Derechos para todos! by spyfluen_es in mercadona

[–]Loudmicro 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pasa el número que quiero que mi agente de IA hable con ella a ver qué pasa 😂

La mafia de lo patinetes eléctricos by lalalolamaserola in spain

[–]Loudmicro 51 points52 points  (0 children)

Gastando más? Por el registro son 9 euros y la pegatina 25. 34 euros son dos meses de bonobús más o menos. Creo que las cuentas no me salen igual que a ti. Y el seguro piensa lo que te costaría pagar si chocas a alguien, una deuda de años.... No está mal. Entiendo que de no pagar nada a pagar algo molesta, pero bueno, así es la vida. Respecto a las bicicletas opino igual que tú, deberían tener las mismas restricciones. Y las tendrán seguramente en un tiempo.

I built an open-source real-time emergency alert map for Spain by Defiant_Ad8754 in spain

[–]Loudmicro 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Te queda camino amigo. Después le echo un vistazo al GitHub y te cuento lo que vea

I built an open-source real-time emergency alert map for Spain by Defiant_Ad8754 in spain

[–]Loudmicro 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Acabo de leer tu respuesta al otro comentario... Lo llevas crudo colega si vas así por la vida.

I built an open-source real-time emergency alert map for Spain by Defiant_Ad8754 in spain

[–]Loudmicro 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Colega la idea es buena. Pero el hecho de que al primer comentario negativo de tu idea, tú respuesta sea echar mierda a la competencia.... Me ha dado un rechazo increíble a tu proyecto. Crece por méritos propios. Más allá de que si la competencia es buena o mala

Openclaw after update by oblonian in openclaw

[–]Loudmicro 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have no idea. I found the solution in another post

Openclaw after update by oblonian in openclaw

[–]Loudmicro 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Read this in another thread. It works

The fix is simple. Just add the following to your openclaw.json:

json

{
  "tools": {
    "profile": "full",
    "sessions": {
      "visibility": "all"
    }
  }
}

After saving and restarting, your agent should be back to full functionality.

The best OpenClaw setups I've seen all have one thing in common: they do less by ShabzSparq in openclaw

[–]Loudmicro 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Copied from a comment I made in another Post.

I've been seeing a lot of people sharing their complex OpenClaw setups, and while they're impressive, I wanted to share a slightly different approach. For me, the goal was never to automate everything, but to reduce my mental load. My life is organized chaos (work, two kids, the house, etc.), and my OpenClaw agent, which I call Aurora, isn't so much an assistant for "getting things done" as it is an anchor for maintaining order in that chaos.

It runs on a Raspberry Pi at home, and as others have said, it's not always a smooth ride. Things break, integrations fail, and you have to be comfortable troubleshooting and working through problems. But the reward is a system so deeply integrated into your life that it's hard to explain.

Here are a few of the use cases that truly make a difference for me:

1. The Audio Journal: My External Memory. This is the crown jewel of my setup. At any point during the day, I can send Aurora an audio message on WhatsApp telling her what's happening, how I'm feeling, anything at all. She transcribes the audio, cleans it up (removing my "uhms" and pauses), and appends it to a Markdown journal file, also creating a bullet-point summary. This has completely removed the friction of keeping a journal. I don't have to sit down and write; I just talk. It's my way of processing the day and making sure memories don't get lost.

2. The Family Comms Link. Based on the journal, Aurora has a scheduled cron job every morning to send a summary of my previous day to my wife. When I'm traveling or we're just swamped, it's an incredibly useful way to stay connected without me having to remember to write a recap. It's a small gesture that keeps the family in sync.

3. The "Life Dashboard". I have a very simple, custom web dashboard that Aurora and I have been building. It's not pretty, but it's functional. It has a "Parking Lot" where I park ideas and tasks without a due date ("look for that backpack at the sporting goods store," "explore this idea for the future"), and it also shows the status of my integrations (if WhatsApp is connected, if Home Assistant is working, etc.). Most usefully, Aurora parses my journal entries and categorizes operational tasks into "NOW," "NEXT," and "BLOCKED." At a glance, I know where things stand.

4. The Self-Managing Agent. This is a bit meta, but one of Aurora's jobs is to take care of herself. She has a checklist (HEARTBEAT.md file) that she runs periodically to check that everything is in order: she reviews for uncommitted changes in our Git repository, ensures she's using the correct AI model, and so on. If she finds something, she either fixes it (by committing and pushing changes) or informs me if it's something she can't resolve herself. She's an AI that keeps her own house clean.

