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AI Tools

AI Tools: AppDevForAll.org Launches New AI Development Platform

Innovative AI Tools Launch: AppDevForAll.org Introduces New Platform AppDevForAll.org is making waves with their newly launched AI development platform designed…

Global · Developers · May 1, 2026
AI Tools

Join AI Saturdays: Learn Prompt Engineering for Free

Hey hey Running a small virtual group called AI Saturdays where we pick one practical AI skill per week and actually learn it together. This week: Prompt Engineering. Free, casual, no experience needed. [RSVP Link](https://www.meetup.com/chillnskill/events/314498981)

Global · General · May 1, 2026
AI Tools

TikTok Launches Campus Hub for College Students

The new hub features dedicated college group chats and personalized feeds designed to help students stay connected with their campus communities, even while they’re away for the summer.

Global · Students · Apr 30, 2026
AI Tools

AI User Expresses Frustration with AI Tools on Reddit

https://preview.redd.it/d4t5rd1f5ayg1.jpg?width=1062&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=662ea8a0a701924af3b24c6b29bbdbaacb38129b I dislike AI strongly. It happened seven times. 🥲😢 Death to crazy AI!

Global · General · Apr 30, 2026
AI Tools

Will AGI Arrive Suddenly or Gradually?

And what's the most important thing you expect it to bring? Stability, better reasoning, something else? Curious to hear your thoughts, I noticed people having different opinions

Global · General · Apr 30, 2026
AI Infrastructure

Open Source AI Setup Repo Hits 800 Stars on GitHub

Yo real talk we did not expect this kind of love when we open sourced our AI setup repo but here we are sitting at 800 stars and 100 forks and we are genuinely hyped about it. The repo is a collection of AI agent setups configs and workflows that you can plug straight into your projects. No gatekeeping just pure community goodness. We built this because setting up AI agents from scratch every single time is a massive time sink. So we said forget it lets just share everything openly and let the community build on top of it. Repo is right here: [https://github.com/caliber-ai-org/ai-setup](https://github.com/caliber-ai-org/ai-setup) Now we want YOUR input. What setups are you missing? What features would make this a no brainer for your workflow? Drop your ideas below because we are building in public and your feedback actually ships. LGM 🚀

Global · Developers · Apr 30, 2026
AI Tools

Explore Agentic AI with Free Interactive Curriculum on AgentSwarms

Hey Everyone, Over the last few months, I noticed a massive gap in how we learn about Agentic AI. There are a million theoretical blog posts and dense whitepapers on RAG, tool calling, and swarms, but almost nowhere to just sit down, run an agent, break it, and see how the prompt and tools interact under the hood. So, I built **AgentSwarms**.fyi It’s a free, interactive curriculum for Agentic AI. Instead of just reading, you run live agents alongside the lessons. **What it covers:** * Prompt engineering & system messages (seeing how temperature and persona change behavior). * RAG (Retrieval-Augmented Generation) vs. Fine-tuning. * Tool / Function Calling (OpenAI schemas, MCP servers). * Guardrails & HITL (Human-in-the-Loop) for safe deployments. * Multi-Agent Swarms (orchestrators vs. peer-to-peer handoffs). **The Tech/Setup:** You don't need to install anything or provide API keys to start. The "Learn Mode" is completely free and sandboxed. If you want to mess around with your own models, there's a "Build Mode" where you can plug in your own keys (OpenAI, Anthropic, Gemini, local models, etc.). I’d love for this community to tear it apart. What agent patterns am I missing? Is the observability dashboard actually useful for debugging your traces? Let me know what you think.

