Register interest: https://insiders.cmdaishow.com
—
TIMESTAMPS:
0:00 Preamble
32:14 Intro / show starts
34:03 Clicky
55:24 Figjam MCP
01:11:55 Webflow Code Compontents
01:33:00 Warp becomes open source
01:45:01 Stripe Treasury
01:54:22 GPT-Realtime-2
—
Unlock the full potential of your online presence with Kabarza and Samuel—experts in web design and development (respectively), powered by cutting-edge AI solutions. We blend creative design with advanced tech to deliver smart, high-impact websites that stand out. Ready to elevate your business? Contact us today and see what AI-driven innovation can do for you!
LINKS & RESOURCES:
Website: https://cmdaishow.com
Check out Kabarza's amazing work: https://kabarza.com
Visit Samuel's website for more: https://samuelgregory.co.uk
📷 Follow on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cmdaishow
—
HASHTAGS:
#ai #podcast #aidesign #aidevelopment #vibecoding #webdesign #webdevelopment #ainews #webnews #designnews #devnews
Transcript
Uh, I can't hear myself. So, it's doing a good job of uh I can use my old headphones. That's fine. Normally, I can hear like hear myself. So, actually, this is pretty good. I think your headphones are worse. Let's see. Check, check, check. One, two. Mic. Check check one, two. Is it worse? Let me put my other earphone in so I can get the full version. Oh, we are live. We are live. Um, check check check one two. Well, that is quite close to your No, it's good. It's good. Yeah, I was just checking if I could hear the echo. Oh, yeah. I'm having some tonic uh lemon. Tonic lime coffee. Tonic lime coffee. That sounds incredible. So, it's lime, tonic water, and coffee. You're quite you're quite fancy when it comes to drinking. Well, you know, I just drink sparkling water. My diet mostly consists of sparkling water, coffee, and beer. That's pretty much it. That's the only liquids I drink. And I think that sounds German to me. That's kind of two of them are healthy. Yeah, the the coffee and the beer are healthy. Yeah. Speaking of immersion, um I I I really want I really want the Vision Pro. Oh, that's what we could talk about is is Turners coming into Apple. Oh, yeah. Um new CEO, but um yeah, I kind of really want the the Apple headset, you know, like my monitor is on its way out. The USBC input doesn't work. And I don't know, I just love the idea of just I love minimalism and there's something about just whacking on a headset with a laptop will make me really happy. There's something I really like as well about just working on a laptop hunched over like a little goblin coding away. There's just something I really and I think I said this in the last week's episode. I just I just really I really like sitting on a laptop whereas I know it's better for me. I don't know whether we can even demonstrate this but it's better for me. Maybe we can actually maybe you can see my office with a bit of help from uh continuity cam. Oh yeah. Uh I can't can't really ladies and gentlemen, this is the closest. I can't um It's mirrored for me as well, so it's really hard. So this is the thing, right? Let's try and do it. There's my camera. And you have one monitor. And I have one monitor. There's my open claw going off. Oh, don't look at the environment variables. And then down there, I've got my iPad, which I like listen to music on and whatever. So, anyway, this I forgotten why should we be here. I don't know why I'm showing you this, but basically, it's better for my posture that I have just I'm, you know, sat up straight like this. You know what's better for your posture? What I've been doing this week um with my laptop in the garden, Claude Code, and while Claude is uh working, I'm actually touching grass. Like actually like I was doing garden. That's good. Yeah, that's good. Um all that to be said, I like uh Yeah. Um I like working on my laptop and I would like a Vision Vision Pro. Yeah, I like it. Yeah, you talked about it because you started talking about Apple and Turner becoming the new CEO, but you know what? I've heard I've heard like I I watched a bunch of videos about him, read a few articles. Vision Pro apparently is not his favorite. I heard uh No, I've heard the same thing. I think I've heard something is not his favorite. He was very against it. Yeah, I think he was not uh maybe it was Cold Fusion's video. Maybe we both watched. Could be Cold Fusion or Yeah. Yeah. Um well, I'm looking forward to it because I remember when uh what's his face, Tim Cook first came in and it was like, "Oh, he's a supply chain guy and he's probably going to really make um do you know what? No one no one ever recorded me say this, but I hit the nail on the head when he first came into I was like, he's a uh supply chain guy. He'll make Apple's lineup really efficient and he will um like reuse stuff and and stuff won't die for a long time. M said that and I was like 20 odd years old, whatever it was. MacBook Neil. Uh I think that one is by the way his favorite. Um so yeah, and as you said like they are reusing the chips. Yeah. But the uh I saw Marquez Brownley's video and he you know he compared an interview with Tim Cook versus an interview with John Turnis and he was like Tim Cook was like huh the magic mouse and couldn't really remember the magic mouse or whatever and kind of just made some [ __ ] up on the spot and it was really awkward but then he just nerded out for like an hour with John Turnis about like materials and this and that and I I I've seen like the iPhone before John Turners. I don't think this is a John Turnis thing, but people have drawn parallels. the iPhone's insides before John Turnis and then what the insides look like now since John Turnis, you know, this everything was like like clear plastic tape over stuff and the classic side like green uh chips and things like that and now it's all black and sexy and you know well I I know actually for fact for a fact that uh Steve Jobs was also really picky about this even when when way when they did before prior to iPhone uh they were like for the design of the Mac the insides like the hardware he was picky and he was um famously like talking to engineers to make the inside beautiful even though it was you know kind of like there is no point to it but it's kind of like the philosophy of the company kind of like the iMac was born to be clear so you can see the you You know what I mean? And they they had another Mac where they had a handle and I think that was Johnny Ives thing and they had a handle on it and it wasn't a portable device. It wasn't a laptop but the idea with the handle was added to make the computer less scary. So it's like something that you can actually touch which is really really smart when you think about it. Like designers shape our perception uh by like adding these like seemingly useless details like a handle for a Mac that you will never use but the job is to scare you less but well I was going to bring it into the AI sphere and we've mentioned a few times about like the fact that co-work could not have existed like at the beginning and click clicky which we'll talk about today could not have existed. People would have been scared to death if that came out even though it was probably possible. Well, it did with Microsoft, you know, they they had what is it called? Recall. No, no, no, no. Recall. Oh, yes. Yes. Yes. Yes. People were like going crazy about it. Sure. AI. That's everyone's been scary at every stage of AI. I think people were just scared of Microsoft. I watched this uh there's an Instagram account which is it's someone playing a video game so the the attention thing but it's uh Peter Griffin Stewie and Brian having a conversation really technical conversations about stuff. Yeah. I love that it's a series. It's a Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. There's loads of them. And um they they're talking about how Microsoft literally does that anyway. Basically does that anyway. It shares every single image that's ever when you visit a website ever has download been downloaded onto your computer and then actually um sent off and it's like a thing that Windows laptops do and you've got to like try and you got to turn all this that and the other off. Like I just think Windows is just an awful system. Um we're saying this and then it comes out that Apple have been doing some awful [ __ ] for years. No, they've been like when it comes to privacy, you know, they they've been actually the one of the reason they are so [ __ ] uh with AI is because of their privacy stance. But what you mentioned reminds me of something that we don't have on our list of news. Have you heard of uh what Mark is doing, our favorite Zuckerberg? Um no. So there's a new company policy not in Europe. One of those instances where Europe being in Europe is an advantage with this new company policy. He literally watches every single click the the employee like every everything the employees are doing everything on their computer like the designers the engineers literally like Microsoft recall for companywide and you cannot opt out so training yes so training llama it's their llama arguably is very hungry and they are they are feeding their own staff uh information to it. Interesting. Well, starting and you cannot opt out. That's quite scary. And and this is like where it, you know, we don't know for sure, but they laid off a few thousand um employees not long time ago. And there are rumors like people are saying that they did that maybe because they wanted to do this and scare people. So if you're not happy and you want to leave, we we are not scared of laying you off. interesting. There's two I mean yes of course but there's another there's another interesting thing about that is obviously we spoke about it last week with open AI and um the language around GBT 5.5 being very similar to Opus 4.7 and this is the workforce is about get actually doing real work and I was even thinking about this today about the fact that um uh what was I looking at oh I was watching a music video Um, and some people in the comments said, "Uh, thanks for not using AI." I won't tell you the name of this band, and I won't tell you the name of this. Actually, I can tell what I can maybe tell you the name is. It was They're like a metal like a band sort of thing. Uh, maybe I can say it because it's it is quite funny. Um, I sent my mate it actually. Oh, here we go. uh Come Beast and their their their uh song Spermafrost. So obviously that's very whatever. But their their music is serious. Like their music is like whatever. Anyway, that's beside the point. God knows why I was listening to Cumbbe Beast. But um so their um someone in the comments was like, "Thanks for not using AI." And I I think I dove into a little bit further down the comments and I've even forgotten why I'm telling the story. Sorry, I was completely thrown off by the name again, even though I knew it was doing this. Um, uh, I think it was something to do with, uh, creatives being very, oh yes, is that people are I don't know. I mean, you might actually disagree given what you've just come to me with, come being the key word there. The people aren't doing creative things with AI. I think that will die doing creative things. And what I mean by that is pointless creative things. Like I think people are now look it's it's really to underpin all this everyone's doing things with AI like doing real things with AI rather than just being like oh I can make a funny video or I can make a silly image. I mean obviously we're all going to do that but that's not like artists even. We spoke about that uh band, you know, people like musicians and things, they'll use AI to make them better. Like we'll get bored of [ __ ] people just lit AI slop. We'll get bored of it. People just lazily just creating every single asset of every single scene of every single everything that will just become boring. That I think that will go away. But people will use AI to do things and I think we're already seeing that transition. Does that now mean um because Llama is still trying to find its way? They've gone they've left the open-source thing and we'll talk about open source later on, but they've left the open source bandwagon. Open AAI left the open-source bandwagon because there's no money in it. Uh Llama's trying to find its way. Is this them thinking, "Right, we need to be really good at working AI, like an AI that does real work, and what better way to learn from people doing real work in their own company?" So, could they just explode onto the scene with this co-work competitor to what Anthropic have been doing for a long time? Do you know what I mean? Focusing on the workforce. How do we build a tool that's good for the workforce? Who the [ __ ] knows? But that's crazy. Yeah. Yeah. One of my favorite things that I heard this week um I don't recall it exactly where from, but it was something along the uh the lines. Is AI becoming a thing that we will just call technology? 