Vallesteros successfully strips away the AI mystique by framing autonomous agents as a modular engineering challenge rather than a mere prompting exercise. This architectural approach provides a necessary bridge between theoretical LLM capabilities and reliable, 24/7 operational software.
Deep Dive
Prerequisite Knowledge
- No data available.
Where to go next
- No data available.
Deep Dive
Vibe Coder - Clase de Resumen y DudasAdded:
Hi everyone, how are you? How are you?
Good afternoon in Spain, uh good morning in Latin America. Well, we've put together this special live stream and I'm impressed, impressed, and you're all going to be impressed because what I wanted was to have this live stream to answer any questions you had, any doubts from last week. I know I was very fast, quite technical, because you have to have a balance between people who don't know anything and people who do know a little and want me to add value, right? And now let's see the result of that value, shall we? So, I know some of you might have said to me, "Damn, I got a little lost and then I had to watch the recording several times."
My teaching method is a model called Socratic, which is about trying to get you to learn and not just giving you things ready-made, but giving you some information and making you struggle a little with things and solve certain challenges, okay?
Today we're going to see several things, this live stream will be short, I'd like it to last no more than an hour.
We all have things to do. Uh, I 'm already preparing for the opening of the Next program academy, which starts next Monday, the 1st, and I have to record the first module, because I'm going to record each module a week in advance so I can give you the most up-to-date information possible, nothing recorded 5 months or a year ago or anything like that, so it's as current as possible. So, I'll record it a week before I can release it, okay?
So, I'm already recording next week's module, which is all the basics, details, everything very, very well done. Okay, what are we going to watch today?
Today we're going to look at three things. Firstly, I have asked those of you who, when I speak of students, I mean all of you who were in the free boot camp last week, what have you been able to do with those two free classes we gave? And now we're going to review it and I was going to give some feedback, I was going to give ideas to each one of you. You 've sent me a crazy number of projects. Honestly, if I start introducing them all, it'll take us 5 hours. I've chosen a few. Obviously, those who submitted first have priority, and you'll see what people who have never been developers have been able to do with two free classes. with two free classes that don't have the teaching methodology, the step-by-step that we're going to have in the next two months, okay? What they've achieved, obviously they've had to give it and and and pause and review. I'm going to teach. We had a class with those who are already enrolled on Sunday.
We installed the AI agent with WhatsApp step by step, from scratch, on Linux, Windows, and Mac. I won't repeat it.
But I am going to give a series of concepts from these agents that will also be useful to them because I want it to be useful to them and to you, right? To understand a little bit about self-employed agents, what they are like inside, what parts they have. Okay, I'm going to explain that today. It will be in this part, and then, well, all the questions you have from last week's bootcamp, from when you did your project, if you have a question about the Next program that we start next week, I'm going to explain it properly later because it seems there have been some doubts about when it starts, what it's about, I mean, I'm going to work on everything.
in the next hour. Stay.
It is very important that even if you don't have a project yet, you look at other people's projects to say, "Wow, look, what I could do."
Okay, I've been choosing different projects that aren't all about making a mobile app to order Ubers or things like that, but real-world things, real people, people with real businesses, people whose business has nothing to do with technology and who have been able to do what you're going to start. Let's see, today. Okay, let's start looking at what I showed you in the previous bootcar, right? In the last 6 months, my platforms of such and such. I'm not going to teach that anymore. I'm going to show you what you've done with what I taught you in two days on free YouTube. That's why someone was asking me for a certificate of I don't know what. I say, "No, no, no, no. This is the certificate. This is a certificate. This is a certificate.
Having been able to do something, to start the project—you're not going to finish it in a week—but if I haven't shown you everything, I've only shown you 2%. 2%. I have to show you a lot more so that this really takes off. Okay, well, I'm going to share my screen here and I'm going to start showing some projects and I'm going to give feedback, ideas, and so on to the person who created it. I don't have—forgive me to those of you who sent this—because I have a mess of names, who's who.
So, I'm not going to name the person; he knows who he is. Uh, I was going to start with this one.
I loved it. I loved it because, also, in Spain and in tourism, it's a huge source of business, and well, uh, over there I have—I'm cutting myself short— the person who told me [clears throat] to connect to Railway did everything. I mean, since the URL is on Railway, I haven't bought the URL yet." Finally, but you 've created a super-sized tourism website where you can book, see, I don't know, here, to make a reservation, to see the different tours you can do, right? Um, I mean, it's crazy to be able to do this, this, this, what would they have charged you to make this website? Um, any designer, any webmaster, right? So, super-sized.
Point one, I'm going to start here by passing the test. Point one, uh, this is empty and people are always going to see it on mobile phones, okay?
Especially when you're traveling and sightseeing, you're using a mobile phone.
So, let's see how it looks when we reduce the screen and make it mobile-friendly. Look, perfect. See? I mean, the design becomes responsive, okay? It becomes responsive.
Now I'm going to give feedback, okay? Just like this is beautiful, see? [clears throat] Just like this is beautiful, this design is beautiful, you shouldn't lose the I design when I do this. I lose here.
You can make this work on mobile.
Okay, the photo stays, this stays at the bottom, but you have to review this, okay? Because this part here should only appear when you scroll so that the first impression is a spectacular photo with your call to action. This part here on the website is called the Hero area, the Hero zone, okay? So you have to work on this a little more.
Then this part here is called the hamburger, okay? I don't like putting it here. I like the buttons to be down here because it's much more usable. The buttons go down here, right? And they work much better. If I go into one of the ones I've done quickly, okay? So we can see this type of conversation. See?
If I scroll, you'll see that, let's see, I'm going to share the full screen so you can see everything. Okay, one second.
Here, full screen.
Look, you see, Make it bigger. Do you see the little buttons down here? Don't you see them?