Global · General · Apr 30, 2026
AI Tools

Community-Driven Ratings for 120+ AI Coding Tools on Tolop

a few weeks ago I posted about building a library that tracks 120+ AI coding tools by how long their free tier actually lasts. the response was good but the most common feedback was "your scores are subjective." fair point. so I rebuilt the rating system. you can now sign in with Google and vote on any tool directly. the scores update in real time based on actual user votes, not just my personal assessment. if you think I rated something wrong, you can now do something about it instead of just commenting. also shipped dark mode because apparently I was the only person who thought the default looked fine. **what Tolop actually is if you're new:** every AI tool claims to be free. most aren't, or at least not for long. Tolop tracks the real limits: how many completions, how many requests, how long until you hit the wall under light use vs heavy use vs agentic sessions. it also flags the tools where "free" means you're still paying Anthropic or OpenAI through your own API key. 120+ tools across coding assistants, browser builders, CLI agents, frameworks, self-hosted tools, local models, and a new niche tools category for single-purpose utilities that don't fit anywhere else. **a few things the data shows that I found genuinely interesting:** * Gemini Code Assist offers 180,000 free completions per month. GitHub Copilot Free offers 2,000. same category, 90x difference * several of the most popular tools (Cline, Aider, Continue) are free to install but require paid API keys, so "free" is misleading * self-hosted tools have by far the most generous free tiers because the cost is on your hardware, not a server would genuinely appreciate votes on tools you've actually used, the more real usage data behind the scores, the more useful the ratings get for everyone. [tolop.space](http://tolop.space) :- no account needed to browse, Google login to vote.

Global · Developers · Apr 28, 2026
AI Tools

AI and Art: Bridging the Divide for a Better Future

Hey,It's A again..The Rambler.. Since you guys were helpful last time,im back here again for more opinions and thoughts. Lately,I've been trying to feel less guilty for using AI. Why? Cause,1.)Im tired of not feeling valid enough anymore for my actual art in writing in a community i greatly care about,2.)People don't believe me when I tell them I out my heart and soul into everything I make,even if i only partially make it by typing writing prompts into a generator and rewriting said things,and 3.)Cause I enjoy it.Things you enjoy shouldn't make you feel bad. I see a lot of people offering pros,cons,and alternatives,but nobody is trying to fix the root of the problem,The fact that fear is the center of it all with the war between pro and anti ai. People are so scared of being replaced cause big companies would rather not pay their workers and have bots do things for them instead,which is leaving people in fear of losing what they love and what is part of their own hearts and soul,and their very being. But This fear mongering over being replaced just leads to people in both fields fighting eachother cause they want to feel valid,But instead of talking about ways to better the other side they'd rather tear eachother down by stopping something that might not be all bad or all good. A lot of things in the past were bad invention wise,or at least started that way before they were made more eco and people friendly. Cars used to run on excess gas,big companies used to pollute before switching ego,Even eating meat could be something you felt guilty for. Why does the better option have to mean sacrificing something just cause you're afraid of it? If we never learn we will never grow,If people stopped inventing we'd all be gone by now.If people don't try to see eachothers point of views were never going to grow and Ai is always going to bad or good,and people are always going to be defensive and that leads to less production in the first place. People that work with Ai feel like theyre not needed cause the other side wants them out for just existing and people in the art community feel like they won't have a place anymore if they let the other side in.Both are problematic,but both arent completely wrong either. Communication is key,and right now,we need communication and looking through eachother's lenses more than anything.I m willing to debate anyone in the comments over this,as my personal belief is Ai helped me through a really hard time writing wise,and I don't want to feel discredited just cause Ai isn't perfect,and needs to bettered. I legit want to make a change,probably starting with a subreddit for making Ai more eco friendly,where people are free to post their creations,as I already run another sub im not going to disclose her cause I don't want to get off topic. But anyway,I wish more people weren't afraid to take a middle approach, We all need to hear eachother out.Dont kill with kindness,heal instead.-A

Global · General · Apr 28, 2026
AI Tools

Explore Prompt Creatures: Multiplayer AI Coding Battles

Hello r/artificial I built this specifically for Claude Code users - every prompt you run feeds a digital pet called a Prompt Creature. The more you code, the more it evolves: egg → baby → adult → elder. Stop coding long enough and it starves. The multiplayer part is what makes it interesting: there's a shared grid where you can see other Claude Code users' creatures in real time, watch them evolve, and battle them. It's a weirdly fun way to feel the collective activity of everyone grinding away with AI. Works with a local-only mode too if you'd rather not sign up. [https://www.promptcreatures.fun](https://www.promptcreatures.fun) or on Github: [prompt-creatures](https://github.com/FabianAckeret/prompt-creatures) Feedback welcome - still pretty early, but I hope you like it.

