Google gets groovy, adds custom music generation feature to Gemini app - MSN
Google gets groovy, adds custom music generation feature to Gemini app MSN
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geminifeatureGod Mode is Boring: Musings on Interestingness
(Crossposted from my Substack ) There is a preference that I think most people have, but which is extremely underdescribed. It is underdescribed because it is not very legible. But I believe that once I point it out, you will be able to easily recognize it. In a sense, I am doing something sinful here. A real description of interestingness should probably be done through song, or dance, or poetry. But I lack every artistic talent that would do the job justice. What I can do is analyze systems and write prose. Hopefully at least the LLMs will appreciate it. I am writing this with some anxiety. If it is a small sin to create an analytical post about interestingness, it is a cardinal sin to create a boring analytical post about interestingness. It is impossible to really cage within language,

You test your code. Why aren’t you testing your AI instructions?
You test your code. Why aren't you testing your AI instructions? Why instruction quality matters more than model choice, and a tool to measure it. Every team using AI coding tools writes instruction files. CLAUDE.md for Claude Code, AGENTS.md for Codex, copilot-instructions.md for GitHub Copilot, .cursorrules for Cursor. You spend time crafting these files, change a paragraph, push it, and hope for the best. Your codebase has tests. Your APIs have contracts. Your AI instructions have hope. I built agenteval to fix that. The variable nobody is testing A recent study tested three agent frameworks running the same model on 731 coding problems. Same model. Same tasks. The only difference was the instruction scaffolding. The spread was 17 points. We obsess over which model to use. Sonnet vs Opu

FinancialClaw: making OpenClaw useful for personal finance
We often talk about AI agents as if their greatest value lies in understanding natural language. But understanding isn't enough. An agent starts becoming truly useful when it can help with concrete tasks, reduce friction, and do so consistently. FinancialClaw was born from exactly that idea. I wanted OpenClaw to do more than just chat about personal finance — I wanted it to help me manage it: log expenses, record income, handle recurring payments, and query summaries without relying on memory, scattered notes, or repetitive manual steps. From the start, the project took a clear direction: a personal tool with local persistence, designed for daily use, and with multi-currency support. What's interesting is that this usefulness didn't come simply from adding more features. It emerged from co
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God Mode is Boring: Musings on Interestingness
(Crossposted from my Substack ) There is a preference that I think most people have, but which is extremely underdescribed. It is underdescribed because it is not very legible. But I believe that once I point it out, you will be able to easily recognize it. In a sense, I am doing something sinful here. A real description of interestingness should probably be done through song, or dance, or poetry. But I lack every artistic talent that would do the job justice. What I can do is analyze systems and write prose. Hopefully at least the LLMs will appreciate it. I am writing this with some anxiety. If it is a small sin to create an analytical post about interestingness, it is a cardinal sin to create a boring analytical post about interestingness. It is impossible to really cage within language,





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