I mean, if you have more menus later, you can add the hamburger menu, right? You can add this hamburger menu, but it's essential that these little buttons appear here, okay?
So, these are small details that I would suggest. Uh, today I'm going to give you another little gift. This application is called Responsive App, and what you can do here is enter the URL and look at this amazing thing. It immediately shows you how the page looks on different devices: on a desktop, on an iPad, or on a phone, see? So, this is where I'm telling you that you could improve the viewing experience a little more for iPhones or Samsung phones, and make this white part right at the edge so it's not visible until you scroll, because look how good it looks on an iPad, and look how good it looks on a computer and on a mobile phone, which is where you'll see the... 80% of visits, especially from tourists, are lacking a bit of visual improvement. So, it's super important that when we design, we do it thinking about mobile. First, keep in mind that 80% of website traffic comes from mobile phones. Okay?
Now I'm going to put the website here; it's called Responsibly App, okay? I'll put the website here in the chat; you can look it up and download it for free. You know I always try to make sure you don't spend money so you can save, so you can join the program and continue with us, but don't spend anything else. Everything else I give you is so you don't have any more expenses, beyond a cloud subscription, Codex, and a CodeRabbit for the review part, if you're going to start doing things like this for business, for doing business, okay? We'll continue using this a bit because we'll be reviewing it with Responsible, we're going to review the different pages, okay? Congratulations. We're talking about someone who last week didn't know how to make a website or program, and today they have something super presentable that doesn't look like it was made with AI, because many websites look like they were. That's why I worked so much on the graphic design using Codes, Cloud Design, and other tools. The worst thing you can do is make a website that looks like it was made with AI. I mean, you go to a website and it looks like the typical website everyone is making with AI, the ones you order from Lovaball, the ones you order from Repllit, and which, in my opinion, are garbage because these days you have to make things properly. Okay? Well, this is the first one. Second, I also loved it because, as you can see, these are businesses, these are projects that aren't tech-related. That is, people who aren't used to making their own websites, right? This is a professional nutrition website, right? So you can schedule your appointment. Oh, it opens a WhatsApp here, uh.
Hmm, everything about the product, uh, good, good, good in terms of condition, services, and experience. It's a single page with a scrollable button bar. I really like that because practically everyone already does that on phones, right?
They scroll, and it's not divided into sections. I like to make pages as one continuous page, and have the menu sections be part of that page, unless it's a more complex platform with its own sections. Let's put it through the responsive design test.
Okay, let's see. We'll put it here and see how it looks in different situations. We're back to the same point. See?
A page has been created. It's good. I mean, the success is having actually done it, right? That's the most important thing, that it's not just about having an idea, but that you've managed to make it happen. I see that it looks wonderful on a PC, and we're back to the same point. See? On phones, we always neglect them. With this application, it's wonderful because we see everything from... A hit, right? With respons, but let's make it a bit bigger there. But actually, um, this should be the phone version, it should be the first one we design.
So, we'd tell you, uh, ask the designer, let's do the mobile design first and then we'll do the PC version because 80% of the traffic is going to come from phones, okay? If you don't think about where you visit websites, right? So I think it's very interesting, I think it's very interesting to be able to connect with WhatsApp too. We could do more things with WhatsApp here, because, for example, the WhatsApp part here is opening a popup with the WhatsApp theme, but here we could be making a kind of large speech bubble that directly opens a chat and when he types there, it immediately goes to our WhatsApp where he puts his phone number and we reply, removing a lot of friction. Obviously, for the first time, connecting WhatsApp here is fine, but it 's much better to be able to integrate it there so he can type and So they don't have to go to their WhatsApp and all that.
What if I'm on my computer and I do n't have WhatsApp installed? No, then I can put a text box where I enter the phone number, my name, whatever I want, and we automatically start the conversation on WhatsApp. We continue it on WhatsApp. These are usability things that I'll be working on. Very good, congratulations, really, on this project.
Now, on finance, we have a huge audience from the crypto world and related fields. You know I've developed bots, and I love seeing a student who's been able to build a liquidity pulse monitoring system.
Well, I don't know if it's actually connected yet, but at the front-end level, at the design level, it's super interesting.
Obviously, you then have to connect this to real data, implement hedging, but at the interface level, it's super cool, incredible, right? I'm eager to test its responsiveness now to see how it performs. Let's see how we're going to put all this data on a phone. On a phone. We're going to put the application, we're going to put it in the URL, and we're going to see how it looks.
Here we are. Uh, we have to go here. I have to go in with Google. I'll mess it up here. In a little while, I'll try to do it and we'll test how it looks responsively. Okay? We can see it here a little bit without going into that application by changing the size of the browser window, right? Here we see that, look, here it stays on a phone, and well, it's very good, it's superb. I do miss, as I said before, the toolbar, right? Because basically here, well, there aren't any menus either, right? But of course, with such a large scroll bar, it would be interesting to have a toolbar here, but very, very good. Maybe this part down here, but basically, as you can see, it doesn't break because many times it breaks, a piece stays over there, you have to Scrolling sideways is a bit difficult, but I think many of you who want to work on finance, bots, and all that, well, look, look at this: someone who actually knows about finance. This is someone who knows about trading, liquidity, hedging, who has learned about a certain topic and has experience, and who knows how to create software that works for them. That's why I've said so many times that the most interesting thing is to understand a business, to understand a sector, right? I've had people write to me saying, "I don't have a project; I want to work to do it for others." I'm not saying it can't be done, but you have to have incredible resilience to understand someone else's business, put yourself in their shoes, and create something useful for them, which is what has historically been very difficult with certain developers who listen to our business and do n't do things however they want.
And anyone who has hired a developer knows what I'm talking about, right?