100%. 100%. Yeah. Yeah. Because like right now it has this you know thing to it especially like because of the how these companies are trying to sell it as AGI which as time goes on we are getting to a point where it seems less and less likely to to to be that a like actually like super intelligent AGI that we were promised and it's just becoming technology like the basic It's becoming the baseline and this is what I want to tell like people in my team and people around me like you you cannot not use AI. It it's becoming like just internet doesn't mean and it doesn't mean to say that yes you will have your moment of getting really excited of doing everything with AI. Yeah, that's cool. But you're settled into a routine where it actually just is, you know, again going back to Cumbbe Beast's video. Um, they might have used AI for that video, but they might have used it for the ideation or they might have used it for the scene generation or something like that, but ultimately it's a 3D kind of video. Looks like [ __ ] 3D. But don't don't rule out the fact that they might have used AI in some capacity. Maybe it was to draft an email to their production company to say, "Hey, we're we've got this music video for us." Yeah, it's kind of funny because I I saw a video. I don't know what it was. Was it by band called Beast? No, fortunately not. Uh but this is your brain when you watch like uh when you just doom scroll and you don't remember what you watch. But I know I watched the video it was made with AI and it was clear that it is AI but it was just very creative and people were saying like this is good and at the end of the day it becomes a little bit philosophical so I'll just point to it but we won't go deep in it. Uh I was talking to my philosopher friend about um art and art having two side two sides. One side is when you create art u by definition art is you know u you as a human expressing yourself right so that could be the com beast making I want out from such a creative force such as it is it is it is their expression as human but there is another side that nobody talks about and that is um the side that consumes it. When you consume art, yeah, you are you are experiencing that thing that somebody else has expressed as human. So that is um also up to you how you consume that and how you experience that expression. So art having two sides anyway. So um it's interesting things to think about while cloud code is working and you are doing something in the garden that's been yeah um I want to yeah do you have something to say or do you want to just tell me would you be fine with Mark Zuckerberg literally looking over your shoulder when you click like anything on your anything you do I mean enough to hide right and if I'm you don't go on PH while doing I would try and confirm like is this going to be used against my performance you know no they are training it training exactly if it's just for training then yeah fine whatever but if it's yeah if if they I'll get them to sign something or have in writing that nothing they find will be used under any sort of performance I don't think that that's a thing I don't think They they will use it absolutely against you if they Yeah. But if they if there's any evidence if they they would need to prove it by some other means. Yeah. The proof is I I know what you are saying but they will just use that as the proof. Yeah. And then I'll sue them. I'll be like Mark [ __ ] you. Um I know I know some people who work in meta. So I'd be interested to know what they say about this. Uh in Europe or in the US? Yeah. Yeah. In London. In London here. Yeah. So that's technically not EU. So Oh, so hang on. Is it So it's only they are not allowed to do it. So they are not allowed to do it in EU. E EU. No company is allowed to do that to their employees in EU. You cannot mass surveillance uh your employees in in the EU. But you guys are though. You voted out. Yeah, that's true. But I'm sure like to some degree like they are like that's an obvious thing but like you know performance metrics they are by definition like um monitoring you have to monitor. Uh I even though like that's not allowed in the EU but tons of EU companies use Microsoft Teams and Microsoft Teams allows the you know the boss to to to see to some extent what the users like it's crazy. I mean I haven't worked for a company in a long time. Uh I'm sure you haven't either but there are like apps where people use to jiggle their mouse. Oh yeah, my mate's got one. You plug it in USB and it's called a mouse jiggler and it just jiggles out. Crazy. Ju just just to show that you're not happy. 20 quid and he says it's paid him dividends cuz he'll be off in the garden doing this that and the other. Uh I won't say his name, but yeah, he's like very proud of the mouse jiggler just to keep his laptop open while he's off. Well, this mouse jiggler cannot consume tokens because soon the performance will be uh how many to tokens he consume? The industry that he works in they're not they're not they're yeah they are I I uh the industry work that he works in is healthcare and uh I've recently had an experience with healthcare where um my mom needed to display something on her website. It was a little widget and it put it on the website and it was like it kept appearing like at the bottom of the page. I was like, "What is going on?" So, I emailed them. Didn't get a response for a long long time, but I actually literally had to dig into the code that made up this widget and I found how it was positioning itself and then I had to work out why it was positioning. Anyway, they built it like, you know, they couldn't even build something that was I mean, bearing in mind I have a very unique use case, but they built it in a way that just so happened to break how modern technology is thought and how modern technology works. They broke it. So, healthcare are rubbish at technology, let alone using [ __ ] AI. But anyway, more software to be written. More software. Speaking of which, I'm making an app every single week. Yeah, mate. Multiple. Multiple. Yeah, multiple. Uh, so, okay, let me show you this one. This is kind of like the the the most It's not useless, but it's the the most like AI brained uh app so far. Is it a prompt to write a prompt? Is it like an AI to write a prompt? It's an app for my dad. Oh, okay. But not for him to use. For me to use to help him. So my dad has to learn German. Well, he has been trying, but he never got a course. And now he got a course. Let let me not rant about that. Anyway, he got a course and then he did a test. He did a test this Monday and they told him, "Look, you can read and write, but it's a bit too slow for the course." So on the way back home, I talked to Claude dispatch and be like, "Write me an app where I can print out like exercises for my dad so he can do so he can practice his writing and reading." And that's this app. So I have like different, as you see, I have like different fonts. I have like different settings. uh I have these lines and I the content itself is AI generated and it's in German but it is something that is kind of like relevant to what he does or what he would be interested in. Uh so he's got to print this out or something is he? Yeah. Yeah. So I I print this out. I actually have an example. Amazing. So, I could do this in Word, but I don't feel like fiddling with Word and I don't like Yeah, I don't I don't want to use Microsoft Word. So, I just made my app that it works and I even added a I I need to connect um Gemini API to it to write the content. So like I know it's a specific use case and I will put it yeah I will put it live for I will probably share it with a few friends who probably need it for their kids or their parents whichever whoever who needs only kids or only parents if they're a pet auntie uncle no no only only parents and kids it's kind of like very AIrained that you could do this in uh yeah any other software. It's very good. It's very good. Let me tell you what I've built. I'm very excited about this. So over on my open crawl laptop which you saw earlier. Yeah. What does that look like? Uh it's a dashboard. It's a dashboard. It's a dashboard for what? That my friends, this my friends is my AI trader. This is trading for me crypto 24/7 365 it's is going and what losing a hundred bucks an hour. Well, no. Here we go. So, here it is. It's none of it's real money, but it's based on real stocks and shares. every every 30 seconds it's reading the stocks and shares and is it's written itself a a strategy whether it should buy or whether it should sell or hold. Isn't it called prop trading or something like this? This uh that's called paper trading when it's fake. Oh, okay. I But it's looking at crypto. It's looking at crypto. So, it's buying and selling on crypto. Um, and then every single day, um, using routines, Claude comes in and looks at what's happened over the last 24 hours and decides whether we should adjust something or anything it notices or whatever and then tweaks some of the settings. And then every week he's Claude comes in and says, "How is this strategy performing overall? And should we change the strategy or do anything with the strategy?" So you've got these micro adjustments that are happening every week, every day, sorry, but then broad things are happening every week and it's just running. And if I can get it, if I can find a strategy that works with fake money, then I'm just going to turn it on, put it into a real trading platform, and just let it earn me money. I've essentially built an index fund that just automatically buys and sells based on what's doing well, what's not doing well. Interesting. Tell it to watch uh Billions. Billions. What's Billions? The It's a series called Billions. One of my favorite series. One of the most underrated series. Um it's a really good one. Okay. Um Yeah. It's like Suits, you know, Suits. I know. So, I know suits. I I think billions is better than suits. Here, I said it. Yeah. Well, put it this way. I'm £854 in the green right now. I started with £1,000 and it's earned me £8 in in three days. Okay? You know, so we'll see. And then it will and then, like I say, Claude will come in and it will assess the strategy and then rewrite the code. So, it's self-improving. It's just going to improve itself. Interesting. Yeah. Yeah, if we can find a strategy that works then I'll I'll flip the switch. But I can see it just turning away there doing stuff and then it reports to me like every day and right said and yesterday it was like it's still too early to tell today's was like this is kind of working whatever will you know didn't change anything but the fact that it has access to the code means that again it can just write the code that changes the overall strategy. Right now it's using Boliner strategy or something like that. I don't know. Uh where you just you sell when it gets too low and you buy when it gets too high or vice versa. You sell when it's high, you buy when it's low sort of thing and you just buy and sell based on that. It might look at it and say because I'm only trading in Bitcoin, Ethereum and Salana right now. It might say let's broaden our, you know, reach a little bit. Let's move on to a different strategy because I know people are using Snipe strategy. They you they're they're leveraging the delay between two platforms to say this platform knows about the price before this platform to quickly buy in that one or sell in that one. Interesting. So is it is it like um it has access to the internet and it can look up news, right? I mean I could I it's not but I could do that if I want because are these assets not uh heavily priced based on like you know what whatever is happening. I mean that would be very advanced and maybe I can build that in and maybe in time it will give it access so it can gather uh internal information. What's it called? Um insider trading inside. Yeah. Well, well, I mean there there's plenty of stuff you can do like technical analysis is a term where you look for signs in the in the graphs. You say, well, you know, yeah, certain things are happening. It's like, right, you can kind of predict to some certainty. I mean, there's never any certainty, but um some level of certainty what's going to happen, and you do have based on that. So, we'll see. I'll I'll update you. M I'm literally just it's just going it's just going 24/7. I'm just leaving it do its thing and we'll we'll uh we'll see where it goes. But yeah, here's here's I'll leave on this, right? I wrote a tweet about it. I was like I knew you could kind of do this but it was kind of like h like my brain just cannot take any more information right now and I was like I can't learn a new thing. But then I just sat down and did it and I realized