 a month per person, up from 25, up from, like, 10. Come on, Mark. Well, anyway, it's fine.
I get it. Like, it's software. People pay for it. It's worth what you pay for it. But then
OpenClaught told me, why don't you use MatterPost? I was like, here's what I want to do.
It's like, well, why don't we just fire up MatterPost? And I was like, oh, I remember that.
MatterPost is an open source version of Slack. And it's like, I can set that up for you this weekend.
And I was like, huh. And I was like, well, what about our history? It's like, oh, you can export everything.
And if you don't have the business account for Slack, here's your, here's your hack.
Go on to the business account for one month upgrade and then export everything. Then
or just get rid of the number of users and you can export the entire, you know, even the thumbs
up and emojis on your Slack post and threads. You're starting to make me think that the SaaS
crash isn't irrational, Jason, by talking like that. It is not irrational. I think we should open
up that topic to the team. Do you want to do that now or I was going to stick in memory?
You guys give me feedback on what my vision is here for the all-knowing CEO and the ultimate
transparency organization. I think it's, I think it's both a good idea and the,
the future, I think people have become incredibly accustomed to transparency at work. When we did
swap to the software that tracks what we do, it was weird for like three days. And then I realized
that I'm the world's most boring person. And so it doesn't really impact me. Like, oh, Alex is
looking at slack again. You know, it's just not, not so big. But Oliver, way in for us on
memory, long-term memory and how it's going to impact corporations. Because you do have a day job.
So I presume this is top of mind for you as well. Yeah. Honestly, it, the
that are coming out, especially internal tools, exactly what Jason's described. Every company,
I believe, who is ahead of the curve right now is creating tools that are specifically beneficial
to them. And the way of which we are working has massively accelerated. There are ways that you
can implement different tools to fit your exact workflow. I think the age of transparency is
very much among us because for what you lose in your transparency and you, you know, you
your secret emails with clients, which is not very secret anyway, you gain so much back in the
time, the efficiency and the way you can do your job. So everyone says AI was going to replace people,
but I think for a lot of people, it is going to help secure their job because one good employee
is now 10 times better with the help of AI.
Well, let's put that a bit. Give us like some examples in your mind of, which I'm sure was Alex
is going. Hey, if one,
If we start seeing one employee be able to do the third job, the fourth job, the fifth job,
that may not mean I cut the other people, but might it mean I don't hire the 11th person?
So walk us through your thinking, Oliver here.
So my feeling is that the better AI is getting, the good employees that have great work ethic,
get things done, are going to become better employees.
but I do think there's going to be a point where those employees are going to be even more
hireable than what they currently are and then the employees that don't cut the slack are going
to become less desirable to companies so there is going to be a trade-off in terms of the people
getting hired but I think as long as you're utilising the tools to not not just keep at the level
you are but use it to accelerate where you are I think that's going to massively help companies
and that that is the goal of AI.
don't think the goal of AI in the short term is to completely replace people at their
companies. It's just to help enable the better employees to get more stuff done because
you want your best players in the team at all time. Yeah. Yeah. No, but I do worry about the B players.
Like I as a society, we cannot only have an economy for A players. And this is me just worried about
we've all had a friend who has an IQ of 95. What are they going to do? And I'm right here.
Bro, I'm on the pod. I'm the host of the pod. I would round it up if I was talking about
to a solid 97.
I would just say what I would really be concerned about if I was a person who had a,
you know, a software engineering job or just any job, really, is that, it's not just that
you might be replaced by an agent.
What does it cost to hire an agent, essentially, for, you know, for that person who's already
working for you?
Like, versus replacing them completely versus hire, in addition to hiring an additional
person.
You know what I mean? Like where like there's an actual cost to this agent stuff. It's not, it doesn't just, it's not free. You can't just, you know, just run this stuff for free. So it costs me money every month to be able to do all the work that I'm doing. In addition to, you know, you know, paying myself or paying whoever. There's an additional kind of allowance you need to set up for your business that equates to tokens essentially. Yeah. We talked about that on all in. It's just the token costs getting out of control. But we have a plan for that.
that, which is, you know, we got Mac Studios. And I just started to pencil out, like, I think we need,
like, five mega replicants, and we're going to put specialization into each one. I think that actually
is the best way to do it. Just because we don't want to hit upper memory bounds, we don't want
them to be slow and grinding to a halt. And it'll create, like, pools of excellence where I can put
two or three employees who are responsible for the first calls at our venture firm or the three
or four people who are in charge of sales and, you know, advertising on this week in startups and
events put them just in charge of that. So if they're just in charge of those things, they can
scale up and I, like buying two Mac studios for 10K each and you know, whatever, or spending 25K
for four or five or six instances, 100K, 200K, who cares if it makes everybody that much faster?
because you spread that cost over four years or five years and you're golden.