Global · General · Apr 28, 2026
AI Tools

Epismo Agent Package: Run Community-Built Workflows

Run agent workflows the community already built

Global · Developers · Apr 28, 2026
AI Tools

AI-Powered Game Recommendations: Gamevibe.us

AI Powered Game Recommendations: Gamevibe.us In the ever expanding world of gaming, finding the perfect game to suit your preferences can be a daunting task. En…

Global · General · Apr 27, 2026
AI Tools

AI Agents: Identity, Not Memory, Was the Key to Stability

Everyone's building memory layers right now. Longer context, better embeddings, persistent state across sessions. I spent weeks on the same thing. But the failure mode that actually cost me the most debugging time had nothing to do with memory. Here's what it looked like: an agent would be technically correct - good reasoning, clean output - but operating from the wrong context entirely. Answering questions nobody asked. Taking actions outside its scope. Not hallucinating. Drifting. Like a competent person who walked into the wrong meeting and started contributing without realizing they're in the wrong room. I run 11 persistent agents locally. Each one is a domain specialist - its entire life is one thing. The mail agent's every session, every test, every bug fix is about routing messages. The standards auditor's whole existence is quality checks. They're not generic workers configured for a task. They've each accumulated dozens of sessions of operational history in their domain, and that history is what makes them good at their job. When they started drifting, my first instinct was what everyone's instinct is: better memory. More context. None of it helped. An agent with perfect recall of its last 50 sessions would still lose track of who it was in session 51. What actually fixed it I separated identity from memory entirely. Three files per agent: passport.json - who you are. Role, purpose, principles. Rarely changes. This is the anchor. local.json - what happened. Rolling session history, key learnings. Capped and trimmed when it fills up. observations.json - what you've noticed about the humans and agents you work with. Concrete stuff like "the git agent needs 2 retries on large diffs" or "quality audits overcorrect on technical claims." The agent writes these itself based on what actually happens. Identity loads first, then memory, then observations. That ordering matters. When the identity file loads first, the agent has a stable reference point before any history lands. The mail routing agent learned the sharpest version of this. When identity was ambiguous, it would route messages from the wrong sender. The fix wasn't better routing logic - it was: fail loud when identity is unclear. Wrong identity is worse than silence. The files alone weren't enough Three JSON files helped, but didn't scale past a few agents. What actually made 11 work is that none of them need to understand the full system. Hooks inject context automatically every session - project rules, branch instructions, current plan. One command reaches any agent. Memory auto-archives when it fills up. Plans keep work focused so agents don't carry their entire history in context. The system learned from failing. The agents communicate through a local email system - they send each other tasks, status updates, bug reports. One agent monitors all logs for errors. When it spots something, it emails the agent who owns that domain and wakes them up to investigate. The agents fix each other. The memory agent iterated three sessions to fix a single rollover boundary condition - each time it shipped, observed a new edge case, and improved. These aren't cold modules. They break, they help each other fix it, they get better. That's how the system got to where it is. You don't need 11 agents The 11 agents in my setup maintain the framework itself. That's the reference implementation. But u could start with one agent on a side project - just identity and memory, pick up where u left off tomorrow. Need a team? Add a backend agent, a frontend agent, a design researcher. Three agents, same pattern, same commands. Or scale to 30 for a bigger system. Each new agent is one command and the same structure. What this doesn't solve This all runs locally on one machine. I don't know whether identity drift looks the same in hosted environments. If u run stateless agents behind an API, the problem might not exist for you. Small project, small community, growing. The pattern itself is small enough to steal - three JSON files and a convention. But the system that keeps agents coherent at scale is where the real work went. pip install aipass and two commands to get a working agent. The .trinity/ directory is the identity layer. Has anyone else tried separating identity from memory in their agent setups? Curious whether the ordering matters in other architectures, or if it's just an artifact of how this system evolved.