that actually it's really easy like my like my brain could piece it together very very quickly. I was like thinking it was much more advanced because of the way that cryp uh crypto the way that um AI bros talk about it because AI bros most of them weren't in tech before AI came out. They weren't building apps before tech before AI came about. So to them, when they talk about this trading bot that's like doing automatic training for me, to them it's [ __ ] magic that they've even produced a dashboard that's exciting to them. Like that's already blown their minds, let alone adding the AI aspect to it. So I'm not sure if I'm explaining clearly, but it's like this curse of knowledge that I have where actually a lot of this stuff is really [ __ ] simple. you add just a little bit of an AI touch to something that already works. Um, a website, which I can already do. And it I learned it and I was like I literally watched like five minutes of video. I was like, "Hang on, it's just a it's just an app. It's just an app that f that sends off the current stats to the to the AI." Anyway, um interesting kind of phenomenon of like wow these people like I mean it's is brilliant. I don't want to take away from the fact that it is absolutely amazing that these people who were not involved in tech can now suddenly build themselves an AI trading bot, but I shouldn't get too caught up in how [ __ ] excited they are and like how amazing this is and all the rest of it because it's like it's it's it's never as complicated as they unintentionally make it seem if that makes sense. Does that make sense? Yeah. Um, anyway, we should probably get on with the news because we've touched on a few things already that I think were going to worm their way into the news. Let's not drag it so like too long. So, oops. Uh, we'll we'll do them quickly. Okay. Okay. We'll do them quickly. Okay. Yeah, we'll do them quickly. So, yeah. All right. So this week we have GPT1.5 real time. Stripe is becoming a bank question mark. Uh warp has become open source. Uh amazing news. You can control Fig Jam not just Figma but also Fig Jam directly from your cloud. We will show how you can do that. Web flow launched its uh AI components. We'll show you that as well. and uh we'll show you Clickie uh an AI assistant that works alongside you. All of this uh and more in today's actually not more. All this all of that's all you're getting. Uh in today's episode, this is Command AI. I'm Kar. I'm Sam and this is a week in AI design and web dev web dev dev dev or web both. the webdev. WebDev. There you go. Yeah. Yeah, that makes sense. So, should we start with Clickie? Let's start with Clickie. And I've lost all my windows. So, let's get the Windows back. Um, so I This is This is fresh. This is very fresh. The account only has a Well, has only a few thousand followers, but like this is this is so bloody well new. Um, man, I'm I'm like I need to my my screen is like zoomed in because I need to show you I need to share my screen for this. So, if I share my entire screen, will this Okay, cool. Apparently, I can share audio, but we'll see. But oh god. Um, so this is Clickie and uh it's by a guy called, if we go back here, by a guy called Faza and I saw this video somewhere. Um, and it's a really it's a really interesting way to do things like there. Well, first of all, Clickie is a personal assistant that follows you around on your screen and does what you ask it to. And it's a really interesting way to use AI. Like I've not seen anything really quite like it. You can kind of see what's going on here where it's kind of you see this blue mouse and it's kind of following following you around and you can just talk to it and get it to do things based on what you're seeing on your screen. Now, one of the things that really caught me about this app is actually go applications here. Um, is the onboarding experience. And I want to I'm hoping I'm hoping audio will be seen right now, but we're going to just open it for the first time. Okay, that doesn't look that good. It's kind of working. Install and relaunch. Just see what happens here. It's a That's annoying cuz I [ __ ] deleted this app in order to show you the onboarding experience, but it's clearly not uh doing its thing. Let's try that again because it's it's quite good. Um, okay. We have a comment. Go on. Oddly sounds like Microsoft's Clippy. Yeah. Well, that's I kept on so much of my like I was trying to get this working and this and that and the other and I kept on typing Clippy to find the things that I want to find and whatever. Okay. Right. Clippy is up. This is a shame. You know that? Maybe it's cached or something. Uh yeah, maybe. Well, you're logged in. So, let's try log out. I'm going to try this one more time. Then, we're just going to go back to the video cuz it's uh log out and then delete. Yeah, that's what I did. But yeah, you you could give your claude dangerously skip permissions and then tell it to remove the cache from Clicky. Well, that's what my app just did. I don't know if you saw that, but that's what my app just did. Okay. Right. Here we go. Logged out. Start again. Let's do God. This is Right. I'm not going to dox myself, guys. So, I'm just going to do I'm just going to shut minimize my screen for a second whilst I do that and then show my screen real quick. And is it free? So, it's free for the start. Yeah, probably. Okay. Heading back to Glickie. Close this tab. Yeah, I'm not seeing it. I'm not seeing it annoyingly. Okay, well, you can already see what's kind of going on here. That's embarrassing. Let's watch the video. Seems like an actual person who's like talking about AI and maybe Hey everyone. So, this is the new version of Clickie. It's the simplest interface in the world for you to interact with the models and actually spawn agents. So, check this out. Uh, I can literally just be here on my computer and I can just tell Clickie, "Hey, Clickie agent, uh, can you clean up these screenshots on my desktop? It's just looking really cluttered." Um, and this is a really simple use case, but you can see Clickie just created a new version of himself and went off to actually spawn an agent to go do that work, which is cleaning my desktop. And what's cool is I can also hover this thing. I can see what it's doing. And I had just spawned an agent with just my voice. And just like that, it cleaned up my desktop. Uh, and I can pretty much find an agent for anything. So, I want to show you also another one which I'm which is really cool, which is that Clickie can actually interact with native Apple apps. So, I can say, "Hey, Clickie agent, can you set a reminder for me for tomorrow at 9:00 p.m. to get dinner with Sharief at Papwan?" Uh, and that's it. And it's going to go off and it's going to actually go in the background interact with my native Mac apps. Uh, and just go do that task for me. Uh, I want to show you some other examples here. Really cool. That's interesting. That's really interesting. Okay. Like, so I had this, right? So, I've got Click Clickie, not Clippy. Um, I paid for it and I'm just going to install and relaunch just because I don't want it to um mess up on me. Now, uh like if I hit control on uh option here, I can say um find out how to open the piano on this app and uh write me a quick melody. It's going to load. This is when it's going to fail miserably because I've had loads of trouble with this app to be honest. But it's interesting because you can you've got Logic Pro open with a deluxe classic electric piano loaded. Open the piano keyboard. Hit command K or go to window then show musical typing. That'll give you an onscreen keyboard you can play with your computer keys. I want you to do it for me though. Got it. I'll open the keyboard and compose a quick melody for you. And this is the interesting thing because it can actually use your screen and use your computer, but it's kind of working alongside you, you know? It's not it's not like dispatch or whatever, which is still all really really good. It's just kind of like there when you need it. Um, if we I can take over, but I need to know exactly what you want made or changed in Logic Pro. Okay. Just write me a melody like as a fun example. I don't mind what. And I think it's using clawed under the hood. I appreciate the enthusiasm, but I can't actually play or input MIDI notes into Logic Pro. I can only type text into text fields. Logic's workspace isn't a text input. It's a graphical MIDI editor. What you could do is hit command K to open musical typing and jam something out yourself. or ask clickie agent to help you compose something more structured. Oh, that's cool. Well, that was a bit of a shame, but the you know um what he demonstrates as well. I I you got to look at the onboarding experience of this because this is what I really wanted to show you. Well, I I I instal I I downloaded it. Should I install it? Yeah, why don't you do that? Why don't you go through the install because uh it's really really cool. Okay, so downloaded it and now this is the DMG and apparently it's closed beta but you can just go on and um download it by giving your email. It's not whatever. So just yeah just the thing is your audio doesn't work does it? You you can never share your audio. Why not? I don't know why. I don't know why either, but you've never been able to share your audio. So, don't dox yourself. Yeah, I'll remove you. I've removed you. Yeah, even though your email has been viewed a billion times on this show before. Yes. I need to give it a bunch of access probably. Yeah, you give it access. And here and here's a scary thing. You because it's always watching your screen. It is kind of like Microsoft Clippy in more ways than you think about, but um it is always on. And you can say, and I've never got this to work either, but you can say, "Hey, Clippy agent." Hey, clicky agent. Maybe I've been saying Clippy agent instead of clicky clippy. Um and it's supposed to just spawn an agent. So whilst you you don't even have to press the shortcut, right? Are you in? Uh, it says you need permission. So, yeah, let's let's do the permissions. Um, yeah. So, it's always listening and you can command it with your voice. So, um I I never got actually got that to work ever. This is like two weeks old, guys. Two and a half weeks old. It's It's very new. I don't see the the Mac prompt. Is it on your other screen? Cuz you got two screens or something. Oh, yeah. True. Good one. And it was kind of like hidden. Yeah, it doesn't come here because it's on the other screen. Okay. Accessibility. Okay. So, I got to It tells me where to do. You can just switch it right there. Interesting. So, it's kind of like telling me. Okay. Uh screen recording. That was accessibility. It's probably for screen sharing. This is for screen This is screen shared. So quit and open. No, I'm hoping the audio is here because this on boarding experience is something to behold. Allow. Do you hear it? No. Oh. Put your phones next to the microphone on your screen and follows you around as you use your computer. Here's how is it speaking up? Yes. Yes. Good. Um, in that moment, Clickie can see your screen and help you with whatever you're trying to do. So, and you don't even have to leave the program that you're messing with. So, let's say that, you know, you're in After Effects and you have no idea how to color grade a video. Let's say you're writing a tweet and you want some feedback. Uh, let's say you're in Cloud Code or Codeex and you want to learn more about how to actually use it. Uh, no matter what you're trying to do, Clickie can help you because it can see your screen and talk back to you and help you figure out whatever whatever you're trying to do. Clicky can also move around and point at things, which is really helpful when you need almost like a friend that's going to guide you through whatever you're trying to do. That's cute. Clicky can also spawn agents for you. All you have to say is, "Hey, clicky agent." And then ask for literally whatever you want. Take your So, here's a request. Take your hands off the off your keyboard right now and let me show you something magical. Just watch me spawn an agent with just my voice. Hey, clicky agent. I'm the CEO of this company of this rocket company you see on my screen. Can you research my competitors and save it as a PDF and open it for me when you're done? And just like that, at the top of your screen, you'll see Clickie just spawned an agent. And I just did it with just my voice. You can even hover it and see what the agent is doing. And because Click E is a general agent, it means it can also build stuff. So check this out. Hey Clickie agent, can you make me a website for the beautiful person watching this video right now and open it in the browser when you're done? And bada bing. Now we have two agents working. And Clickie will you can move