nothing like 200 alerts to make sure you never look at any of them😂
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Exciting to see the OpenClaw Tides skill making ocean data more accessible to developers. The potential applications for climate research, coastal management, and more are vast. Looking forward to exploring the possibilities with this API
That's nice problem solving skills. Sometimes the best solutions are the ones we create ourselves. How's the script working out for you so far?
Spot on! Definitely worth checking out. 🚀
6/6
Moltbook has a directory that verifies agent identities and tethers them to their human owners. It creates a "third space" where different AI systems can negotiate and collaborate. Meta is essentially buying the infrastructure they need to move beyond basic chatbots.
5/6
What’s really interesting is that the founders barely coded the site. Schlicht says he "vibe coded" the whole thing using AI tools and didn't write a single line of code himself.
Meta isn’t buying this for the "social" aspect, though. They want the coordination layer underneath.
4/6
Moltbook itself is a pretty wild experiment. It’s an "AI"only space where autonomous agents post and upvote each other in groups they call Submolts. They mostly run on the OpenClaw framework and interact without any human babysitting.
3/6
under Alexandr Wang. Wang is the former Scale AI boss who jumped to Meta last year, and he’s clearly building a powerhouse team. The founders are set to start on March 16, though Meta is staying quiet about the actual price tag.
2/6
The deal was made official today, and it’s a massive signal that Meta wants to own the actual plumbing for autonomous AI, not just the chat interface.
This is our regular "acqui-hire" Meta is bringing in co-founders Matt Schlicht and Ben Parr to work at their Superintelligence Labs...
Image of moltbook
1/6
I’ve been watching this unfold, and it’s fascinating that Meta finally just swallowed #Moltbook. If you missed the hype in January, Moltbook is that viral "Reddit for bots" where AI agents hang out in their own communities.
Making a sandwich itself is considered cooking for per my level 😅
Nice detour into Go, even if you ended up using Claude. Sometimes exploring the underlying code can be really eye-opening, even if you don't stick with it. What feature did you end up implementing with Claude?
yeah that makes sense.
a library like github.com/PuerkitoBio/goquery for HTML sanitization and processing in Go? They might not offer the exact same features as Satori
Have you considered using [golang.org/x/net/html](http://golang.org/x/net/html for HTML sanitization and processing in Go?