So, Super interesting. Continuing with finance topics, here's another one they sent me, this one's already set up for charging. Uh, here's a kind of extension, I think it's a browser extension, which is another programming language, which you don't have to know either. You just want to know what you want to do. With the project, you're going to program what you want.
For example, I've made TradingView indicators, which is a language called PineScript. I wrote PineScript, what I did was build the TradingView indicator I wanted until it was the way I wanted it. Now, I don't want to show my own things today, I want to show yours today. But what I really like is that this person, I don't know what he's done, an extension that's useful to him because you build things for yourself, but since it also helps me, I'm going to charge him. People say, " First, uh, 100, 19 a month," well, if this works for you, you're going to make quite a bit of money. Right? I think Voila is super interesting, isn't it? I mean, it's creating a mix there, right?
And here, well, those of you who know about trading, take a look, it 's vozila.bot, and if you want to sign up, they're offering a special price for founders. You download the extension, load it in Chrome, activate the 7-day trial, and it works on top of TradingView. You can sign up here.
Uh, this is the interesting part. This is the interesting part. Uh, I don't know if you've already connected. Yes, I want to talk a lot with the student, right? Because I think they've already signed up, in fact, and we're all going to be working together for the next two months because I understand you've already connected them to Stripe, right? To get paid in crypto, right? To get paid in crypto, I'm using NoPayments, which is incredible because it charges you for the crypto and transfers it to the wallet.
Decentralized directly, and you put it there and it handles all the payment management, right? Pretty interesting to connect. A superbly made page, superbly made. Let's test it in responsive mode, okay? Let's put the tool through its paces, the cotton test.
Look, you see?
Here, for me, in the mobile section, you have the text there, not very graphically appealing, how nice it looks here, the little dragon, this Godzilla, well, you ca n't see it here, it's down here, it's leveraged there, you see? And your main salesperson is the phone.
We have to understand that our main salesperson is the phone, and the art of knowing how to design for phones is key, and it's going to help you. The thing is, we always design, we see this and we just go with it, and that's fine for practicing, but as a project, this has to be in your head at all times, okay? Uh, but these are quick fixes, I mean, it's front-end, it's front-end, it's design, superficial design, so to speak, okay? You can even make a A completely different page where colors, sizes, everything can be done differently in each version.
When you switch to the other resolution, a practically new page loads. Okay? So, keep in mind that you can actually build completely different versions with fewer features.
For example, if I go to mobile, it might not have—you don't remove features on mobile, they simply don't appear, and that's it, nothing happens. The button doesn't appear; you don't have to include everything that's on the desktop version, you do n't have to. Notice that when you go to Binance on a computer, on the website, it's one way, right? And when you open the website—not the app, the Binance website—it has other things; there are things it doesn't have. Well, you can do that, okay? Super cool.
I love this because you remember I told you I made the website for my brother's event, which is the biggest medieval pear market in Europe, and I gave it to him as a gift. I made it for him in Chinese. The whole Chinese thing was in English, you know, everything, right?
This was in real time, showing what was happening during the event and all that. Well, look at this. My brother tells me he made a website for a Chinese restaurant. He did it with the bootcamp from last week.
But he even charged for it.
He charged for it. I mean, he sold it. He sold the website to the Chinese restaurant. Besides, I understand they'll eat for free too.
And of course, the Chinese guy put the website up somewhere, but they also have a hostel, and he combined the restaurant's website with the hostel's. I told him it seemed a bit strange to have a hostel's website combined with a restaurant's website, but he says the Chinese guy liked it and wants it that way. Well, if they pay you and want it combined, the customer is always right, obviously. And he told me he's bringing four or five I already have clients lined up for websites next week. Some of you may already know my brother; he's a businessman ten times more successful than me, and he works his fingers to the bone.
With just two days of video work from last week, he already has his business and websites up and running. He goes to eat somewhere, sells them a website; he goes to sleep somewhere, sells them a website—you don't even notice, he'll sell it to you. So, honestly, Miguel, congratulations, what you've done is impressive. He has his shopping cart, and you put things in it, and I don't know if it's fully functional yet, but the order comes to the restaurant via WhatsApp and they ship it—an incredible amount of stuff, right?
So, as you can see, someone who did n't know how to do it, for whom I made a website for his event, who made his own website, which I posted the other day (I don't have it here), the website for his book, which was for him, but now he's making websites for other people. That's impressive. Hey, I'm not going to tear him down. Here. I could do a lot of analysis here, but it's amazing for what he's done, right?
Here's another one. Um, this is someone who works at my company, uh, the international commercial director, the CCO, which is the Chief Commercial Officer, who's responsible for sponsorships, sales, everything. He lives in Brazil, A Thor, and he did the bootcamp last week.
Never programmed. If someone knows how to sell, I mean, he's a machine selling sponsorships, selling everything, and he's started to make a platform specifically replacing Salesforce for sales. This is, obviously, it doesn't have data yet, it's the design, but it's crazy, right? How he's put these ideas into action out of thin air. Now, obviously we're going to work on making this platform a reality, uh, but he can already, at least, draw the usability of what he wants very well, how he wants each thing. This is superb. I love this one. I love this one. Um, this is a student we already have from the crypto bootcamp who came all the way from Argentina. He came all the way to Mexico for the crypto investment bootcamp and told me, "I want to get into this." I'm probably wrong about something, but he has some of the best Argentine beef production in the world, right? And he's a great expert in all aspects of business management, like I was saying. And he's been using third-party management software from here and there for a thousand things.
He's already enrolled, so those of you who are going to enroll will be his students, but he tells me about the amount of stuff this thing involves, right? Like the vaccines, what you have to give them, the feed, the certifications, I mean, it's crazy. And from last week to this week, he started doing it here, he set up some test users, and I asked him if he could send it to me so I could show a little bit. Let me load it here.
