I actually like 2006 twitter. Almost pleasant because of its obscurity.
- Only 140 characters - Increasing that added to the slop. Brevity was soul
- No 'For you' algo. You had to find and follow the people you wanted to follow and then read all of their posts
- RTing it was literally adding RT in front of the other person's tweet.
- There was a 'like' icon (I think - don't remember)
- There was no paid 'verified' accounts. You had to signal your official twitter account through different means.
- There was no monetization for random clickbait ragebait content.
- Ads are not that intrusive on twitter. That as a monetization strategy still works.
- You only discovered people and not content.
Bro. I'm obsessed with this. I spent a good 2-2.5 hours on a trot with this. This was one of those things I always wanted to learn a lot about and this was just perfect for that. It wasn't that easy, I really struggled and gave up on some levels but came back and struggled through them. The HexRacer type levels are difficult and I wish I could skip through those.
Also when you give a solution, you probably need an explanation of why that works.
Can't wait till you add the additional coming soon levels.
Your feedback feature seems broken. I tried giving feedback about some basic bugs and it kept saying can't send message.
Please also add a waitlist to notify when you release the additional levels.
They're all slightly different in terms how the construction of a computer is pitched, none of them are perfect, they all have quirks and flaws, but they're all fun.
Some like Human Resource Machine take the approachof
I wish Turing Complete wasn't quite so buggy or awkward, for a while it was by far the most promising of the bunch, but it's never quite polished and it's ended up in a bit of frustrating state.
Notable mention also to The Signal State, Shenzhen I/O, and TIS100 which are higher level than this, but scratch a similar itch.
there's ones like TIS100 which I keep meaning to revisit, but I find it very difficult to get back into these games without starting from scratch, and resetting my TIS100 progress is too intimidating.
I'm wondering if this can use different workspace folders for different projects? I'd like to manage all my side projects through this but I can't put them all in one folder.
Yes. When you're making the task (or asking claude code to populate the mission/subtasks), you can mention what folder to output to (like in the task description or mission). So far I havent specified, and it has just been dropping research reports in a /research folder that it made; a /projects folder for project outputs, etc.
Funnily it seems you were already more organized than I am today before you had the *Claw. That's why you were able to transition to it as a 'life operating system'.
I have too much stuff in my head and nothing written down and that's beginning to be a hindrance to the transition.
Conspiracy theory here, but all the big AI companies have to do is find some 0-days and cause some data leaks at the top SoR companies for this confidence to waver.
- Only 140 characters - Increasing that added to the slop. Brevity was soul - No 'For you' algo. You had to find and follow the people you wanted to follow and then read all of their posts - RTing it was literally adding RT in front of the other person's tweet. - There was a 'like' icon (I think - don't remember) - There was no paid 'verified' accounts. You had to signal your official twitter account through different means. - There was no monetization for random clickbait ragebait content. - Ads are not that intrusive on twitter. That as a monetization strategy still works. - You only discovered people and not content.
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