Agents should interview you
is claude trying to become openclaw?
We keep hearing about giving agents the right context - that’s our job now.
But how do you actually give it instruction files to write/design/code/whatever like YOU want it to?
A pattern I see a lot is getting your agent to interview you.
Your task is to interview me and get all the information you need to [your task].Then add a specific ask based on your goals…
Come up with a number of interview questions for me about landing page designs I like, why I like them and what I don’t like.Ask me a number of questions on how I think about sales copy, ask me for some examples I like and dislike and why.Interview me about writers I like, which books/posts I love from that author and why.I recently did this with the course I’m working on.
I hate courses. I don’t think the majority of them do all that much teaching. They walk you through steps to mimic getting you to the end goal. But once you ‘graduate’ (not many people do), you’re on your own.
But real life is never that straight forward, you’ll always hit bumps in the road and courses don’t give you the knowledge to navigate them.
I get stuck with blank page syndrome. I need something, anything, to start me off - even if it’s AI slop.
So I asked my agent
I am writing a course on 'Becoming a builder'. A helpful guide for non-coders to learn how to work with and steer agents, understand systems of code projects (not specifics of how to code) and learn whilst building.
I want you to interview me so we can flesh out the course content map - a hierarchical overview of the topics to cover, with some bullets on the points to cover.
Ask me one question at a time, I may disregard questions but I will say why I don't think its relevant.
Feel free to probe further if you dont have enough context for any section.
Really try to understand what and how I'm teaching based on the end outcomes I've specified.The agent asked me 20 questions and I spoke my rambling thoughts back. I was genuinely surprised how often it would remember to probe me, or ask clarifications like ‘do you actually mean to go down this route or this one’.
All in all a very helpful exercise in getting off the blank page. I now have a number of sections with ‘what this covers’. Even if on first glance I know I’m going to remove/merge/edit a lot, I’m moving forward.
What am I building this week?
I’m furiously working away on the course I mentioned above, named Fork Off.
I want to revisit my OpenClaw/personal agent memory system - has anyone found one that they absolutely love and swear by?
I really want to make a YouTube wrapper for my kids where I can pre-approve channels I let them watch. Fuck CocoMelon, ASMR, cutting coloured sand and all that crap. YT’s algo just constantly surfaces these. Also if you make a YT video for kids, please put the thumbnail scene at the start of the video - or you get meltdowns 🙃
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Headlines
You can schedule recurring cloud-based tasks on Claude Code, and you can now enable Claude to use your computer to complete tasks. It uses your connectors first, but if there's no connector, it’ll use your computer to open the app (but your computer must be on!) Plus projects are now available in Cowork.
Long-running agents designed to automate large software tasks like building applications from scratch with Factory Missions. This is genuinely the closest feeling of AGI I’ve ever had. You spend decent time planning your mission but then it just does everything end to end.
ChatGPT now has a library of the files you upload, making it easier to reference them. OpenAI is also planning to simplify its product experience and launch one “superapp” - much like Claude has done with their Desktop product.
Cursor launched Composer 2 as their latest ‘in-house’ coding model. It came to light that the model was a tuned version of Kimi’s 2.5 open-source model (which they failed to mention, which caused some rumblings on X.) They boasted about their high scores on their own benchmark, CursorBench - but only compared their scores against Claude Code/Codex (not any other harnesses which outperform them), which feels weird considering they are a harness themselves. They also released ‘Glass’, which is their new interface that follows the 3-column layout that lots of apps are using.
SpaceX, Tesla and XAI launched TERAFAB, the largest chip manufacturing facility ever (1TW/year). This post from Sequoia Partner Shaun Maguire puts forward the idea that everyone is sleeping on XAI, and how it will win in AI.
New model, worse benchmark. Plot twist: the truth files were wrong. AssemblyAI found their AI penalized for transcribing things correctly that human labelers missed. Live workshop March 31 on why WER breaks and how to fix your eval pipeline.*
My feed
Speechmatics – STT for voice agents. <300ms latency, high accuracy at conversational speed, 55+ languages. BB readers get $200 free credits.*
Codebase to Course - a skill to make learning codebases more visual and interactive.
Luma Labs has a new image generation model: Uni-1. Think Nano Banana with a canvas and multiple outputs per turn. It’s good but slow because of the many outputs (sometimes 10+ for a single message).
GPT 5.4 is awful at frontend design - but this guide apparently makes it better. And they’ve added a frontend-skill to use in Codex. I’ve not yet tested it - mixed reviews on X.
~99% SOTA memory system for agents.
‘The Minimalist Entrepreneur’ is a great book for founders, and now Sahil’s turned it into a set of agent skills.
A podcast with Simon Willison: Engineering practices that make coding agents work.
Must read/listen: The End of Coding: Andrej Karpathy on agents, autoresearch, and the loopy era of AI.
How to use Claude Code to design, by one of the Tailwind founders.
Ghost Pepper - 100% local hold-to-talk speech-to-text for macOS.
Deploy a team of OpenClaw agents securely.
Lovable is kinda pivoting from an app-making tool to a general agent.
AI style guides: How to help AI write like you
Afters
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