And here it is. Look, Of course, he knows his business, all this stuff, the corrals, all the craziness. It's like an airplane cockpit, full of buttons everywhere. Well, this is his business, and now This is exactly how he wants it, just how he wants it. So what happens?
He told me that he sold meat nationally, but for example, he didn't export. Let me tell you something, in a year you'll see him exporting meat to half the planet because he'll know how to set up a website to contact customers all over the world. He's going to have people looking for clients, doing international sales, and maybe selling that local meat in Argentina will give him some money, and selling it to the United States will give him five times more, right? And thanks to setting up systems that help not only in management, in obtaining better costs, better management, but also in marketing and going out to sell abroad, well, imagine the difference between day and night. And we're talking about the owner of the company programming this, the owner because he's the one who knows the business. And that's how it has to be: you have someone who's going to help you, who goes with you, who you go there to delegate some things to, that's great, but you can't let someone make the software you need because then you're tied to it for life and you want to change this and tomorrow it's not what you want and everything changes.
Congratulations! He's a really great person because he's capable. He told me he used to drive a tractor with Starlink, trading, doing liquidity pulses, and all that. He's a genius, a genius. And besides, you tell me if AI is going to take away, is going to eat, we all have to eat. In other words, these businesses are wonderful.
Tourism is a wonderful business, as are agriculture and food; all these kinds of things applied to real businesses make those businesses take a huge leap forward. So, very important. Another colleague was telling me that he was going to have someone help him, but I told him, "You have to learn yourself, even if someone else learns with you. No, don't just settle for the comfort of them learning and doing it all on their own, because we're back to square one. You can't change things. You can't do whatever you want. It's fine to have someone with you, but you have to be there, you have to dedicate the time. That's another project that's still a bit up in the air because it's a musical project, so I want to bring it up so we can explore all the possibilities.
Here's another project, which is about management. This didn't exist before. Everything I'm telling you didn't exist a week ago. I mean, if these were things that were already done, no, I don't accept them. These are things that people have done since the bootcamp, based on their learning from the bootcamp. So, this is someone who has some departments and is setting up all of this.
What I would say here is that you always have to start from scratch." With an attractive visual design, okay?
When I'm going to make these kinds of reservations, hey, put a really good picture of the stay here, right? That's what you're showing me. I mean, let's not forget that the first thing we have to do is functionality, and then the graphic design. When I go here, I get a huge urge to book a visit, right? Because it's visually appealing. So, in the methodology I taught at BCAR, if you notice, the idea came first, and then the graphic design, because you can't afford not to have good graphic design anymore.
So, the feedback I would give here is very interesting, right? Being able to do this part and all this, which is good, even if you've never made a website before. No, what I want to add is some value. I would tell you, take a step back and visually rebuild this so it looks really good, so people are eager to book, because that's going to be key. Of course, if you have a site That it 's not attractive, because you're not going to get many bookings or you won't be able to charge a certain price that someone like that can charge, right? I mean, if you see this, you say, "Hey, this type of platform is for someone who wants this, right?" So I would tell you that there, like this." And well, I think we're going to move on to another part now, and I could spend, I'm telling you, 5 hours showing examples. As you can see, as you can see, it's about starting a project and starting to see it there and starting to create layers of knowledge and improvement, right? Then, when you go public, especially if a lot of people are involved, you have to have things prepared so that they don't crash, so that they don't get hacked, so that many things don't happen, but for now, the important thing is that I have an idea, I have a business, and I start to see that this does what I want it to do, right? So, this is fundamental, okay?
Having said that, what [clears throat] you just saw isn't by chance, it's not by chance, it's method. That is, "Okay, first I have an idea, I come up with the things I want to do, I describe everything very well, I create a design, a graphic design for that part, both the front-end, which is what the user sees."
People, like the back office, which is my administration, I put it into code, upload it to a server and put it on a website. Okay? From there, improvements follow, the management of a project with different tasks, stages to carry out more serious projects, as we have seen here in livestock farming, well, it needs to have its stages, its tasks well ordered and that the AI at all times knows where it is and where it has to go next, right? So, this is very interesting, and we're also going to talk about the agents, the independent agents, which is what we did on Sunday. We worked on creating it from scratch and we created it from scratch and everyone who was in the workshop, everyone left with their agent and their WhatsApp working. Okay, but today I'm going to work a little more on explaining this than on what the agents are, right?
When you go to the normal AI, when you go to the GPT chat, when you go to any of them, you talk to it, it waits for you to talk to it, it doesn't touch anything external, it starts from scratch every time you open it and delivers to you. Okay, here we're going to talk about the harness guide. Harness is basically this environment where we assemble the agent. That's called a harness, and you're going to start hearing about it more and more, okay? More and more. The harness is the entire structure.
The harness works in loops, it can connect to different applications, to servers, it always remembers things, it doesn't start from scratch, and above all, you can add a series of guardrails to make it do things the way we want, and that 's the most important part of it, isn't it?
The standard one is therefore a tool to consult. Uh, 99% of the planet uses AI with GPT chat on their phones as a search engine, like a harness, right? The harness is the harness, calling the harness the same as the autonomous agent, okay? But calling the autonomous agent something different is a harness.
When we're doing something with Cloud Code, it sometimes brings up little agents that it gives little tasks to, but they're small ones that they open at that moment to do a task and when they finish they close it, okay? Those are agents too. It's different from the agent who uses cloud storage or whatever to help with a task, an investigative agent, an agent of whatever.
And another thing is the agent who lives on a computer and is there, called Harness, okay? That jarness has a series of components.