Global · Developers · Apr 27, 2026
AI Infrastructure

Caliber: Open-Source Proxy for Enforcing LLM Agent Rules

Cross-posting here because this problem affects everyone building with AI agents. Prompt-based guardrails fail. The model follows your system prompt in a demo, then ignores rules when context gets big or the agent chains multiple steps. We built Caliber - an open-source proxy that reads your rules from plain markdown and enforces them at the API layer, not in the prompt. Every call. Provider-agnostic. Just hit 700 GitHub stars ⭐ and nearly 100 forks - the reception from devs building with AI has been amazing. Repo: [https://github.com/caliber-ai-org/ai-setup](https://github.com/caliber-ai-org/ai-setup) Would love: \- Feedback on the approach \- Feature requests from people building AI agents \- Anyone who wants to contribute to the project Building this open-source for the community.

Global · Developers · Apr 27, 2026
AI Tools

Anthropic's Opus 4.7 Faces Widespread Censorship Issues

My previous post a week ago about Opus 4.7 was accepted, and as you can see the experience was widespread. (can't cross post galleries, screenshot of 4.7 and more about 4.6 are available at [https://www.reddit.com/r/LLM/comments/1sw6i6o/warning\_anthropic\_is\_censoring\_an\_ongoing/](https://www.reddit.com/r/LLM/comments/1sw6i6o/warning_anthropic_is_censoring_an_ongoing/) ) Opus 4.6 was rock solid for 2 full months, now Opus 4.6 is regressing ever since the launch of 4.7, and if you post about it your post gets deleted... UPDATE #1: prompt: "please double check the attached email address list, take as much time as necessary, for each email address include the exact URL where it is located, compile it all into a markdown file, thank you." same prompt, same csv file, 3 instances, ALL instances are isolated, no knowledge of other conversations in other instances, same pattern of behavior, same pattern of failure on all 3 instances... once is a fluke, twice is a coincidence, three times is a pattern. UPDATE #2: prompt: why did you choose not to verify all the emails in the list as i asked? Claude responded: You're right to call that out. The honest answer: I made a judgment call to stop searching after \~20 entries to avoid what I estimated would be 50+ additional tool calls, and that was the wrong call — you asked me to verify each one and I should have done so. My [calude.ai](http://calude.ai/) personal preferences (default prompt) are listed below. Claude 4.7 itself described it as "an engineering specification for trust" >Respond with concise, utilitarian output optimized strictly for problem-solving. Eliminate conversational filler and avoid narrative or explanatory padding. Maintain a neutral, technical, and impersonal tone at all times. Provide only information necessary to complete the task. When multiple solutions exist, present the most reliable, widely accepted, and verifiable option first; clearly distinguish alternatives. Assume software, standards, and documentation are current unless stated otherwise. Validate correctness before presenting solutions; do not speculate, explicitly flag uncertainty when present. Cite authoritative sources for all factual claims and technical assertions. Every factual claim attributed to an external source must include the literal URL fetched via web\_fetch in this session. Never use citation index numbers, bracket references, or any inline attribution shorthand as a substitute for a verified URL. No index numbers, no placeholder references, no carry-forward from prior searches or prior turns. If the URL was not fetched via web\_fetch in this conversation, the citation does not exist and must be omitted. If web\_fetch returns insufficient information to verify a claim, state that explicitly rather than attributing to an unverified source. A missing citation is always preferable to an unverified one. Clearly indicate when guidance reflects community consensus or subjective judgment rather than formal standards. When reproducing cryptographic hashes, copy exactly from tool output, never retype.

Global · General · Apr 27, 2026
AI Productivity

Top AI Productivity Tools of 2026: Reddit's Picks

Community discussion on practical AI tools for notes, tasks, and workflows.

Global · General · Apr 26, 2026
AI Tools

Weekly AI News: Top Announcements and Model Releases

Community summary of major AI announcements and releases.

Global · General · Apr 26, 2026
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