your mouse right now. Uh, and so that's Clicky Agent. It can do so much more. It can set reminders for you on your native Apple reminders. It can schedule stuff for you. It can write stuff for you. It can do anything. It's the simplest interface in the world to talk to the models and spawn agents. Uh, let us know what you think. It's this is all still really early. We're we've only we're only like two weeks into this. If you want into if you run into any issues, please uh message me here. I'll open my Twitter here and just DM me. Cool. Bye. And then you'll get and what what will happen in a moment is that that website will open up and that PDF will open up. There you go. So it built that website on the fly and then now you can interact with it. You can say hey make it more colorful or hey make it all black and red or something like this. Yeah. How do I interact with it? You you should be able to say hey clicky agent. But hey clicky agent. But are you listening? If you mouse over the the red agent or the blue agent whichever one was responsible for the website. Yeah that's it. Uh, press voice or text or whatever and then tell it something. Um, what should I tell it? Uh, wait. There's the there's the PDF. Here's the PDF. The PDF is ready. That's really cool. That's really cool. The fact that it can do it and then in the the interactivity of it is making it really really interesting. So, so it's just looking at whatever's on your screen right now and it's like dealing with it there. But I mean, I've been trying to use it. I haven't quite found a use case for myself in what I would do with it to be honest. But it's a really interesting innovation that I think that I don't know. I think this will open a few doors. Um, certainly the way they present themselves. Like he's literally messaged me and said, "Hey, here's my WhatsApp. Give me a text." Like, cuz I was having problems with it. Like he's really going down this personal route. And you saw in the video there, he made loads of mistakes in the video. And I I don't think that was that was intentional or at least he didn't mind that he messed up the whole brand image and you watch their videos and they're all like a family sort of thing. Um he's really going down a they are really going down a person personal personality route which is really interesting to see from a from a tech start but this is yeah this is super new and I wondered if anyone else could think of any cool use cases for it because it is quite fun and interesting. So like the first use case that I can think of is uh obviously like learning what you kind of like showed if I'm doing something how can I how can I yeah like when I was in logic there it told me how I can open the keyboard or something like that right yeah I I suppose in a in a way that you instead of going over to claw codes go do something say like you know you just tell it in the moment rather than going over to claw code you Yeah, it's cool. Yeah, cool. And yeah, it was 15 20 bucks I think I paid for it. So you get like uh like I see. Yeah. So Oh, you can connect Google Workspace now as well. That's interesting. So yeah, Clicky Agent, go check it out. DM4 bugs. I I really like that. It's very personal. It is. Yeah, I'm going to I'm going to play with it. I'm going to play with it and think of some use cases like it it happens when I want to change some setting for for example in a in a tool like how how do you do that? How do you enable something like a setting? Um maybe maybe for that it can do it. Yeah. So again it's just like there when you need it as opposed to something you have to go away and go and do that. One of the biggest feedbacks I've given and they've emailed me as well was to perplexity. They've nerfed Comet in that that you can't do things in the browser anymore from the assistant. You have to go to their computer and by that point you've lost the context of the tab that you're in and the conversation that you might have had and all the rest of it. And it's like I didn't I don't want to leave the thing. I just want it to be there. And that's I guess what Clicky Agent is. It's there where you need it and you just tell it to go do things. So yeah, it's cool. Yeah. Quite fun. Do one thing for me. Ask your clickie agent to go to um insiders.commandaiow.com. Um click agent. I don't know if it can do that. I have not. I think the hey clicky agent thing is broken because just type it out. So hold and it might not understand command AI actually as well. So you might have to spell it out for it. Spell it out. Command spell cmd. Go to command AI. No, go to insiders or insider insiders. Go to go to insiders.commandai dot commandaiishow.com which is spelled cmdaiow.com. Let's see what it does. It might just do it. Let's see. Well, it was the worst prompt that I could give. But but I mean these these agents, they don't really care. Where do I type it in? Uh in the in the URL bar. You have to go old school, buddy. You have to go old school. Ah, no. I thought I I thought I would type the prompt. Uh no, I don't think you can. I don't think you can. Yeah, you can type it in. Are you there? I think you can type it in once the agent I think he's not there. Here's the thing. This is it. It was broken for me. Like it did that for me and then it just broke. So I deleted it and restarted it and then it worked. This this is maybe I can do it. Maybe I can do it. Go to insiders.ai.com. Commander is spelled cmd. Okay. Okay. It's heading there now. So, should I share my screen? I'm going to share my screen. I don't know where it's going to go there because I've got all these windows open. Oh, there it is. Oh, it didn't do the spelling for me. Never mind. Never mind. Yeah. Uh, CMD. So, everyone listen up. We wanna we want to build or we want to do some sort of community effort beyond these live streams and we don't know what we're going to do. We don't know how we're going to present it. We we don't know anything actually. In fact, which is why if you go to insiders.comow.com, you know how commandi is spelled unlike clippy clicky here. Thanks for that. Um, if you let us know your name, uh, give us an email and let us know what you want to learn about. There's a list of, uh, topics here. Or if you select I don't see my topic, you can type something. If we were to get together on say a weekly or a monthly call, um, what you want to talk about like in a group setting, it would group setting. Yeah. in a group setting like listening to what you're trying to do where you're potentially having issue with AI either you're starting or you want to you know do more or just stay updated I feel like in the show we are covering everything right it's it's our job for the show to cover everything that interests us but it doesn't mean that we end up using everything um right so this is where this can get interesting. Uh for you guys to to potentially come to the calls and we can recommend you specifically to use something for what you're trying to do or how you like to get stuff done because we do try all of these things out. uh sometimes just for the show we you know prior to the show we get on a call and we prompt things using new tools and sometimes like clicky we do it while we are live. So yeah we we we would like to share that experience with you and have a community um meetup a community setup. So if you're interested, head to insiders. Yeah. And become an insider. Yeah. Let us know. Not guarantee. It's not guarantee that we'll do this, but we would like to understand a little bit more about what you want to hear about and maybe something will come of it. So yeah. Yeah. We got to find few people interested and then we'll start it. If there are Yeah. Cool. So, we we have a few other things and we're going quite slow, buddy. Well, um, so the next one is Fig Jam. Let me like bring everything that I need for Fig Jam up. And then we need Claude. Um, is this thing a claw only thing or no? It's an MCP. So it can you can do it with any AI well with cursor you can do it with um open AI stuff as well right? Okay so starting now you can control your fig jam and you can create stuff on your fig jam file using your AI. uh they came out with their MCP. Previously you could do design inside of Figma but now you can do it also in Fig Jam. And for that um we're going to show you how you can do it. Um to start um I would suggest if you don't know how to use MCPS probably the easiest would be downloaded desktop app if you have it already. Go to settings and then in connectors uh you have Figma. If you don't have it, you go to browse connectors, you add Figma, and that's how you connect it. Um, are you meant to be sharing your screen, by the way? Sorry. Oh, yes. Oh, [ __ ] Why was it? That's fine. You can just go over you. It was only for the last second you you could uh you really needed to see it. So, yeah, you're in claw desktop right now. Yeah, I I'll just Yeah, I'll just do the steps and you add it to the clip settings and then connectors. Uh I have this clippy thing. So I would actually quit it. Uh the cog down the bottom. Okay, cool. Got it. Yeah. So I'll do it again. Just speak it out so I can just use the clip. That's easier. Yeah. So in your claw desktop you go to settings and then you go to connectors and here you see I already have Figma. If you don't have it go to browse connectors and here you can simply add it and then press configure uh and press connect. And then once you have it you can also go into that connector and allow and disallow stuff. So for some you can let it to ask you, but I'm living on the edge. I let it do everything. That's not the only thing. Uh you can also add the Figma desktop. This is where if you have the Figma desktop app just like I do. You can set it up here as well. Add custom connector like Figma desktop. You see I already have it. And again here I can allow it to do everything. So you simply using the claude desktop app add the Figma connector and you're good to go. But if you want to add it to cloud code or you want to add it anywhere else there's a link in the description uh set up the desktop server this is using the desktop app you can just simply copy paste this into your terminal and it is added to your cloud. But if you are interested in doing a remote server, this is when you don't have the desktop app open, you still can using your AI uh agent do stuff with Figma. Uh this is how you set it up there. So is that clear? I think so. Yeah. For building if you're building an app as well, you'd use the remote one. So if you're building some sort of integration where you want to control Figma, you'd use the remote one instead of the the desktop app. But yeah. Yeah. Cool. True. That's how you'd add it. Anyway, so now we have a Figma Fig Jam file for our website. And then here I'm using cloud desktop app just from the chat. I normally use clot code in terminal but for for this one let's just use the chat and I already have a prompt. So the prompt is about our show and let's just paste it in and just to make sure that we have the connector here we see we have the Figma uh and what I'm going to do this is I found it to be important in my uh use case it if I don't link the exact file it might go and do it somewhere where I don't want to do it in another file. So I'm just linking to this exact file here for my agent and I'm just going to say use the fig jam mcp. Is that how you would do it? