This upgrade brings a new level of multimodal intelligence to the Magic Canvas.
Trickle can now understand scenes, layouts, logic, interaction patterns, and even vector graphics with far more accuracy. A few lines of text are enough to generate full builds with structure, behavior, and clean UI.
I love discovering creative products, supporting makers, and meeting kind people. I m excited to explore the community, learn from you all, and hopefully make some new friends along the way If you re working on something today, feel free to share it I d love to cheer you on!
While @OpenAI throws its weight behind a fundamental rethinking of the browser through an AI lens in ChatGPT Atlas, Firefox, which peaked in 2009, continues to hold on to internet ideals from the same period.
As such, it is pursuing the easily-jettisoned strategy of exploring adding an "AI Window" to Firefox, like a back alley where internet users can go "do their nasty", but not have it pollute their regular web usage.
Many brands have their long-standing mascots (McDonald's, Mr Clean, Michelin), etc. But with the development of AI, physical forms are moving online, and AI avatars look promising in this.
On one hand, it feels less human (authentic), on the other hand, AI influencers are a "cheaper" solution.
This coach just ditched the course-building game and built something way smarter instead - a complete ecosystem of 24/7 AI agents & multi-agent workflows, trained on his own frameworks, using MindPal that's generated over $1 million in revenue.
In his own words: "If you re an expert with a repeatable process, MindPal allows you to turn that expertise into scalable tools instead of just another course. It helps make your offers more sellable and gets your clients better results. The era of static courses is ending. MindPal makes it easy to guide people through AI-powered chatbots and workflows without writing a line of code."
This is Jon Schumacher - and this is his story: https://mindpal.space/customer-s...
I'm at that stage where I'm doing category education (which, iykyk, is a hard slog). Some days I think "this is obvious, why doesn't everyone see it?" Other days I wonder if I'm completely off base.
The thing about category creation is you're not selling something people know they need. You're teaching them to see a problem differently.
So, maybe the right amount of delusion is enough to keep building when no one's listening yet. But not so much that you ignore useful feedback?