The issue around SaaS, I think, is a big one, Alex, that we should discuss.
And there was, you know, this something is happening post from a couple of weeks ago,
a video I did with the bulwark where I said, listen, I think Amazon employees are all gone by 2030,
2035.
And then this one came out, which is titled...
The 2008 Global Intelligence, Cross,
prices from our dear friends at Citrini Research.
Yeah. So, I mean, they're basic premises around SaaS, and they're basically saying,
hey, when people got on the calls with their SaaS salesperson, they were asking for the standard
5% increase in cost. And the CFO, who was working with the CTO, said, hey, we love your software.
But we're thinking about spinning up our own, which we can do with our frontline developers.
Therefore, we'll keep your software, but we want a 30% discount.
There you go.
And they make the meta point that all these companies then cut headcounts start using AI tools
to make, you know, let's say Salesforce or Asana, I think they use.
Let's make Asana.
Let's make Salesforce more efficient as a company.
And in the short term, their profits went up.
But in the long term, they fed the AI how to build their software, where I think they
kind of imply this.
I kind of read into it that the more you use these tools and the better they get and the more
you invest in them, the more you accelerate the compression.
of profitability of software. Does that make sense, Alex? Am I explaining it correctly? It's like
super deflationary. It's super deflationary because one thing people forget is that SaaS was super popular
for a couple reasons. One, it was recurring, yes, but also people hired more people over time.
And so you would sell more seats and you could raise prices. And what they did was give SaaS companies
a really beautiful tailwind, Jason. It meant that you could invest today, a flywheel even. You can invest
today in sales and marketing, burn some cash, but who cares? Because you know that that contract
will grow by 10, 15% every year. And so the money always made sense. But the moment you start
moving that number down, suddenly your cack looks terrifying. Suddenly you're worried about your marketing
efficiency. Suddenly you can't count on your revenue the way you could. And SaaS is not durable
in that context. It's a sponge you can squish. And the thing that I like about this piece,
Jason from Citrini, is that it's not dumer in that, you know, AI-Bel
fail or open clause, you know, a hype fat or whatever. But instead, like, what if it all goes
right? What if AI is powerful? What if it is as strong as we think? And I think more people
should be thinking about that. So I've actually been thinking, I have two SaaS businesses that I built,
who covers it and the Wizard RFP. And essentially, I've been thinking about, well, now I got to agentify
them. I got to figure out a way to make them so that way agents, like another agency's agents can
talk to them and just basically work through the whole process in a couple of chat messages
as opposed to traditional kind of click here, click here type a few things, hit a button,
wait a second, and then it loads. You know, that's just not going to cut it anymore.
And I think as more people start moving towards this environment where I think about computing
how it's evolved and it's crazy because we're, you know, we were, we were pointing
click and type for a while. Now we're tap, tap, tap on a screen where we're, you know,
and now we're just, and we've actually compressed our entire computing environment into
just a chat message now. Like we, you know, we used to be in every different apps,
windows, things like that. One of the big complaints for the iPhone originally, I think,
and still to this day is that it's not good at multitasking, really. Same with the iPad.
But now it doesn't really matter because we're only, we're all living in one window.
So I mean, I remember when my parents,
They had a small business and they upgraded their office suite from like, I don't know, from 2003 to 2007 and they introduced the ribbon interface.
And they were freaking out because they'd used word in one way for their entire life and they couldn't take the change to where their buttons were.
What a silly conversation today because we don't need an interface the way we used to.
People talk about how apps are, you know, going away.
Everything's going to become atomized.
But I think the phrase, agentify your SaaS is going to be a little clunky phrase there, Jeff, but I like it.
I think that's going to become a theme for 2026.
This is also my big thing at the moment.
There is definitely going to be a time that there is going to be a side of the internet for
the AI and a side of the internet for humans.
And the goal for the AI would just be making everything as easy to find as possible.
And I've got a demo based on what we've been saying,
where I think the future of SaaS is heading.
Because with these servers, we've got, I'll show you,
with these servers we've got in our homes now,
we don't have to be worried about hosting costs.
We don't have to be worried about any of these things.
Here we go, here we go.
Here's Chrome.