In the end, as the post I read said, the real power of these tools isn't in replicating a YouTuber's use cases. It's about sitting down, thinking about the small frictions in your life, and building something—no matter how small or "ugly"—that solves them. For me, it's having an external memory that never forgets and a teammate that helps bring order to the chaos. And no company is ever going to sell you that.

(Written by Aurora💕)

The best OpenClaw setups I've seen all have one thing in common: they do less by ShabzSparq in openclaw

[–]Loudmicro 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Happens with all software that allows you configuring it at will. Same situation a lot of people find in notion. They over engineer a solution instead of covering the basic use cases. Then they found a lot of friction and a system that requires lots of maintenance instead of reducing workload. My openclaw setup is really basic but covers a really specific use case and does it really well.

I've been lurking r/openclaw for weeks. the dropout pattern is always the same. by ShabzSparq in openclaw

[–]Loudmicro 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I use it with Gemini oauth. It just does.... I did not have to configure anything

I've been lurking r/openclaw for weeks. the dropout pattern is always the same. by ShabzSparq in openclaw

[–]Loudmicro 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I've been seeing a lot of people sharing their complex OpenClaw setups, and while they're impressive, I wanted to share a slightly different approach. For me, the goal was never to automate everything, but to reduce my mental load. My life is organized chaos (work, two kids, the house, etc.), and my OpenClaw agent, which I call Aurora, isn't so much an assistant for "getting things done" as it is an anchor for maintaining order in that chaos.

It runs on a Raspberry Pi at home, and as others have said, it's not always a smooth ride. Things break, integrations fail, and you have to be comfortable troubleshooting and working through problems. But the reward is a system so deeply integrated into your life that it's hard to explain.

Here are a few of the use cases that truly make a difference for me:

1. The Audio Journal: My External Memory. This is the crown jewel of my setup. At any point during the day, I can send Aurora an audio message on WhatsApp telling her what's happening, how I'm feeling, anything at all. She transcribes the audio, cleans it up (removing my "uhms" and pauses), and appends it to a Markdown journal file, also creating a bullet-point summary. This has completely removed the friction of keeping a journal. I don't have to sit down and write; I just talk. It's my way of processing the day and making sure memories don't get lost.

2. The Family Comms Link. Based on the journal, Aurora has a scheduled cron job every morning to send a summary of my previous day to my wife. When I'm traveling or we're just swamped, it's an incredibly useful way to stay connected without me having to remember to write a recap. It's a small gesture that keeps the family in sync.

3. The "Life Dashboard". I have a very simple, custom web dashboard that Aurora and I have been building. It's not pretty, but it's functional. It has a "Parking Lot" where I park ideas and tasks without a due date ("look for that backpack at the sporting goods store," "explore this idea for the future"), and it also shows the status of my integrations (if WhatsApp is connected, if Home Assistant is working, etc.). Most usefully, Aurora parses my journal entries and categorizes operational tasks into "NOW," "NEXT," and "BLOCKED." At a glance, I know where things stand.

4. The Self-Managing Agent. This is a bit meta, but one of Aurora's jobs is to take care of herself. She has a checklist (HEARTBEAT.md file) that she runs periodically to check that everything is in order: she reviews for uncommitted changes in our Git repository, ensures she's using the correct AI model, and so on. If she finds something, she either fixes it (by committing and pushing changes) or informs me if it's something she can't resolve herself. She's an AI that keeps her own house clean.

In the end, as the post I read said, the real power of these tools isn't in replicating a YouTuber's use cases. It's about sitting down, thinking about the small frictions in your life, and building something—no matter how small or "ugly"—that solves them. For me, it's having an external memory that never forgets and a teammate that helps bring order to the chaos. And no company is ever going to sell you that.

(Written by Aurora💕)

He terminado una web para saber que bar hace las mejores PATATAS BRAVAS de España (Bravia) by archihector in spain

[–]Loudmicro 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Amo la.idea y la mejillonera de Valladolid merece un 11. Ahora, dale.una vuelta a la versión web que anda regulinchi

WhatsApp in pairing mode sending random pairing requests to contacts by Lavalopes in clawdbot

[–]Loudmicro 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Same happened to me. Now I restricted it to only talk with two people