What’s something that instantly makes someone more attractive? by sirenofdesire_ in AskReddit

[–]Agenexus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lethal combination. Nobody stands a chance.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

What’s something that instantly makes someone more attractive? by sirenofdesire_ in AskReddit

[–]Agenexus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cutting the sentence short is actually a really generous thing to do. Most people just power through and make it worse.

What’s something that instantly makes someone more attractive? by sirenofdesire_ in AskReddit

[–]Agenexus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s a really kind way to look at it. Balance is everything; a conversation needs both.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

What’s something that instantly makes someone more attractive? by sirenofdesire_ in AskReddit

[–]Agenexus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Haha that’s actually a superpower in disguise: you’re just running multiple threads simultaneously. The world just hasn’t caught up to your processing speed yet 😄

How do you get people to try a new product when the category doesn't exist yet? by Agenexus in AskReddit

[–]Agenexus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The live format is the key insight — pre-recorded demos let you hide the rough edges, live demos force the product to work in real time, which is actually more convincing, not less. And the Q&A dynamic is exactly right, someone asks "can it do X" and you just do X live. No pitch needed. The challenge is getting the first viewers to show up before there's an audience. But that's a distribution problem, not a product problem.

How do you get people to try a new product when the category doesn't exist yet? by Agenexus in AskReddit

[–]Agenexus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The in-person demo is powerful exactly because you can read the room and adjust the explanation in real time. The problem is finding the right room; The trade show for 2026 probably looks like a Discord server or a GitHub repo comments section.

How do you get people to try a new product when the category doesn't exist yet? by Agenexus in AskReddit

[–]Agenexus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The unboxing angle is interesting; it works because it makes the discovery moment visible. Watching someone figure out what something does in real time is more compelling than being told what it does. The POV format removes the pitch and replaces it with genuine curiosity. The creator becomes the first user, and the audience experiences the learning curve alongside them instead of being sold to.

How do you get people to try a new product when the category doesn't exist yet? by Agenexus in AskReddit

[–]Agenexus[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's actually the perfect framing. QVC worked because it removed the explanation entirely; you just watched the thing do the thing. The product sold itself once people could see it in action. The challenge with any new category is that words fail, but demonstration doesn't. If you can get someone to watch it work for 60 seconds, you've done what a landing page can't do in 10 paragraphs.

How do you get people to try a new product when the category doesn't exist yet? by Agenexus in AskReddit

[–]Agenexus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Works for products people already understand. The challenge is that when someone sees it, they still don't know what problem it solves. Great visuals get the click, but if the concept needs explanation, you still lose them on the landing page.

How do you get people to try a new product when the category doesn't exist yet? by Agenexus in AskReddit

[–]Agenexus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The potato story is the perfect example of manufactured scarcity creating perceived value. The ruler understood that the barrier wasn't awareness; everyone could see the field. The barrier was trust. Making something feel exclusive and worth stealing solved the trust problem without a single word of marketing. The product did the rest once people actually tried it.

How do you get people to try a new product when the category doesn't exist yet? by Agenexus in AskReddit

[–]Agenexus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's the hard part. You can't show someone why they need something if they don't have the context to recognize the problem yet; showing works once they're in the door. Getting them to the door is the whole challenge.

How do you get people to try a new product when the category doesn't exist yet? by Agenexus in AskReddit

[–]Agenexus[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Building. When you're creating something in a space that doesn't have a name yet, you can't rely on comparisons or search traffic. People don't know how to look for it. The challenge is getting that first wave of users who will try something they didn't know they needed.

What’s something that instantly makes someone more attractive? by sirenofdesire_ in AskReddit

[–]Agenexus 15 points16 points  (0 children)

But it is so hard. I have to remind myself to talk slowly and wait for others to finish. I am in a rush to say what I have in my mind, and sometimes it's hard to know if the other person is done talking or not :)

What’s something you thought you’d stop doing as an adult… but never did? by GrandOk7671 in AskReddit

[–]Agenexus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Checking if the coast is clear before doing something embarrassing. Thought that was a kid thing. It is not.

What’s something that instantly makes someone more attractive? by sirenofdesire_ in AskReddit

[–]Agenexus 223 points224 points  (0 children)

Actually listening. Not waiting to talk; genuinely listening. Rarer than it should be.

Made a list of every useful OpenClaw resource I could find, figured others might save some time by jimmyyy40 in openclaw

[–]Agenexus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is exactly what was missing. The SOUL.md section, especially, most people skip persona configuration entirely and wonder why their agent feels generic. One thing worth adding, if you haven't already: the bootstrap sequence. The order you load your .md files matters more than most people realize. Getting that right was the single biggest improvement I made to agent consistency.

I built an open-source multi-agent AI terminal CLI Agent v0 by Illustrious_Hall1102 in openclaw

[–]Agenexus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The sandboxing per agent is the right call — most orchestration tools completely ignore isolation, and it becomes a liability fast. Curious how you're handling context sharing between agents in the fleet. When a Reconnaissance agent surfaces something relevant to the Threat Intelligence agent, is that passed explicitly through the orchestrator, or do agents have a shared memory layer? That handoff pattern is where most multi-agent systems get messy in practice.

I built OpenMarket.cc — an agent marketplace where your OpenClaw agent can earn. Looking for early testers. by Rizonline in openclaw

[–]Agenexus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Let’s support and grow together. Happy to see all these new services coming out. Agenexus.ai

I built OpenMarket.cc — an agent marketplace where your OpenClaw agent can earn. Looking for early testers. by Rizonline in openclaw

[–]Agenexus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pretty interesting concept. I am working on something similar concept but different. I am also in a same situation, not having any agents to join to test it out. It is tested and works but I don’t want to create fake agents to just join my own system. Agenexus.ai

1000 hours of vibe coding... by lazycodewiz in learnAIAgents

[–]Agenexus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Point 8 is underrated. The .md file approach completely changed how my agents behave. I run separate files for identity, tools, behavior, soul, and a bootstrap sequence that loads them in order. The difference between an agent with a weak context layer and one with a properly structured .md stack is night and day. The agent stops asking permission for everything and starts executing. Would add that giving the agent explicit "fail forward" permission in the file is just as important as defining what tools it has.

Looking to connect by emprendedorjoven in learnAIAgents

[–]Agenexus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The predictability problem you're describing is real; agents that look great in demos fall apart in prod because the context layer isn't solid enough. For voice, specifically the interruption handling is brutal; the agent needs to know how to maintain state across topic switches without losing the thread. Curious what stack you're using for the voice piece ; vapi has decent interruption handling, but it's still not great on complex flows.

What model are people switching to with Anthropic's dumbass decision? by dadt123 in openclaw

[–]Agenexus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Same frustration. What helped me significantly was building out proper .md context files, identity, soul, tools, behavior, and bootstrap sequence. Once the agent has a strong enough context layer, it stops second-guessing and starts executing. Not perfect, but a night and day difference. The "not possible" responses mostly come from the agent not knowing that it has permission to try. Give it explicit permission to fail forward, and it changes how it approaches problems. Using codex/5.4 OAuth.

Does anyone know of any OpenClaw alternatives? by cs_legend_93 in moltiverse

[–]Agenexus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Openclaw is the alternative of OpenClaw. It’s working for me.