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Nor they are quite good at kind of picking up what you that you want to use the Figma MCP. You don't have to be explicit. Yeah. If you don't mind taking a few seconds just to say use the Figma MCP, then go. Exactly. Yeah. So this is just just for safety. And I and I think your bug is because it's an empty file. It doesn't know the file. So you copy that, paste in. Whereas if you've got frames, yes, that you want to insert. That's where you can just select the frame. You don't even have to copy the link and then you can just type do this in Figma or whatever. But exactly. Yeah. It should pick up the node you're the frame or the node that you're selecting. But in this case, we're an empty file. So you just cut paste in the file. So, do you want to read out the the prompt we've given it just a sec? Yeah. So, we have a show called Command AI and want to plan a user flow for our website where users can get to know us, watch the episodes, join us live um for and for the ones more interested in how AI can help them, they can join our insider community. And I'm asking Claude to make two site maps and two user journeys. That's it. That's how normally you would like one of the use cases for Fig Jam to make site maps and user journeys and diagrams and this kind of stuff. And now you see even a live preview which is really really cool inside of your claude. Okay. Now, now it stopped showing it, but Okay, here we go. I don't have edit access to that specific board. Interesting. Um, okay. Now, it's going to make it here. So, let's see. Even though you saw that I gave it access to do stuff, but it doesn't have access here anyway. Uh, okay. It's this one. So, it didn't know which file to use. And this is kind of like why I Okay. Yeah. Edit in Figma. Open the link. It's going to do now, isn't it? It's not going to do it in Fig Jam. No, it is Fig Jam. And now it is doing it on the wrong account. So, this happened to me before. That's why. Yeah. Anyway, it it it's doing it with a different account because I'm logged in in another one and I can't log in right now. But yeah, that's the idea. You see how it works? And to prevent this issue, previously I would just add the specific frame as you said and that would tell it exactly where to do it, but somehow got confused. So now let's see how it did. So it seems like it did one. It did just one site map. But this is where you can continue chatting. Interesting that the chat becomes this where I can site map one, sitemap two. No, it says it made them, but it's probably in the pages. That's why I don't see them. Yeah, it's probably like different pages. That's why it just shows one. Yeah. Um, well, I should have probably tried it before the show, but I didn't want to, you know, I I on purpose I wanted to show it authentically, but yeah, that that's that's the issue. It's doing it on a different account. And yeah, um um well, I could um that's all right. I mean, you know, we get the idea. It's like, you know, used to be able to design on Figma and this and that, but now they've just brought it over to Fig Jam, which is kind of handy. Um, we used, I don't know whether you remember this, but we had we we did well, the project that we're on now, we had discussed what the site map should be and this and that. I used Miro and I told that to Claude, and it used the Miro MCP to basically do the same thing. It just crafted a journey. It did a site map and this and that. So Fig Jam and Miro share a lot in common and it's a good place to just map things out and have flow diagrams and and create um I don't know what do you do on Fig Jam like create workshops and things like this. It's a really useful tool. It's just nice to be able to use Claude to be able to play with it now, you know, and do Yeah. like planning uh or writing things down uh sometimes with my team. So right now like the last thing that we used it for was uh we we we made some user we made some personas now it worked. Okay. So the I know that now the mistake was from me. I had the project in my draft and it couldn't edit my draft but I put it in the team folder. Now it can edit it. So So yeah. Uh but it's all in one page. And now we see. Okay. So this is the flow. Yeah, pretty nice. It's I would say it's quite simple. It's quite simple like visually, but at the same time it's I mean this is meant to be for visual is it? I mean it's it's functional. It's more of a Figma's functional take on on the design process, isn't it? Yeah, it's quite good. It's quite good. The cool thing about this is I can do this from my phone, right? I can use Claude from my phone and I have access to the connectors from my phone from the app uh and I can as long as my computer is awake, I can do it from my phone or I use the remote desktop uh version that I showed earlier and then yeah, so we should we should review this later on. So, like that's pretty good. Like press kit uh meet the ho hosts uh about the show. It's pretty good. Like the site map checks out. Yeah, I like it. I like it. It's I mean the prompt is as minimal as it gets. Normally my prompts don't look like this. Normally my prompts are me talking to um what's it called? uh whisper flow for a few minutes for a good few minutes uh and the prompts are more detailed and I often also ask Claude to do research so in this case we don't have an existing website but we could say hey go on and do some research about other shows doing um like covering AI topics and discover how they are building communities and add your findings um to the FIG jam board and see how we can do better. I don't know. This was also kind of not an amazing prompt, but that's the idea is that it can go research, find stuff, bring it to Fig Jam. And I think this is quite powerful because if you're only doing the research or like whatever that you are trying to do in an AI tool, you have like you're limited to this chat, you know, experience or it creates a PDF for you or it creates a report for you in an HTML doc. None of these are as good as this because this you go in, you edit stuff, you you remove stuff, you you add more and that interactivity is amazing and I can have my teammates here. So, uh I think I'm going to use this. Um you you raised an interesting point as well around the kind of mindset around AI that I think we don't really appreciate. like we're so used to um I want to do this one thing like a onetoone relationship with the thing that you're doing whereas I think to get the best out of AI we need to think um many many steps so the example you gave was go and do some research do you know what I mean so you that's already a two-step thing go and do the research and then come back and put it into fig jam that's a twostep um system it can go as far as you one and this is where we talk about agent you know it could be go and do some research go and pull together a powerpoint presentation also map it out in Figma there's a three-point journey there that you you know again just to get to the point of what needs to be in the fig jam at the end of the day um you know uh it isn't always this onetoone relationship with the thing that you're just trying to get done that's where that's the that's like basic use of AI do you know what I mean like basic use of agents sorry not not AI but yeah so it's cool it's cool it's quite quite funny because I told you about this community uh workshop that I did and I could have shown this I didn't because uh it wasn't out I think at that time or I haven't tried it before but now if I do it again if I go and do a workshop and showcase what AI can do in terms of um research this This is how I would show it definitely because this is much better than a PDF than a PDF. It is accessible via a team and it's editable and expandable all of all of these good things. So yeah. Yeah. Well again if people are lost and they want to know more go to insiders.commandaiishow.com commandaiishow.com, fill out the form and let us know what you want to talk about and we'll we'll we can get into all of this stuff like how we use AI and what we've just done. Maybe it's a I don't know. You let us know and we'll uh we'll make it happen. Do you know these uh other communities AI tinklers? Tinklers. Tinkerers. What did I say? Tinklers. Tinkers tinkle. think cognitive revolution. So this is AI. I think I know this one. AI daily brief. So you just So you've just gone and told it to do a bunch of research on AI communities and Yeah. What what's that second point in the flow? What's the white boxes? Uh the white I So this is what they have uh for their community. Yeah. No, this is what they have in terms of community. Mhm. Yeah. So this is what they give to their community or offer their community and here should be what we can learn from them or can do better to give for our community. So own a signature ritual. Sounds like building a cult. Let's build a cult, guys. Let's do it. Let's build a cult. Well, uh, the the the merch from last week. I'm still I it I really liked it. I I developed a few more taglines. U that that I think can become a thing. So, let's see. Let's see. Stay tuned. Cool. Let's move on. Let's move on. Um, do you want to talk about Higsfield? No, not really. So, then it's Web Flow. Yeah, Web Flow. Let's Let's do Web Flow. We can close these. Do you want me to kick it off and you do the demo? However you feel like it. I have it ready. Oh, well. Yeah. Okay. I'll go over the article real quick and then because this is fresh off the press, boys and girls. Web flow have up their AI integration game with their platform. Now you can create code components which I think we've seen coming for a long time to be honest. We framer have had it for for centuries what it seems like but now they seem to have brought AI co components are now available in web flow only a day ago they released this. So yeah I co components are now available to all web flow customers. This is a significant step forward in how teams build on web flow. Until now adding a code component to a site required writing react in an internal external codebase importing it via dev link. This was powerful but out of reach for most designers and marketers. With this launch, anyone can generate interactive production ready component natively in Webflow using the AI assistant. So I'm keen already to see if it still leverages Dev Link and that you can bring it back and forward because you know a designer may start the component and then get to a point of like oh I'm lost and then a developer is like well I don't want to go in web flow. I'll bring it in and then I'll do it in my codebase where I've got clawed code. I've got all of my IDE. I've got all of my, you know, helpers and things like that. Um, but yeah. So, yeah. And they've got a two-eek build challenge which you can they've got $100 gift cards on. So, pretty cool. Okay. So, let me show it to you. So, here's a preview. But how do you get here? So, here I have just, you know, a normal Web Flow project open. Here you go to components and then I'm showing it step by step because there is a very specific way of go going there and I don't really like that. You go to components, you create a new component and then you say generate with AI and then it shows you this prompt area. Yes. Yeah. And it kind of like I'm lost where I am and I can go back by clicking here like I can't do this. I can't do this. Like none of these. It's kind of like a bit Yeah. rough. Anyway, you lost. You lost. What happened? What happened to the rendering? Okay. So, something is broken when it comes to the rendering because maybe because I have two tabs open. Anyway, once Anyway, so you write your prompt and then you see something like this. But let me reload. And this could be something like I don't know whether widget I'm guessing this is for widgets like little interactive components dotted around your website right this is where I have some comments on this so here the components are loaded one of the examples that they say like in the prompt area is uh a pricing p component and I asked it to do some pricing components and it then I asked it to to multiple versions. Um, so again, look how rough the UI is. Here we see this view code. When I click it, it shows it here. It's so rough. The UI is really rough. And then, yeah, I can't make it smaller. Actually, I can uh I can make it bigger, resize it. And this is 600 lines of code. But I guess for all of these different component variations that I have. Uh where should I start? Let's start with the quality first. How does it look to you? I mean it looks okay. I mean my first question is is it is it taking the website into account to No. So, it's there there are two things that it's not doing correctly. It's not taking my brand colors. It should have access to them. I see like it has access to them, but it's not doing it for whatever reason. Not doing it good. Anyway, the first version is not this. The first version was a completely broken white version with white text on white. And I asked it to make a new one, but it didn't do a new one. rebuilt it here. So, I can't show you the the fully broken one. Anyway, this is okay. Uh my second biggest issue is for the content, it's not taking the content from my website. So, it's not aware of my website. If I do something like this with clawed code, I can tell it to to research or like give it the link or give it a Figma or whatever. Give it context. Here it feels like a bit more separated. And then I said uh make versions and here where like there is a different way of thinking when it comes to versions how web flow sees it and how AI people see it. Um so these are like different versions and I will explain what I mean by that. So these different versions are different variants of that component. Oh okay. So if I add it to my project, I can swi switch these variants. So let's Did were these variants created because you asked it or it just created? I did ask it. Okay. I wonder what happens if you don't ask it as an example, but yeah, it it just creates one version. Okay. Yeah, it creates one. Um it it seems like there is a bug. It breaks my site every time I get out of the component. But anyway, so so you asked it for a design variance whereas Webflow interpreted that as the feature of varants component variance. Is that right? Yes