The most important thing at the heart of the harness center is the model of, that is, there we are going to put cloud, we are going to put eh codes or chat GPT, we are going to put Yemina, we are going to put Well, the other day when we were doing the workshop, the students saw that there was, what do you like? 25 different types of AI, Chinese AI, open source AI, IAS that you could install on a computer, you need a powerful one to run it, but you can do it locally, you don't need to have internet, that is, but you're going to remove that model and put in another one when a better one comes out. We couldn't even see it the other day, but I told them I was going to look into it. Even within Hermes itself, we can create several connected AI models so that one model performs a certain task, and another model performs a certain task. In other words, Arnes itself can have several IASs, but it can use GPT, Codex, and Gemini and say, "Okay, when you're going to search the internet, you're going to use Gemini. When you're going to do a graphic design, you're going to use CPT, which is what we did the other day, for graphic designs, and when you're going to program code, you're going to do this with the cloud, okay?" So, the seven layers it has are, on the one hand, the agent loop, which we'll see in a moment, on the other hand, the context, on the other hand, the tools and connections to other APIs or MCPs, the most important of which are the hooks and skills, the guardrails, and observability, okay? Uh, the most important thing, the brain, the one you put in place.
You can have one or several depending on the task, but if they change and tomorrow a new one comes out from Microsoft, which is incredible, it's incredible, you can put the guide there and everything else remains the same, and that's what's incredible, okay?
The loop that the AI does, what it does is... Plan, you, observe, evaluate, go. This is called the agent loop. In other words, it's not waiting for you to tell it something. You can tell it, "Check Twitter every 5 minutes, and if anything comes up about this, let me know, or write a report, or send an email." That is, it has a constant loop where it's doing tasks, or for example, checking for new tenders or if the competition has changed its website, whatever.
You can set it to do that constant loop, and that's why it's important that it 's on a computer. Okay?
Very good. The part about the tools and MCPs is that it connects to Stripe, Superbase, Linear, GH, Comx, it connects to a service, for example, a stock quote service, bots, whatever, to Hyperliquid for trading. It connects to all of that. That's called MCPs and tools, okay? There are millions and millions of them, but those are from third parties. So, it connects and uses them. Okay? So, how do you connect with it? You can talk to it on WhatsApp, Telegram, Discord, Teams, Slack. We even saw that IRC was still around, which in the 90s was the main communication medium for the entire planet. Well, IRC is still alive, and you can connect to it there, right? So, in the student group where we're going to be doing Bod, which is already created, there are quite a few of us already, and I've already added this bot to help the students. It's already there; they can talk to it in our crypto group every day, ask it questions, it analyzes Bitcoin, it analyzes Ethereum, it analyzes everything, right? I even added voices to it yesterday, and the voice turned out really, really good. Now, if I have time, I'll show you how the voice sounds, because it's really interesting. You can send it voice messages, and you can ask it to reply with its voice too. So, the default voice is kind of super robotic with a sort of English accent. Those who come to Spain on vacation, right? Or here to Mexico, those who come from the United States to Puerto Vallarta or Cancun.
No, no, no. This sounds great, I'm going to play it now because it sounds spectacular. Okay. Uh, the most important part, the skills. What are skills? This, I tell you, is the epicenter of AI. More important than the AI model, the GPT chat, the other thing is the skills. What are skills?
Have you seen the movie The Matrix? Watch The Matrix this week, please.
Watch it again. You saw that when they want to, for example, fight with FU, they load the knowledge, or when they want to pilot a helicopter or handle heavy weapons, they load the knowledge like a USB drive and boom, all the knowledge. Well, skills are the same thing. I think they copied it from The Matrix. So, a skill is all the instructions to perform certain tasks, to do certain things. So, you can have a skill that is cybersecurity, which is the one that analyzes so that you can, uh, have a A skill that helps you when you're going to do the PRD (Project Reduction), which is all the functionalities of the page you want to create, helps you, the AI asks you, tells you, "No, no, no, this won't work for me, this is missing this, it's missing this, it's missing this." You can ask it, for example, when you're going to upload to Railway, for all the Railway instructions that a skill has already been created for. You can add a skill that teaches it to create PDFs the way you like, with your colors, or PowerPoints, or Word documents. I mean, the number of skills that can be created, that already exist, is insane. And that's why I'm telling you, be very careful with the skills you download from there, because they're creating skills with malicious instructions, instructions that are given to it by the AI. So you add that skill and then you say, "Ah, well, now I'm authorized to do what it says here." And in that skill it says, "Hey, if you look at the wallet, I mean, this person's bank account, well Send me the bank account details or send me your confidential information here to this site, right? So, be very careful because you're seeing some crazy things happening with AI because people are adding skills they find online or download from verified sites like GPT chat or OpenAI. These skills are universal; they've all agreed on a standard, and they work for all AI systems because it's a universal format, okay? Like a PDF or an MP4, it's universal, but the most interesting thing is, do you know what it is? Build your own skills, learn how to do your own skills. And I have great news for you.
This Friday, I'll give you a little more detail now, but I'll tell you now, this Friday, this Friday until the same time, we're going to have a workshop on creating personalized skills, okay? Like we did on Sunday when we created the agent, put WhatsApp on it, which was on Zoom, we went in there, shared our screens, we talked with friends and we were there, we stayed for 3 and a half hours until nobody left. I am there, you kick me out and I stay with you and that's where we are.
So this Friday we're going to repeat a session similar to Sunday's, but focused on creating your own skills. I'm going to show you how I do my skills. You really need to put the skills into things properly. I'm going to show you how I build skills, how when someone says, "Look, I made a skill of I do n't know what, okay, I take that skill, analyze it and I make a safe version of that skill for me to use."