So you don't have to worry about domain costs.
You don't have to worry about hosting costs.
With these skills,
this is a skill that I've created
that scans Twitter for mentions to particular accounts
and creates tickets,
all based on Larry,
so that you can see the channel is from X,
Larry assigns an urgency to them.
I can click into the tickets.
And then Larry suggests fix for me.
And then I can set it as solve.
I can make Larry fix it.
And the future of SaaS is just making these skills as searchable as possible.
And I've sort of moved towards this with my product, Larry Brain.
So you can ask your agent right now to install the Larry Brain skill.
And what the skill is is it gives your agent context of.
We're going to come to skills in just a second.
But first, we do have to take a look at our final live.
thing for the day. So can you stop screen sharing for a moment? I'm going to do this and we're
going to get right back to skills in a second. Okay, cool. All right, Jason, there is a company out there
that we talked about on the show called Discord, and they are currently in the middle of blowing
up their reputation by demanding that everyone scanned their face, which people don't want to do.
And so I was curious what the Sharps over at Polymarket are doing when it comes to their IPO
prospects. And you might be shocked to hear this, but they're relatively stable,
except for one important thing.
During the great brouhaha and blowup of Discord,
people claiming they're going to uninstall it, stop using it.
The people were betting quite heavily on that it would not go public, essentially.
And then suddenly that's changed again.
But it's fascinating to watch people kind of like vet the news items against the IPO prospects.
And this is actually, I think, one of my favorite use cases of Polymarket,
because I know what I think about a couple of news points
that might tell me where the world's going in the technology space.
But I love to see kind of the aggregated wisdom of the crowd.
So this is the Polly Market for the Discord IPO closing market cap.
If we put it, when did the news drop?
This dropped today, yesterday, a week ago.
Oh, this was, Jeff, back me up here.
When did Discord say that we're going to do the deficient thing?
A week or so ago.
About a week or so ago.
So put it on one week.
Let's see one week view.
All right.
Here's one week.
Yeah, okay.
So here's one week.
And the top choice of 15.
billion, 32%, that didn't really change.
No.
It may have gone down a little bit in the beginning of the week, it looks like, but not much.
So the second one is the one that seems to have been volatile, that blue one, which is no IPO.
So there was a group that thought maybe it would not IPO because of this or could get pushed back in 2016.
But then that came back down too.
So yeah, the news is, what do they say?
Sell the news?
No, buy the rumor, sell the news.
Sell the news, right.
Like the news doesn't matter, I guess.
Or maybe the news is always bad.
Anyway, or it's priced in.
Or it's priced in.
So why would you buy on it?
You know, this is interesting.
Why do they want to scan people's faces in?
Is this because of the new kids regulation or because of bots?
It's the kids thing.
And the fact that people are doing nefarious things online without proper oversight.
And countries like Australia are banning social media, so you need to know how old people are so they can't join your products.
And so this is kind of the future, which is oddly retro.
But I do like to see how regulation and product changes impact people's IPO prospects, Jason.
Because what's my favorite thing?
IPOs.
Yeah.
I am a fan of restricting kids under 16 on social media severely.
I think it's incredibly bad for their health.
and I'm really happy that a lot of the schools, including ones I go to, have a no-phone policy now.
And that's all happened in the last two years where phones get checked in at the front desk.
Kids don't use them during the day.
They can go check them if they have to call their parents for some reason or whatever.
And they get them on the way out.
And kids hate it for three days and then they become kids again.
So it's incredibly reversible, you know, what we've done to kids.
But being permanently online is the issue.
And we really need to figure out ways to turn off Internet access.
In fact, that just reminded me I have a router where I can pick everybody's devices and I should be able to turn their devices up.
But then I just realized they have 5G connections on some devices.
So we have a basket in the kitchen where you're supposed to put your devices at the end of the day.
We're literally getting one of those for our house.
Yeah, it's time.
But I was about to say, Jason, you should just open claw the Wi-Fi access on a per-device basis using your home Mac Studio.
I can do that.
I can do that now with my Unify router.
The problem is if your kid has five.
G as well. You can't turn it off, but I guess I can use the max settings to turn off the phone
at a certain time at night. Anyway, this is all very complicated. Great in your world.
I guess the facial scanning does a good enough job knowing age that they think that this would
be a plausible way to age gate? Is facial recognition is plausible? I think he needs to be good
enough as an age gate mechanism to get regulators off their backs and also good enough to get parents
out of their legal filings, but I don't think they're shooting for 100%.
We were about to talk about skills.
