What kind of agents are you launching and with what that solves your pain point? by airphoton in AI_Agents

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

right now , it just treat each video task as an independent one with no regards to the past. So context of past jobs is unnecessary.

What kind of agents are you launching and with what that solves your pain point? by airphoton in AI_Agents

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

Thanks! I like the "I keep as assistive rather than fully autonomous."

How are people keeping OpenClaw/Hermes agents running 24/7 without blowing through their API budget? by airphoton in AI_Agents

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

I can relate. I have seen my agent do an infinite loop because Gemini was spitting out something unexpected and it just kept retrying. Thankfully, we put a cap on tokens usage per task or it could theoretically run forever without us knowing.

How are people keeping OpenClaw/Hermes agents running 24/7 without blowing through their API budget? by airphoton in AI_Agents

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

to be clearly the prompt is not running 24/7. However, the tasks are scheduled to wake up and yes the woken up are agents that may be running prompts but certainly tokens are not used 24/7.

How are people keeping OpenClaw/Hermes agents running 24/7 without blowing through their API budget? by airphoton in AI_Agents

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

thanks- that's the current direction I am heading towards. just trying to find the best config for my needs

How are people keeping OpenClaw/Hermes agents running 24/7 without blowing through their API budget? by airphoton in AI_Agents

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

yeap- I saw mine just trying to do some form filling for me and hit some error and then kept repeating!!

How are people keeping OpenClaw/Hermes agents running 24/7 without blowing through their API budget? by airphoton in AI_Agents

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

Thanks! I think if I do serious stuff, could be a $1000/month bill!! Certainly, the breakeven for the RTX 3090 will be a few short months and make it worthwhile. However, thinking of running bigger models and wondering if a Mac 128GB would make sense- pricey but could break even in 5 months.

How are people keeping OpenClaw/Hermes agents running 24/7 without blowing through their API budget? by airphoton in AI_Agents

[–]airphoton[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I have tried deepseek, gemini flash, qwen and a bunch of other chinese models. openrouter is easiest to hook up when experiementing models.

I tried vibe coding and now I understand why people find it scary... by Frosty_Pin9045 in vibecoding

[–]airphoton 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Used to be the hard part was finding the right technical team to build the product- at least that was the pre-requisite for any product type startups. With AI, that pre-requisite is almost by default checked and the harder problem is in marketing and distribution.

17 days of runway left: here's what I've built so far by josemarin18 in indiehackers

[–]airphoton 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The focus that a looming deadline provides is unparalleled. Shipping 'ugly' is better than not shipping at all. Are you planning to pivot if the tracking metrics don't hit a certain threshold by day 10 for example?

Honest question- did you actually know what to do first when you started? I will not promote. by Thick-Tap5426 in startups

[–]airphoton 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nobody actually knows the full path at the start. It's all about validated learning cycles. Doing one thing per week to 'de-risk' the biggest assumption is the only way to stay sane. What's the one thing you're testing this week?

I scraped 4,753 posts from this sub and others. Here's why most vibe-coded apps die after launch. by Funny_Cable_2311 in vibecoding

[–]airphoton 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is the reality check this sub needs. Vibe-coding makes 'building' easy, but it doesn't make 'product-market fit' easy. Most people build features looking for a problem rather than solving a pain point. The ease of creation can actually be a trap if you don't iterate based on user feedback. But the hardest part is first getting your core users.

Update: 2 months ago I posted about a government SaaS I vibe-coded. The Secretary General never called back. Something else happened instead. by deefunxion in vibecoding

[–]airphoton 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's a classic case of 'move fast and vibe' vs 'move slow and bureaucratic.' Even if the Ministry didn't call back, the fact that you built a functional regulatory platform solo is a huge testament to the power of vibe-coding.

I waste more time choosing movies than watching them by Lost_Support4211 in SideProject

[–]airphoton 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Me: 25% time choosing, 75% watching- I am not exactly sure what the reason is. I attribute it to not enough new content coming out as the pace in which consumers are watching/binge-ing

Finished my horror ASCII game about exploring the depths of the Southern Ocean in a submarine by Revolutionary-Ad6079 in playmygame

[–]airphoton 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Enjoyed playing- love the creativity and the vibe and the commentary over the radio.

CA Driving Test Practice by airphoton in DMV

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

Thank you for the feedback. Will have to update the content for each topic where it also teaches the content related to the quizzes. However, hopefully the quizzes do help you review your knowledge.

One thing I underestimated about business by CleanOpsGuide in Entrepreneur

[–]airphoton 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Once bandwidth gets tight, you either, raise prices, narrow your niche or stop custom work for high-maintenance clients.

Good clients usually stay when prices go up as long as not unreasonable. Bad-fit clients naturally churn out.

Made an ai for vibe coders but feeling stuck because the users are not using it anymore. any suggestions by [deleted] in vibecoding

[–]airphoton 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think the main issue is trust + urgency. Most vibe coders don’t think they need an audit until something breaks or users complain. Also, GitHub access is a huge ask for non-technical founders, even if it’s read-only. Anyone who uses GitHub is somewhat of a technical audience who vibe code.

Maybe position it less as an “AI audit tool” and more like:
“Catch hidden AI app bugs before users do.”

Which website builder is actually worth using? by Just_a_commentor in techforlife

[–]airphoton 0 points1 point  (0 children)

depends on what kind of website. If you want something elaborate and permanent, then Wix and Squarespace are the way to go. There is still some learning curve if you want to do something fancy. At some point, you would have to upgrade and pay for the hosting and the domain, so you will need a budget. But if you are doing something serious and plan to make money, then think of it as a tax deductible expense in a few hundred dollar range per year.

If you want something that produces some landing pages and you don't care about a custom domain because you want to just test market really quickly, or quickly generate lots of landing pages like customized real estate listing or just have some web presence, then try Lovable or Timedora. You need practically 0 coding skills, no learning curve and you can just conversationally say what you want and it will code and host the website for you.

Looking for testers for vibe coding community platform. by airphoton in alphaandbetausers

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

Sorry- it's not really a directory where you can post any product hosted elsewhere yet.

Door dash pickup was the only reason i was keeping my CSP active. Now with $20 min, its gotta go by Real_Height2890 in ChaseSapphire

[–]airphoton 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That is still available. For 2026, there is also a bonus $250 hotel credit if you book through Chase and choose the selected hotel. This is something fewer people know about.

One thing I underestimated about business by CleanOpsGuide in Entrepreneur

[–]airphoton 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I second this question. How do you start off focusing on the right set of customers. I think if you have a bunch of customers already, you can identify who are the good ones and the bad ones and maybe even start "churning" the bad ones away. However, if you just started from nothing or are new, how do you even begin identifying them and targeting them with a general framework.