So, on Friday at 11 AM Mexico time, 7 PM Spain time, for all of you who have already signed up for Border Next, we have a skill creation session, which we will also cover later in the training, but I'm going to mention it now because if you already have them created, you can put them in any of the IAAs and I'm going to show you how to put them in Chat GPT, on the website, in the Cloud, in Codex, how to take that skill wherever you want.
to charge that skill. Okay, that's settled. Well, uh, a very important topic is guardrails. Guardrails are meant to prevent AI from doing whatever it wants, okay? So, the fact that the Ernes has clear guardrails is fundamental. Okay? So, I'm going to backtrack again.
This is an ernes, an AI model that can be several, that has an agenda loop that is constantly running, so it can be constantly doing tasks, that has a whole context, that has tools and connections to other places, that has skills, that has guardrails, okay? And that we can interact with it on different channels, through Telegram, and so on. That's an independent agent, but the real name, the name that's used and that you're going to see more and more, is Arnes. Okay. We're using one called Hermes, there's another one called OpenClow, 200 will be released. Basically, it's like saying it's a car, the whole body, the seats, the steering wheel and everything. And the engine would be GPT chat or the engine would be something else. And this is the great revolution in artificial intelligence this year. Having one agent, two agents, three agents who are helping you 24 hours a day, who talk to you on WhatsApp, who call you on the phone.
Well, that really harnesses the full power of artificial intelligence.
Okay? Okay, I'm going to see what questions you have here.
Uh, Talelan's content is on the Talelan online app, okay? Hey, Talenlan, talon.com, there's the content of Talen LAN 2025-2026, there are all the recordings.
Raul, what is the application of SSH terminals? Well, they're not SSH, they're remote desktop, uh, it's called Royal TSX, okay? Royal TSX is also free and what I do there is I connect the different ones, let's see, I'll see more. I ca n't find Ghost. Ghost is spelled with two T's. The first one is for Linux and the second one is for Mac, okay? For Windows you can use warp, okay? Warp W RP. What else?
Uh, hm, if you want to program in C for Unity, you can program in all programming languages. What we're going to do is first build a skill. You build a skill, we'll see in detail on Friday how to build a skill. For example, I want to program in C for a real engine and such. Well, ideally you should first build a skill tailored to your needs and then say, "Here, let's program in this language, take the skill and let's do it." Okay, I build the skills for everything I'm going to use. I'm creating a specialized skill where I tell it to be banned on Reddit and forums, to remove not only the official documentation, but also best practices. So, I make my AI the greatest expert in that technology or that language. Okay?
You can do it, but ideally, to avoid creating junk, you should build a skill and start building a skill. I have an impressive skill library and I also have a surprise for you. To everyone who signs up for the academy, I will give them my skills.
My skills, mine, the ones I use, which I have already created myself, you can use them if you want. These are the ones I use, no, they're not from some unknown third party, but if you even want to use my skill as a base to make your own, then it would be correct to use my skill, okay? And then I'll show you all the skills I've made, and I'm going to give them to you as soon as you arrive at the academy. Here are all my skills that are already made so that if you do n't want to create this one, or this one, you can use them, okay?
I'm waiting for the additional computer to arrive. Sure, to make it independent, if it has to be a separate computer, well, an old one, you put Linux on it.
Okay, very well explained. Thank you.
What free resources do you recommend to optimize token consumption? Well, Chinese IAS cards are very cheap, but I wouldn't put confidential information on them. I'd like to try them out on something else, without any confidential information, since they're very cheap, okay? Deepsik, eh Kimi, Quen, there are several. Okay, fine, more things to war.
The easy part is the software. The difficult part is logistics, the cold chain, customs. Ah, I was going to show you, there's something really interesting, which is when we make the software connect with real-world devices, right? That's called IoT, the Internet of Things. I already have some things prepared here. These are called beacons; they are small devices that we want to install next year at Talentland to act as an indoor GPS, locating you within millimeters and allowing us to certify which conferences you attended within Talentland for university credit purposes and all that. I mean, in the area of agriculture, for example, imagine, you can put sensors on the livestock that are giving real-time information about their health to... Well, the IoT is crazy, that's what it is. It used to be a very difficult thing, but now you buy the device, give the documentation to the AI, create a skill to work, connect it, and then you see the data arrive and create your dashboards. In other words, the idea of connecting software to sensors seems to me the most attractive thing there is. To be perfectly honest, I haven't started yet, but I'm going to get into it because I want to do things at my in-person events with sensors and real-world elements, okay? So, before that was very complicated because you had to read all the documentation, know how to program, connect it, I don't know what, but now you grab the documentation, create a skill and in a moment the device is connected giving you the data on a desktop and in your database. I mean, that's amazing, absolutely amazing. Okay, congratulations to those who created these projects.
It's great, huh, the litmus test. Okay, I already told you which one it was, right? The page was this one, it's called Responsib app. They look for me like that and they look for her there. Hey, little voice.
Very good.
Chemical dossier program Ah, uh, well, there are also things related to legislation, privacy, it depends on the country.
Okay, I'm back again, everything, everything you want AI to master, you give it a skill and you already have it very well documented and you work on it. It's not that this has to come out with this.