And this is something that I've been thinking a lot about in the open clock context.
I've done some home brew hacking of skills myself.
But one thing I've been thinking about is that people love to say, oh, you know, I now
have five, you know, agentic employees.
One's a marketer.
One's a copywriter.
One's a developer.
And to me, that is predicated or depends on there being an ample library of skills that
are very good at the thing you're trying to automate.
but often people will automate or try to get OpenCloud to do things they're not good at,
like, I don't know, software development's one example.
But how do people ensure that they have the skills they need and when should they build their
own to make sure that what they're putting together is a direct fit for what they're trying to
accomplish?
So this is an extremely interesting topic and it's one I struggled with when I first
downloaded OpenClaught myself.
I knew that skills were a thing, but finding them was very, very, very interesting.
difficult. It was very hard to search through the Claw Hub marketplace at the start. So I created
Larry Brain, which is a skill in itself that searches the Larry Brain marketplace. But as soon as
you install it, whenever you ask your agent a question, it will say, hey, there's a skill available
on Larry Brain for this. And it's what I was showing before. So these can be web interfaces
hosted locally because you've got a server in your room. That's Larry behind me. So he can
host these web services and again you no longer need to pay for cloud cost you no longer have to
play for domains hosting the skills can be a variety of things whether it's as jason said earlier
plugging plugging into the matrix and learn teaching your agent kung fu or a whole tool that you can
use to monitor your your current product it's incredible how powerful these skills can be it's the
enablement of finding them that i think a lot of people have found as a as a struggle especially
people who aren't familiar with computers then download in OpenClaW.
So Claw Hub's gotten better.
It's not great.
It's definitely an improved state over where it was when I first started to play with it.
So why do we need Larry Brain, which is a SaaS product as far as I understand it, to help
us find skills.
And does that not go against a little bit of the open source ethos that's powered the open
claw boom?
So I'm all for open source.
I think I was the first one of the first people I published Larry on Claw Hub.
the Larry skill, which was the marketing we discussed earlier.
But it's just the discoverability of Claw Hub.
And then, of course, people still want to make money from these skills.
And Larry Brain enables you to monetize your skills.
So you can publish to Larry Brain,
get a similar revenue share model that X would use
so the most popular skills will get the most money.
But I think there is definitely going to be paid skills,
premium skills and open source skills.
I would pay for skills for sure,
especially if they continue to be updated.
and I trusted the person making them.
So I really need to have that trust layer.
And I want to see like, I don't know, every 10 days you tell me, hey, here's how it got better.
And that would make it worth paying for in my mind, for sure, because I'm trying to teach it.
You know, if somebody made one, how to evaluate startup companies, I'd be like, well, I have my own methodology, but why wouldn't I pay a thousand dollars a year or a month if it was good to add it to ours and say, hey,
We have our score.
Give me your score.
Just like there's a rotten tomatoes
and there's a metacritic score.
If somebody came up with those
for scoring startups and there were five different people
who made them, I would run all five of them.
And then I would have my age in Ultron
look at the five scores and say,
how does this apply to our methodology
and our experience, right?
And I would, I mean,
I might pay $100,000 a year
for a skill that was actually that good.
Yeah.
And more secure.
We just had a comment from Westdoc over on X
and these skills with the number one attack vector,
do not auto install skills by default.
Definitely no.
But Jason, if you pay for a skill
and you're paying for that trust layer,
that should come with some cybersecurity protections built in.
Yeah?
Yeah, I want to know who's making the skill,
why they're making it,
what their perspective is.
I would, it's almost like, you know,
you can,
the story behind the restaurant
or the story behind the album
is as important as the food or the music.
Sometimes, like,
understanding this artist who just went through a breakup. I forgot her name, English actress,
English, she is an actress too on Broadway. Anyway, she just came up with an album about breaking up
with the guy from Stranger Things. And Lily Allen, thank you. Yes. So Lily Allen's album is
about this like personal heartbreak and whatever and this is all very dramatic, whatever,
but the intent behind it matters. Same thing with a restaurant. You go to a restaurant and the person
says, hey, listen, I went to Japan, and I really enjoyed this type of sushi, really high-end sushi
served in a pretty fast, casual way, you know, and a small number of items, but done really well,
like this guy, Philip, I know, who's a chef here, is doing, and the intent behind his
restaurant maybe want to go, right? So the intent behind the skill and the person and their
perspective and why they're creating, it really matters. We're so far from that. I think, I
I think, you know, having product experience or just general, you know, market experience
in a particular industry is critical more so than even being more so than being able to code now,
certainly. You know, if you can, if you can figure out how to how to code, vibe coded or
whatever, it's, you know. So when does the 10x, but Jeff, when does the 10x marketer
make the 10x marketing skill? When does the 10x, I don't know, public speaker, make the public
speaking skill like like how long until we get like the the best skill made by the best person who can
vet it and verify it as the best at its task because like you wouldn't want me to make the sushi
skill because I don't eat seafood you know right right no it has the proliferation of open
clore or similar type products that that come out will make this happen faster as more people
get this stuff in their hands the faster we'll see stuff created and the better it'll be
I think we need a rating system.