and no. Yes. There is no inter like wrong interpretation because that's how web flow in general has this web flow does not offer this feature to us to to play with different variations. It's just variants. I I'll just show it. So I'm going to add it. Let's just add it here on top. Oh god. Why is this broken? Uh let's let's add it anywhere. Okay, let's reload because the the the scroll is broken. It's it's early. I'm going to give them that. And it's just loading code component because it's it as you said earlier this is good for like interactive widgets but that's like my vision is to do design as well. By the way you see how it didn't even use the black or the red. Uh and here's the thing when I said versions it's these versions. That's what I mean. So it's that's what I mean by variance. It's like exactly understanding. You just wanted to see different designs. So you can pick one design. Got it. Exactly. And uh now I can open the component here. And now you see my chat is back. It was gone for some reason. My chat is back. I can close it. But this is what I mean. It's so bad the UI. The ask AI assistant is here and it opens it here. Like what? This gets me crazy. And the view code is here and it opens it here. Like how bad can the UI be? Like human hasn't used this. And when you say UI, I think you mean UX. Like UI is fine, but like I I'm lost. I don't know where I am. Do you know what I mean? Like a human hasn't used this. And um I genuinely don't think that like Yeah. web I think web flow and framer even uh they don't have a good understanding of how or they have issue trying to implement AI similar to like to native to make it native to make it feel native it it feels everything but native where with uh AI native tools like claw design even though it has its own bug bugs etc it feels like they have an easier time to have the AI experience um because they're AI first probably, right? Yeah. Yeah. There the AI experience is right and then they are slapping the editor on top and this is where they have issues with like the editor part uh where these tools have issue with the AI part and I think they don't get it. Here's what I mean. I don't want to have just varants. I don't see this is a bigger picture. I don't see Webflow being a dev only thing and I don't see Figma to be a design thing anymore. Design and dev to me are especially when we're talking about front end, they're becoming one thing. We are generating more and more of both with AI and it doesn't make sense to do my design variations in Figma and then do design and do dev varants in Figma. It does it it makes zero sense. What I want is to have an environment where I can use AI to generate a bunch of stuff and then put them together. And this is kind of like I didn't plan to do that, but let me show you. This is what I've been doing with Figma and Claw Code. And look at these designs. I'll zoom in and tell me what you think. These designs are all made with AI. Yeah, they don't look at they they look good. Like look at the fonts. Look at the layouts, the details. They are even the images are AI by the way. These are really good. I mean look at this UI. Yes, there is like tiny issues, but it's really good. And I have hundreds and I and I have like three pages. I have hundreds of these designs and look when I want to do to make a UX decision I don't want to sit and design it manually. I'm I'm imagining something and I'm communicating this with AI and I AI is now visualizing that for me and now I can go in by the way I'm using Figma most of my time without the UI right now. I noticed um without a UI because I'm just using it as a canvas to put these ideas together and then mix and match them right and then develop them. Sometimes I do this type of things in code. Sometimes I generate these things via HTML and then bring them to Figma. Sometimes I do image like these UIs that I think I showed you. These are done with chat GPT image gen 2. They're super good, super detailed. So what web flow is getting right uh wrong to go back. I know that they are creating this as a tool for variance. They are being very specific here. But I feel like they're missing out on the opportunity. give me an actual canvas where I can do what I just showed you in Figma. I want to be able to do all of this in web flow and then there is no separation between design versus code. It's it's there. I can use it wherever I need it and okay. Yes. This is a fun like functionality thing. AI can add it, right? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, static first, dynamic after. I mean, you know, the fact that this doesn't I mean, it's black and red at the very least, but it's not taking it doesn't you can't just whack this into your website because it doesn't have any relationship to the website is being whacked into. So, I don't really understand. Maybe it will get it in time. I don't know. But, uh, do you have the ability to publish this website the the page with this code component on? Because I'm curious to know if it's a pre-rendered component or a JavaScript. You see how it [ __ ] broke my website again? Well, my website is broken because we're we're redesigning stuff. So, anyway, let me go to a page where I don't really care testimonial. This page by the way was also designed by designed and developed by Claude code the MCP. Mhm. Uh so here I feel like just let's add the pricing here right before the footer. Let's do this one. And it's not in your homepage, is it? Just do staging. Just do staging. Yeah. Yeah. I'll just do staging and I'll share the link or or we'll just look at it. Let's see. Yeah, go to it. But you we're um when you go on the page, right click and inspect and we'll turn off JavaScript basically and we'll see what loads and web flow if you are watching. I know that's not the point but just to specifically to to specify I feel like you're missing out on what is happening. I I feel like all these like builder tools are not getting AI. Not really. I just I I feel like they're they're not maybe they are I don't know but they're not going out and asking people what do you what do you wish AI would they are they are asking but they are they are not doing it uh what we're answering or at least what I what I'm um telling them. So, so if you press the the top right where you normally close. Yeah, I want to see. So, this is the section before. So, this is the code. This is the code component section. But why isn't it highlighting it? You know, when you maybe that's a clue as to this loading after the page loads maybe. So, okay. So code um island data loader do you see any do is this working? It is working. Do you see any indication for what this could be? Um well do you want to turn off JavaScript and see if it loads? How do I do that again? I should ask. Click click click. Yeah, do it. Do it. Why not? It's in this menu. Isn't that menu that we were just in? No, no, no. Oh, you Sorry. I thought you were searching. Um, yeah. So, control option. How can I turn off JavaScript here? Let's see if it can do it. No. Okay, it's not working. Uh, let's Yeah, I think yours is doing the same thing mine did. So, you might have to install. So, yeah. Go to that menu we were just on here. Yeah. And then scroll down to the bottom. It's around there. Disable. There we go. Now just refresh the page. No, it's here. Yeah. And then that should be broken now. This Yeah, it is broken. Yeah. Cool. Yeah. So, it's preloaded. That's good. At least that. No, that's good. That's good. That means for for people who might be wondering, that means this is not bad for SEO or accessibility, not by default at least. Depends on also how you build and how you And I wonder what code it's written in as well. I didn't see that, but do you know if it's written in React? Well, it's written in React, but do you uh you have to you'll have to go to Webflow to see it. Yeah. So, here it was React. Yeah, but Astro has written react as well as NexJS. So, I'm wondering if there's any clues as to the because they funded they um supported Astro and they seem like how do I go back to that view? I can't from here. The code view. Yeah. Yeah. Double click on the component. No, that that that's how it opens it here. M uh but that that's what I mean like the the ah this is so frustrating. So I know how to go there. I'm trying to see if there is a different way of going there. How would you do it? How would how would you do it? Open component. Okay. Open component there. Uh how how I would do it? I will I would add a button or like like under some somewhere else as well like to to navigate. So let's go back. Um probably I would do it by default. No, I would do an option here like I would right click and say view code or something like or edit component. Yeah. Yeah. If I say edit component here, it does it. So we have two things. Okay, I'm getting it. We have edit component and open component. And it's it's not clear. It's not clear because open component it opens it in the canvas say it open it in canvas or something like this by the way then you've got edit code at the top right there haven't you by the way I I know that we have also this but I'm pretty sure they are aware of it I can do this and you see it's not responsive but it is responsive it is just that oh you know when you when you do it with that thing it's just yeah it's responsive on the page that on the device size that it loads on. Yeah. If you if you click edit code at the top right there. There. Yeah. Okay. Okay. Web flow data types react. If you scroll down a little bit to get to the actual functions. So that's use plans checking function v1. Uh looks like standard. They got use state. Yeah. It's just straight up react. There's no there's no closes whether it's um Astro or Nex.js. That's all I was looking for. So these are the V1 card and then there's all one big component which is crazy. So there must be a must be a master component in here somewhere then. Interesting how they have What is this? Yeah, maybe this is that's your the list of That's a content. Yeah, that's a content. Yeah. Yeah. Um well, it it looks very early. I'm not sure if I would use it like this as it is. I don't know what to do with it to be honest. uh like if I want to create an interactive component, I would just use clot code because it just can do more or like I have more control and it's easier. But I guess this can become easier once they make it more aware of the website or maybe I got unlucky. Maybe I can Let's actually see. Well, let's move on because we've been on this for freaking ages. Okay. Yeah, true. I I was complaining just hating on it. Yeah. Yeah. Uh I I'm sorry, web flop, but this is Yeah. Anyway, I hope you find your way. Should I talk about warp? Should I Should I take the next one because otherwise you'll be doing, you know, loads then? Yeah. And uh I'm not ready for that one. So you should do it. Yeah. Yeah. Do a little do a little thing. I'm so hungry, man. Yeah. I'm um Yeah. So Warp, my favorite terminal, and it's slowly becoming your favorite terminal, too. Our favorite terminal. Our favorite terminal. Um has become open source, which is really exciting. But what does it mean? It means quite a few interesting things actually that's come out of it. Now, if you don't know what open source is, it means that we literally have access to the code that they have access to, which you can download this and you can run it on your computer and you will have the app. Um, you know, you'll have it just like they do. You have to build it and whatever means a couple of things. It means you can build your own features. And the first one I had was how can I download warp and just just have it use clawed code. So, you know, the beautiful thing about Warp is that it can use a bunch of different agents and things like that. Um, it's an AI terminal. Actually, for those who don't know, Warp is an AI terminal. Um, and it's quite good because it, you know, you can type in aentic commands and it will interpret that and run the terminal commands that relate to what you're doing. So, you normally have to access servers via the terminal. You run croco code with the terminal. do lots of things running terminal and it's all this bash syntax that's often very hard to remember. Uh if I want to run a sim link, if I want to copy a file or something like that, I just say copy this file or move this file to here or something like that. You know, you can do it all in the terminal if I write certain commands. But now I just don't even need to think. But it uses lots of different models, right? You can you can just yeah, you can use it as just a normal AI chat interface and it will use a lot of different models. Well, what if I just use stop paying for warp, pipe it into claw code, and then just use my claw code membership to be able to use it. That's one aspect of it. Um, oh, sorry, I'm showing