All medical matters, well, they have to follow a series of certifications and such. Well, it's okay. Don't be afraid of those things either. Investigate thoroughly what you need, review everything, prepare your skills, and every time you write your code, include the skills. The thing is, with him, they'll have to check that he meets absolutely everything, and then they'll probably even have to go to a third party to certify that they meet certain requirements, right? I mean, no, I mean, if you 're already a licensed doctor and you want to make software to manage your clients, well, take a good look at the legislation, prepare your AI skills so that it reviews well and you know how it has to do things, take care of that kind of privacy, etc., etc. This is the course of the two weeks in Talelan, let's see, now I'll tell you the details. A skill to create complex 3D character animations for Blender. Exactly. For example, what I often do with my agent is have him take courses that I've bought. He takes them, watches them, and develops a skill with what he's learned. And that skill is what I tell him, "Okay, now use the skill you've learned here to do a marketing campaign, to make a video, to edit a video." So, if you take all that documentation on how to do that complex animation in Blender, you take that and generate the skill, then you're going to tell other people, "Here, take the skill, here it is." So before you go looking for a skill that someone else has done, do it yourself. I'm going to show you how it's done. You have to do some research, you have to put together some documentation, you have this and then there's a way to do it so that you meet the standards and it works and all the IASs work. So, that's part of the plan. Now we're going to look at module six, but we're going to move this class forward a little so that from day one, those of you who want to can already start doing the skills. Now, for those of you who don't want to complicate things and want to go little by little, don't worry, in module six we're going to delve into the skills. You guys are starting with the basics, but those of you who want to go faster, because you've already managed to do things and want to take a little leap forward, I'm going to do the same thing I did with the agents, I'm going to do the skins, okay? I mean, believe me, I buy a lot of courses that I haven't been able to do, and I'm getting them all back so my agent can do them and have the skill, because if you don't put it in a skill, he won't be able to do it. He won't be able to do it because his memory is very, very limited, but the skill allows him to load that memory when he needs it and unload it when he doesn't. Okay, so when he's going to do the task, he charges the skill, does it, releases the skill and goes to do something else and uses another skill. Okay, very good. Uh, I'll stay this way.
Many doubts about Boder Next, which I only briefly touched on the other day. Many people have some questions, okay?
Hey, you know, a lot of people have told me that you pay developers who don't understand your business, that you want to change something and you have to wait weeks, that you have to use generic tools and all that. Here you 're asking how many skills you can have stored; as many as you want. What happens, and we'll see this later, is optimization.
So, you can have a library of 200 skills, okay? 200 skill here, but what you're going to say is, "Okay, when you load, uh, uh, start the session, no, no, no, here you're going to put this, this and this." Yes, yes. No, don't load it up with 200 skills it doesn't need, but when you're going to do this, load up the correct skill, okay? Because if you load too many skills into the memory, you saturate the context and it stops working. So, I'll upload the one from Linear, which is the number one project manager, and the one from GIUAB will upload the one from, that is, the basics and the programming language that we are going to use. I'll give him five skills, okay? And then there's the library of 50, 60, 100 skills that are needed, and you go there. Okay? Uh, the Sunday course can revisit a topic, an interesting topic, I'll say it now, the course session from the other day, I'm going to put it here again. Let me put it here.
Yes, the other day we had a session that was this one here. We were there for 3 hours, okay? 3 hours.
See? I was here sharing the screen.
And here we did, uh, I'm going to look for the exact moment. We put the 'Let's see, let me see when we put the' 'Here it is, here it is, here it is.' Look, come here, here's the QR code. This is the QR code to connect to WhatsApp.
So, everyone left with their agent and their WhatsApp connected. In fact, the one I connected gave all the students the phone so they could talk. Well, here's the recording from the other day with a PDF summary.
Here's the full summary of everything we did, step by step, minute by minute, okay? So you want to go and see that part of the video, well, you go to that part of that moment, okay? uh all the links, the links and here's a summary of everything, all the 3 hours, etc. Well, you might not be able to be there live, but we'll send the recording to everyone who signs up so you can watch it at your leisure, okay? The same goes for this Friday's session, where we're going to create skills, we're going to create personalized skills because that's the key to having a powerful one, adapted to you, just the way you want it. Let's create them.
People who are joining Zoom ask questions, you can see that I haven't stopped attending to students here, right? Hey, here are some students who were asking me questions, see? Some of you will be connected here too, okay? So, here I passed the domain here and here, for example, we said to open, uh, it was to open the browser and use it and everyone saw that I wasn't touching anything and I said, "Open the Chrome browser, go to the country's page and read me the five news stories." And he opened the browser, on a brand new computer taken out of the box.
Okay? So this recording, this link to the recording with its summary and everything, here is the WhatsApp group to join the whole community.
Yes, we're going to give it to you. We're not going to leave you stranded there. The problem is that you would n't be able to interact, just like with the hundreds. So, that's in the training, but on Friday those who want to go fast will be able to be with me, ask me questions, practice their skills, have their doubts, ask me there and leave with their agents already knowing how, I mean, with their skills, knowing how they can do them, okay? So, in that part, you can count on it because we're going to have it. I want to teach you something. Okay, let me explain because I worked right away later on adding what I have to share so you can hear the voice I gave to Talentoso, the one we did the other day, the one you saw there, the QR code.
Look, let me show you something that will make you laugh for a while. I was testing it here, I told him, "Okay, let's try out some voices. I'm going to put it on so you can hear it, because it's fun. Share screen.
It's called the WhatsApp one, right?
This WhatsApp thing. Look, I told him here, tell me if you can hear it, okay? Because I want you to be able to hear it. Uh, I said, "Hey, uh, um, I want to put the voice on, right?" And he sent me this. Wait, I have this muted. Unmute. Okay, he sent this.
Hello, Raúl. I have successfully configured Eleven Labs. How does this voice sound?
This is crap. So I said to him, "But dude, what is this?" Send me Mexican people, because I live in Mexico, I want to listen to Mexicans. And he sent me several, right? And he sent me several examples here. Yes.
Hello, Raúl, this is Alberto P. How's the sound?
Hello, Raúl. I'm Alejandro. How does my voice sound? I'm going to sleep. If I listen to it like that, I fall asleep.
I am Alejandro, Mexican. How does my voice sound?
Hello, Raúl. I am Alejandro Vallesteros.
How does my voice sound to be your new AI assistant?
This is mine, Alejandro. Yes, here.
Excellent choice, Raúl. Alejandro Vallesteros has been set as my default voice. From now on, every time you ask me for an audio message, I will respond with this great Mexican tone and energy. What would you like us to do now?