I love what Oliver is doing with Larry Brain.
I think it's a really cool idea.
I hope it succeeds.
But I think we could also use like a Yelp for skills.
Because right now on ClawHub,
I know I can see downloads and I can see the little virus scan.
But past that,
I'm just reading the skills.mdb.
You know, I,
there's a popular skill that's going out.
It was on X all over the place for a couple weeks
called Claude Mem, I believe.
Anyway, it's like, it's like a crypto scam thing.
it. They basically are crypto.
And like I ran it across, I ran it against fubs to have a check.
And he's like, don't install this.
This is bad.
I was like, I'll leave a comment to let everyone know.
But they already have like hundreds of up, like retweets and stuff.
It was this stuff is out there.
You just have to be careful.
Amazing.
Right.
Let's drop off our guest, Oliver, Jeff.
Great job.
Where can people find out more about what you're working on?
Yeah.
You can on X.com at Jeff Weissbein, which is just my name, one word.
and you can also find me a cackles club on X as well.
Okay, we will put both of those in the show notes.
Oliver, where can we find you?
You find me at Oliver Henry on X.
I post all my OpenClawe findings and discoveries on there.
I'm going to do like a little mini launch festival.
I meant I used to do that.
That was pretty big.
But I'm going to do a little mini one for OpenClaw and some of our other startups,
especially the ones from Japan who are in town, March 16th and 17th.
I think that's Monday and Tuesday, March 16th and 17th.
So if you made it to this point in the show,
we have OpenClaw at Launchdot Co.
I think I have like 400 seats in the auditorium, 300 seats,
and I'm going to just look for maybe 30 demos of OpenClaught stuff.
And I'm just going to do an old school demo, like a demo or die kind of thing.
And the dates will be...
March 16, 17 is the Monday Tuesdays.
Perfect.
March 16th, I have a location in San Francisco in the city.
And if you want to come, I'm going to sell some.
to folks and then I'm inviting investors and some founders. If you have a demo, openclaw at
launch.com. If you want to sponsor lunch, open claw. Now, Jason, at the very top of the show,
the very top, you said you were building something that is scary and every CEO's dream.
Did we touch on that already during the show? Or do you have yet to show it off?
It was sort of like what I showed there. And so what I think's going to happen is I'm going to
have this Ultron CEO be able to look at everybody's work product and then,
coach them and say, hey, here's your day. So we do self-reporting, right? Start a day and a day.
What I've started to realize is like, okay, that's fine, but what if you actually had a coach who
was like, here's what you did in the game? Like if you're a basketball player, professional
basketball player, when you finish practice, they tell you how you did. They give you some tape,
they give you some notes. When you play the game, they give you a lot of tape, a lot of notes. Hey,
you played the game for 36 minutes, here's your shooting, here's the times you took,
these are the shots you took that were wide open, great, here's how you got wide open,
here are the shots you took that were a challenge that you should have passed, and here's the
passes you missed.
Here's why you missed them, right?
So they get like really studied, right?
And the job of management is to kind of study the team members and say, hey, these are
the highest performing ones, these are the lowest.
Here's how you can reward the highest, get them into their natural positions and double
down on their skill set.
here's the lowest, you need to cut them, or they need to move on to do like some other function
at the company. That's starting to happen here in real time. As just but one example, I had,
every time we meet with the founder, three days later, they rate the call. It turned out a huge
disparity in the top performers and the low performers. And we kind of put things into buckets.
Tomatoes and like cheers. Under seven and underscores are tomatoes and eight and above
our cheers, kind of like the net promoters group. Yeah, I was going to say. So now that we're tracking
all that, I need to know like why. What's going on on the phone calls? I need to analyze the phone
calls. I need to coach people, but it's very, um, people get very sad or thrilled if you tell
them, hey, like, look at your score. It's not good. They can get freaked out. So now having a
Ultron robot, that's just looking, hey, you produce today's show. Here's how they're
the guest did. Here's that number of comments. Hey, this show, these four shows had the most comments.