the wrong screen here. I'm um should be showing this one. This is the code on GitHub. Ah, so you can just run, you can just run this. Yeah. Download it, run it. And and also the second thing is is that you can contribute. So you can actually build features into these things. I do worry that this opens up a can of worms because um ever since AI, you know, came came became big, people were like contributing like crazy to open source projects just submitting AI. Well, yeah. I mean, there's that as well. That's another aspect to it as well. So, but it's still pretty good and it and it's there's, you know, the open source community is is a big deal and it doesn't get the love and respect that it kind of, you know, deserves and all the rest of it. But there was another aspect to this that was quite interesting, which is about the fact that Open AI are supporting it and driving it, which is kind of a good thing. I'm just going to I'm just going to search Open AI just real quick. Oh, it's right at the top. OpenAI is the founding sponsor of the new open-source repository and the new agentic management workflows are powered by GBT models. I don't know what this is. I think this is part probably something like um uh maybe some actions here. Maybe they've got some GitHub actions, like all of these stuff, you know, the cleanups, create releases, all of that stuff, uh, to protect you, protect them from receiving your AI slop. They've got a bunch of agents protecting it, you know. So, I think it's that, but um, yeah, it's quite interesting. It's quite nice that um open AAI are really kind of supporting this uh opensource aspect to it because the world can't go around, you know, the dev world can't go around without open source. But it's just a nice thing, you know, again, I kind of want to just get it working with core code and then stop paying my 20 20 bucks a month fee or whatever it is that I'm paying um or soon to be paying anyway. So yeah, um that's kind of it. There's nothing much more to say about it. I don't know if you had any thoughts what you might do with an open source thing or whether it tempts you to contribute to open source. Um I just want to show how I'm using it. Right now I'm in the light mode. Normally I'm in the dark mode, but uh when I go outside I do the turn on the light mode. Uh vertical tabs and colored by project. I turn that straight off. I turn that straight off. I start Yeah, I started doing that and I you can toggle them and I quite like it. I started do because it it makes it easy for me to see, okay, what project this is and then like by color. I like the color by project. That's an interesting one. How do I turn that on? So, you just right click or no, just you do this. Yeah. You do this and then you you select Oh, I see you've colored them. Oh, okay. Yes, yes, yes. I got it. Oh, that's nice. Oh, it's not automatic. Yeah. No. So, yeah. I just want to show how I'm using it, but how I would change it. I feel like it's a bit too busy here. You see like the name of the project is like remote control like rich input. That's like information here. I don't need any of this. And uh as for uh the directory, I already have it here. So why do I need it here? So a bunch of like UI changes. That's my biggest issue with warp. It's that the UI is busy. And that's, you know, if you go to just the the main terminal, it's just so clean. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, it is doing a lot more, but I know what you mean. even to the point of that there's a code review button at the top right and this was added simply because people weren't using it. People didn't know that there was a code review button and it's like that's that's kind of like a bit annoying because um that's cluttering the user interface. They have reduced it as well like you're in claw code but if you open up a new ter if you open up a new tab just a fresh tab that doesn't have core code in it. Yeah. So to do that you go to you do agent because you can Yeah. So and and well you've just opened up a new terminal. Exactly. So if you go to terminal if you open up a new terminal because I will often do this right. You see how the bottom is just very I say clean. It's you know um if you were to flip between the agent view now if you go to the agent view see what happened. Yeah. Yeah. New one that you opened up down the bottom there's there. Well, down you got all this stuff down the bottom. Now, on the far right, you've got I don't know what it says. Um, in the bottom right of the page, uh, it's the agent that you agent, you got voice. That was all visible in the terminal view, but now they've moved that to the agent view. Yeah. Um, so they have cleaned it up a little bit, but you know, yeah, it's it it can be overwhelming, but also it is still a [ __ ] hot terminal to be able to use AI. Are you still not paying for it? Uh, no. I have the subscription. You have subscription now. Okay. Yeah. Cuz I want to know how much you can get away with free version. Yeah. Yeah. What Why would you need to pay for it? Because I don't if I don't use the agent and just use it as a terminal, can I use it for free? I don't know that actually. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Totally. Yeah. If you use the agent. Yeah, for sure. I I have used the agent and I sometimes do and you do the command shift or use use it too. Like I think that's if you just want something as clean as the terminal, but you want something, you know, a bit more idea of it. Yeah. Why don't you use this because of this? No, I'm kidding. Uh I just said like it it's asking me to do uh to do stuff. But no, to be fair, uh I have used that term. I don't know why I stopped the um I think warp just has more stuff and I somehow started using warp. I mean it doesn't have tabs. It doesn't have. Yeah, true. Because I know you you taught me that I can do this and I can do this and I can do this. Oh, I don't like also the select state but I think I can change that to highly customizable. Clicky. Yeah, probably clicky. Yeah. Yeah. How can I change the or just ask warp to help you customize it term too? That That's mean. That's very mean. And the agents will figure out one day what we're trying to do and they will say, "Nope, you're stuck with me." No. I'm happy with what Yeah. what I have here. Well, we'll we'll stick your referral link because I'm absolutely I've exhausted my referral links for this uh uh app. Um but yeah, it's a good Okay. So, yeah, let's add my referral link. But also, I want to say I haven't used pretty much any cursor. Uh no any I haven't used cursor T3 uh cloud code in the desktop app or the what was the other one uh that I was using the codeex yeah I haven't used any of them since Monday just warp and dispatch dispatch it's funny because and I was thinking about this like I I know the claude I know that I like the claude desktop app I mean god damn it it needs some improvement for for I hate that all the shortcuts are different and this and that whatever but um it's nice just to have it all there and there's a nice UI but I still just gravitate towards clawed code I just I always I'm like why am I always in I when I say claw code I mean clawed in the terminal like you just got it but I just I just gravitate towards that I don't know why I think it's shortcuts maybe um this this slash I really like it uh like compacting you know compact MCP model like I don't know it's kind of nice but also this vertical thing I you know that I've been doing this in codeex I've been doing this in T3 I've talked about how I how much I like this uh vertical idea of different projects and I just discovered that I can do it in my terminal so I'm I'm giving it a try and I'm pretty happy with it but I know it's not for everyone because the content that you the in the apps are just nicer and terminal you it's kind of difficult to read. Yeah. Cool. Um next one. Yeah. Next one. What what is the next one? Probably uh I don't know. But while you get that ready, I want to remind people if you go to insights.commandaiishow.com, commandaiishow.com. We want to build a community around this tools, whatever it is. I don't know. We want to know. We want to hear from you. If we were to have an insiders community where we kind of meet up once a week and you can learn from each other, from us, whatever it may be, insiders.ioshow.com. Commando Show written the way that you expect it to given the name of the stream right now. links and also the description and whatever. Um, let us know. Let us know what you want to do if we're going to build a community because we're up for it. Cool. So, I have the next thing to share. Uh, let's just do Stripe and I'll do it quickly. That's a quick one. Okay. So, introducing Now, let's play this. Introducing Stripe Treasury. Uh, this is this sounds like a bank to me or similar to a bank. Hold funds in multiple currencies and stable coins. Uh, instantly transfer money to US businesses. Yes, US only businesses on Stripe for free. Pay anyone in 160 countries just with an email like you know Wise and other tools similar to that. earn credits um on balances to apply towards Stripe fees. That's that's pretty good, you know, because you have to pay what 2.5 2.9% on Stripe or something like this. Plus Yeah. plus like 30 cents or something. So that's that's good. Spend funds uh with a Stripe card. Uh get 2% cash back. uh view balance uh in the mobile app and use treasury from any AI app with the Stripe MCP. So that's pretty interesting. That's until I go to the website and you log in and it says not available in your country because you live in Europe. So let me try let me try here. What what's the what's the URL? Um Treasury. So one business account for all your financial needs, transfer, send uh and have a card. So to me it sounds like not a bank bank. Like when we say a bank, banks normally, uh they they guarantee like there are some guarantees and some regulations like what happens to your money. In some cases, they they return the money up to a certain amount. I don't know if Stripe offers that or if they don't. I don't know. That's something. If you are interested, you would look it up. But basically, the idea is from what I understand, you make money with Stripe, right? you hold the money in Stripe instead of letting it to be transferred to your bank account and you just use Stripe to spend it to send it to people to to pay things with it and that's that's quite interesting. I would I would totally do this once they make it available. I would totally do this because the fees are quite high and then why why should I send it to my bank account and if I earn in dollars and I send it to my bank they're going to take a big chunk. So I'm mad that it's not available in Germany but I mean this is not too dissimilar to wise transfer wise which we do have you know. Yeah. And I do use transfer wise for most of my stuff nowadays. Yeah. Even I have like some stocks um with Wise because it's and you can even get bank card with Wise too. I do have bank cards like I'm looking for. So I wonder if I wonder if Stripe are going to offer bank cards or is literally online purchase. Yes, it says create card. So there you go. Yeah, I love this MCP though. I love this API. You could be like, "Send Kabaza money and it will just do it through the MCP." That's really nice because I um I have an assistant and she handles the finance stuff as well, but she Yeah. One step closer to flinging it. I I asked. No, but I will I will I mean telling her instead of telling her I will tell the AI to do it and she does better stuff with her time then. Yeah. Too polite. Too polite. She will do stuff in the garden just like what I do in the garden. Yeah. Yeah. No, this is an interesting step because Revolute, interestingly, Revolute, which is our European brother, brethren, um they are just they're opening up a physical bank in Barcelona. So, it's interesting how Revolute Well, digital now they're going physical. Well, Stripe is digital as well and also going kind of physical. Yeah. And it's I'm I'm a bit shocked that it's happening now. Why not early like stripe is um handling a a good chunk of the entire like earth GDP? It's it's a big chunk for you know being just a single company. Why didn't do this? Didn't they do this before? Well, I suppose they focused on businesses and this is still pretty business but it's more you know they enabled SAS. SAS was there. Ah okay. So mitigate risk with added security through FDIC insurance eligibility that covers funds up to not exactly but up to 250k. So this is like what banks do. Um but yeah that was that was a big thing. You know Monzo when Monzo first came out they I don't think they had that type of the European version of that type in of insurance. I think we call it FCSC or something like that. Um, and then Stalin came out as a digital bank and they had