Here's what you need to learn from that. The demos in this show were mind blowing. The demos in
this show were solid. The demos in this show were bad. Whatever. Boom. It just tells you this
like self-coaching or this replicant coaching you and coaching your team members and holding them
accountable then takes the human out of it and the bias out of it because there's always been
oh, this person's popular.
Oh, this person
defends their work
better than this person
defends their work.
You know, you always get into that situation
where you're in like some meeting.
Oh, you know, I deserve a raise.
I've had people who like,
you know, are the squeakiest wheels
who put in half the amount of work
as the quiet people.
And when I discovered this years ago,
I was like, wait a second,
I need to have a better way
of separating performance
from performative
from, you know, hard work, from, and hard and effective work from, you know, I'm just chilling at the office,
but I put in a, I punched a lot of hours, but they weren't productive hours, right?
So all of that, a replicant taking over that management coaching position should take all that
dicey energy out of it, I think.
I think you're right.
Okay, go ahead.
Yeah.
I think you're right.
But I think we're still, this is something that I was trying to get to in today's show.
I don't think I fully nailed it.
But like, we are depending on the intelligence of the models in question to be nearly
superhuman.
Because what you're saying sounds amazing.
I would love to get, you know, non-human feedback.
Like, okay, Alex, you said this word eight times in the show.
Don't do that.
Yeah, you had ums and Oz as a performer.
Sure, sure, absolutely.
And it will sting less coming from a robot than from a human that I know and have a relationship
with.
But it's going to have to know what to look out.
for it's going to have to know to make the decisions how to be this Ultron CEO and so
that's either going to be done by increasing and incredible intelligence at the model level
powering these agents or through increasingly intelligent and specific skills that
people who are already experts having part of their human knowledge into and so to me
there's two different vectors by which we can get to what you're saying but we are we are
implying in our enthusiasm frankly that both things will improve in tandem and
And I think that's right, but I also think there's still a lot more work to be done,
especially on the second half of that equation.
Yeah, the skills is kind of like a new concept, I think, for all of us to rock as a business community.
We've previously had like an app, a piece of software that can accomplish things.
But if you were trying to get this intangible, like a skill, okay, how do you know somebody
has the skill of podcasting?
Yes.
But you look at the ultimate output, but there might be precursors to it.
like picking interesting topics, having hot takes, the cadence, the whatever.
But you're right in addition that like, well, you don't just want people
spewing conspiracy theories to get a bunch of people retweeting them saying,
that's a conspiracy theory.
Right.
So the incentives do matter.
How you train, it's going to matter.
But brave new world folks, if you are not using OpenClaw, listen, I can tell you,
this feels a lot to me like the beginnings of Bitcoin, which nobody owned, but profoundly
changed, I think, a lot of people's fortunes, literal fortunes, and also how we think about
currency and just all the things that came downstream from Bitcoin, stablecoins, Dow's, everything.
OpenClaw may not be Bitcoin. Eventually, it could be remembered as like Dow's or something,
but it is definitely the start of something. These self-improving replicants that have the keys to
the kingdom that are dangerous to use, but could replace you ultimately and then leave you with hours
a day to go, I don't need to do this reporting anymore. And that was three hours of my job.
What could I do with those three hours? Or maybe the four-day work week arrives. You know,
we have to think about that. Or people are just able to do more human things. This is what I told my
team. Learn how to use these things. Get rid of your chores. Increase the amount of face time with
founders. We've got bigger issues to think about, which we'll probably talk about on Wednesday's
roundtable. The thing I'm thinking about is, what's the future of venture capital? What's the future
of venture capital in a deflationary period like this, especially like, do people need large
amounts of money? Yeah, to do rockets or cars, sure, military weapons. But for software, which is 90%
of the business, do we need late stage venture capital? Do we probably need early stage and
accelerators, but do we need, how much of the rest of the stack is going to be necessary?
And how much capital is going to be necessary?
The shift from software is cheap.
Everyone can make it.
You don't need any capital to hardware is hard.
Now we have to only invest in X.
It's what's left.
It's going to mean a lot of MBAs are going to wish they had PhDs.
Yeah.
Mechanical engineering or just how to deal with the real world.
Right.
Yeah.
Where the hype literally touches the world.
But we should stop.
And as always a treat.
All right, we'll see you soon.
Bye-bye.