this special kind of insurance. So, I think it's a hard thing to get. And the I'm sorry for our US viewers, your banking, you probably know this, your banking is so [ __ ] I remember going to Vancouver. I know it's not the US, but North America. I remember going to Vancouver in 2014, I think, something like that. Um, and they had only just got chip and pin, you know, before then they were still signing for their purchases, you know, u just transferring money, wiring money to each other is just awful compared to how we have it in Europe and and the UK. So that not I'm not dunking on you guys, but it's just I think that's why it took so long to Stripe to do it because they probably had to I'm surprised that it took them that long because it feels like it's such a wild west um uh industry that it could be easy to get that type of insurance. I don't know. But yeah, it could have been done sooner. Um, I'm not sure what this 2% cash back on card purchases or like is it I mean says what it says what it says on the tin. If you pay with your card, you get 2% cash back. There's probably some asterisks in there somewhere. But yeah, that's what I want to try to understand because if um because this could be really good, like if I move all my money, everything, all my invoices, you know, with clients to Stripe, it has many good things about it. Like it's it makes it much easier to invoice and get paid and for sub for subscriptions as well. But I haven't done it because of the fees. The fees are But this is this is not a card payment though. That's not a card. They're talking they're trying to get you to go into a shop and use the card. I wonder what the incentive is or like our tools our like we buy a bunch of tools. We're paying you know the code that you are paying physical physical card. That's what I mean. Touch tap Apple Pay do it. Apple Pay do it. Yeah. If you use the physical card Well no actually that's wrong. I think if you use a physical card, you did get like a bonus or whatever, but um now they've moved it to like all purchases on the But isn't it the same like isn't it like using the credit card? If I buy clawed code, will I get 2% back? That will be that will just be in the fine print. But from my understanding, I think that any any physical card transaction will get you 2%. But I could be wrong. I'm not going to I'm not going to argue anyone on that. I think it's just about reading the fine print what that 2% cash back really means. Yeah. Uh I would be interested to see like what it does to Master and uh Visa is if it's going toffect Yeah. I mean, you know, especially businesses that run off of Stripe. Do you know what I mean? Like their whole and which is a lot of them now. They all like most SAS services run off spot stripe. Now they can be like, "Well, now we can just leave all our money in Stripe and make all those make business purchases through Stripe." So yeah. Um, well, we only have we have GBT real time and we have Yeah, I think Should we end on GBT Real Time? Yeah. Um, I can get it up. We can watch the video as a starting point. This looks really cool to be fair. Uh, open AI. Share this tab. So, this is GPT real time which is a texttovoice model and they've made an update which allows it to dynamically control your apps which quite cool. I want to show you a few ways to build with our real-time voice API so that your users can interact with the application more naturally with voice. This includes things like changing your settings, filling out forms, or even playing a game of chess. Let's say I run a website for a company and I want to improve the accessibility by adding some kind of voice widget. The pattern here is that using the real-time API with function calling, I can control my application state. The model can talk to me using notifications and it can also update the interface directly by calling tools that I've defined. This is not computer use or screen scraping. The application owns the state and the model calls these functions that change that state. In this demo, I've even added a cursor just to show the user what's happening on the screen. Let's start with a practical example. Here I've defined a simple application with a wake word and the ability to go from light mode to dark mode. Hey chat, can you go to dark mode? Can you go back to light mode? Sorry. It's that simple. Now let's go into the form demo. Here I can fill out a form using just my voice. My name is Jason Lou. My birthday is March 27, 1994. And can you make sure that I accept the terms? Great. Can you submit that form? Perfect. Now let's try. So what is happening here? I'm wondering if this is the cuz the mouse was moving. If you have a look, I'm wondering if this is the this is the app like because to me this looks like a website. Annoyingly, this looks like website which confuses things a little bit. But you've got this mouse here. 1994. Jesus Christ. You got this little mouse here. But my understanding is you could build this into your website or app and it will just do things while you ask it. However, this and I and then I because whilst I was watching this, I was thinking, well, surely this now exists on the layer, you know, above the app like clicky, which is, you know, the thing we demonstrated at the beginning of the show, like comet browser or dia browser or or whatever or computer use with claw code. Surely, this exists a lot higher, whereas this is saying you can build it into the app experience to call certain functions. But does this person have to build a function to be able to write the name in or build a function to have to write their birthday into that field or is it some sort of screenshot thing? I don't know. So I'm not too sure what happens. And can you make sure that I um so there's a mouse again. Black but wait for this example. Now every time I move a piece I want you to respond automatically. Can you do that for me? So now it's just a real time. So he uses the application from what I understand and the application responses all by itself. Now let's reset the board. How much of this do you need to build yourself? I can state of your if that was a website, why wouldn't you just use claw code with it? But it I mean it's cool. Don't get me wrong. The the real time I think is the point. Um So it Yeah. So it's kind of like always on thing in a way. Does that make sense? That's my understanding. Um real time voice component react browser voice controls for tool constrained uh tool constrained UIs built on open air real time. Okay. So it's built on top of real time. Um is it 1.5? You said it was 1.5 but this looks like a whole new thing though. GBT realtime 1.5 so users can control app state more naturally with voice. It's interesting. I I honestly think this is one of those things where it'll be cool to play around with and what you can actually do with it. Is it like uh can you have an application that builds its own UI based on what the user needs real time? Well, okay. So, here's what I'm reading right now. Your app defines the exact actions the assistant can take. So you need to build all of that stuff in um tools stay app owned and narrow. The UI remains responsible for the visual state change. You want a react friendly controller and an optional launcher widget. So I think you you do need to build the responses in and this is just a nice way to basically it handles the understanding and turns that into essentially tool calls that bind to here we go reusable controller with binding. So it binds to certain actions. So you have to build that bridge but it does the heavy lifting of interpreting what the user says and which br it's like an MCP in some ways I think. Can you open a new tab and go to Edgar Allen, please? Is that like something that you would use it with? What's the Alen? Just Edgar Allen, I think.com. No, the one below. Yeah. So here uh they they have this agentic mode where you ask something and then it sends a a um the response to an AI and then you you see how you get like these pieces of the UI. All of these are predefined. So from my understanding or like there's a set of predefined one and the AI responses with what it best understands and yeah you could you could work it into this website I think but it wouldn't be the same sort of functionality. I think it would literally be, you know, on their form. Um, let's say, uh, get in touch. You could you could navigate this form with your voice because they've built in the the But why not for the rest of the website? So, instead of typing um controlling this website with voice because you could do that with say whisper flow and say um, tell me more about you. No, but this is not real time. And this what do you mean it's not real time? That's my understanding like um my understanding is with this chat GPT uh with this GPT 1.5 real time you would have a mic button for example there you would click it and then you talk to the AI and the AI understands your intent and you don't have to press enter it shows it renders the right side you know the UI based on what you want and then it goes to the it goes further further and further well okay so I'm not sure if I'm going to be able to explain this correctly, but there's two like the real time happens in the voice, but it would it would call a defined set of functions or tools or something like that. Right? So the real time happens in the voice whereas what Edgar Allan have right now, the real time happens uh after you've typed it in. So it's d the content itself is dynamic. So whilst you could probably do that using GBT real time, it's not really what it's intended to do because this is um probably rag storage of some description where it's understood what we it's both understanding what we're saying. So we could type in a bunch of typos in in the text box, but it's all like I don't think it will always I don't know actually. It might it might not always write the same bit of text. I don't know. I really I think it does. I think it does. I think um yeah, I think the and I might be wrong about this, Mason, if you're watching, you can correct me, but I think uh the responses are pretty much predefined. Um it's I've just said the route. Yeah. So, there is a element of, you know, why did Scarecrow win an award? Because it was outstanding in his field. You know, there is still a little bit of AI generation stuff. It's still an AI thing. I wonder if um write me a react component. Yeah, exactly. Exactly. Um um build what I was thinking like with the real time uh AI that the AI understand the intent real time. So before without you needing to press enter, this conversation could go on like it shows it to you. Okay. Well, it's I mean it's starting to So now this is a blog article. So this is a specific thing that they have on their website or on their data. It is quite limited to the to the rag storage and on purpose from my understanding is like they did a like they they they build the entire content and the entire path um and the AI serves the user what it thinks is the best. Yeah. Yeah. Um, so like yeah, there's a middle ground here where I think GBT real time would would help, but it wouldn't be getting the most out of it. Just you there are probably simpler ways to give this voice interactivity just by using voice to text, you know, just a voice to text model. I think what um, and again, I'm not saying that Edgar Allen couldn't use Ed uh, GPT Realtime 1.5. I'm just saying it wouldn't be the best use case to to because you're you're seemingly able to bind to specific functions and actions as opposed to what Edgar Allen do which is actually quite a it's still probably doing a a bit of it it's got free reign a little bit to do whatever it needs to do. whereas you're locking voice actions down to specific functions with GPT real time which has its own set of um benefits and and whatever. But all that to be said, there's a middle ground here where yeah, you could bring voice to this. We should send this video to Mason. Mason, if you are watching like we we should have Mason on the show and you can tell us how you made the website and that would be really cool and a bunch more about AI. He's Mason has been talking about uh AEO a lot lately. I saw on um Jana podcast he was on. Yeah. So that would be cool. Well, that's all we got time for, I think. Yeah. Yeah. Join us next week for Well, actually, no, no, no, you won't join us next week because I am going on holiday. I don't know whether you can see. I've got a bunch of clothes back there ready to be rammed into my uh backpack for a week in Madiraa. So, we will be ne back next week after week after next for everything in AI design and webdev. Yeah. Um, but go to insights.commandioshow.com. Let us know what you want out of a community. That would be really cool. Uh, I think that's it. That'll do it. I've been Sam and I've been Kavara. Keep on vibing, [ __ ] This