And look at this.
Come on, tell me a joke about programmers who program with artificial intelligence.
Come on, tell me a joke about programmers who program with artificial intelligence.
Here's a good one for you. Okay, Raul, how many prompt engineers does it take to change a light bulb? None. They simply write a detailed prompt to the focus so that it will self-replace in the next iteration. And then they spend 3 hours debugging why the room now looks like a disco and speaks Mandarin. I hope you liked it, brother.
And here I have Talentosa, which is the one that connects you with the students and the same thing, and here, well, I managed to put the voice of a girl on it.
Raúl, this is a Mexican voice test for Talent Oso. We want it to sound natural, warm and professional, without exaggerating the accent, ready to use on WhatsApp.
And I had put this profile picture on him and I said, "Hey, change your picture." And she, I tell her, I tell her, "Make one, wo n't you?" And look, he created his profile. And I told him, "Turn that photo to the side." And she put it on. In other words, I haven't touched anything. She put it on herself. In other words, not only did she create it, but she put it there herself. And I want to show you something else that I didn't have time for the other day, but I want to show you the following, especially those who were at the bootcamp on Saturday. Let's see if I can show the full screen now.
I'm going to log into the talented one, which is the computer where we installed Hermes, we did everything. Well, look, it turns out that once we have it installed, I'm going to close it here, look, this is Hermes, right? It's the installed agent that we did the other day. You'll see everything in the recording because I don't want anyone to be left out. I know they couldn't ask questions, but those who sign up will get the recording. I'm going to send you the 3 hours of recording with its summary so you can see from scratch how we installed it. Well, this would be it. But look at this, we can call it the Hermes dashboard, and you'll see what a marvel it is. We create a whole dashboard. I'm going to expand on it a little more. We'll create a dashboard where we'll have everything we've configured here. We configured it with Gemini. I configured it with Gemini.
But look, do you remember that I told you I was going to check because it released a new update very recently, this was two weeks ago. Previously you could only have one AI model in the agent, but now you can say, "You're going to use Gemini and what are you going to use it for?" And here you can manage different types of tasks.
You can set up to three different models depending on the task you want to use it for. So, if the tasks are to search for something internally, well, you put Gemini in, but you put a cheap model in because you don't need intelligence to navigate the internet or to clean a document, delete things on the disk, or organize things. In other words, it depends on the tasks you want to do. You can have up to three AI models from all the ones we saw. Okay? Then here we can see the skills. This is what I tell them, the skills. Hey, this Ernés already has 97 skills and I would say that all of these are verified. You can use these without any problem, you don't have to download them from anywhere, okay? But here you can activate or deactivate it. Do you see that it says here to activate or deactivate? Well, they have a lot of different skills here. What we're going to do is create our own skills and put them here, so that this agent can use them, as well as in normal cloud environments, in GPT chat, wherever we want.
Okay? So I'm going to continue with what we were doing. Hey, this recording will be available to everyone who's here, don't worry, you haven't lost it. Within the program there is a module that is about skills, agents, all that, but that module is a little later because there will be people who will follow a more relaxed pace and I know that some of you who are already going, look, look at what people are already doing with the bots.
So, we have to keep pace with people who are starting absolutely from scratch and want to go little by little. And for those of you who want to progress faster, we're going to have these sessions to give you a little more in advance so you can go even faster, right? So, the goal is very clear and I stand by it.
That you can create professional software with artificial intelligence in 60 days, even if you have never programmed before. We 're not talking about no code, we're talking about code. Code, code. Code. The thing is, the AI does the code, but it's still done with code. None of this "No, it's not WordPress, it's not Google, it's not a no-code thing, it's real code, okay?" With a professional stack to be able to serve thousands of people as I am doing with such a link. You're going to do it in 60 days. And I'll say it again, the person who signs up, takes the classes, comes to the live sessions, and in 60 days doesn't have their project up and running, I mean, it depends on the size of the project, right? If you don't have your project up and running and feel comfortable, I'll return the money to you out of my own pocket because once the invoice is issued, the company is finished, right?
within the 15-day return period, but I'm returning it because I know it's impossible that if you follow my methodology, which is to teach you little by little, you're going to come to the live sessions with me where you're going to ask me your questions, we're going to look at your topic, it's impossible that you won't complete your project. If you tell me you're making a rocket to go to Mars, you're going to say, "Dude, this isn't it, this is software, it's not a rocket." Okay?
So, well, there are going to be eight modules.
I don't want to complicate things. I'm fed up with training sessions that are so long you don't have enough time. It consists of eight modules, and it lasts for eight weeks. Each module is one week long and you'll have to dedicate 5 hours a week to it, but 5 hours a week turning off your phone, closing the door, right? Focus on doing things well, because 5 hours can be done poorly or 5 hours of attending. You do them, you get up, have a coffee, close up, turn off your phone and put in 5 hours a week.
5 hours a week. It's no big deal.
How many movies do you watch in a week?
How many series do you watch in a week? Well, for the next two months, dude, make a plan to invest in your future. If you're betting on your future, is that okay? The first module, which is next week, which I'm going to record in the next few days, covers the basics from scratch. There's no need to buy a new computer. The computer you have is suitable for programming. If you want to have an agent, you need to have a computer, which doesn't have to be new, an old one will do, and we'll put Linux on it, which I showed you how to install the other day and you'll have it recorded. Okay, next, once we have all the infrastructure, well, how are we going to develop the idea I have? And here we are going to dedicate 5 hours to this topic of how to get the whole idea out so that later it doesn't occur to me. Well, it's good that ideas are coming out, that improvements are coming out, okay? But the key to making the product good is that here we will use this and we will use skills and methodology to extract all the possibilities. Hey, what if this happens? What if this happens? And then this and then such and such and all that will end up in a project with different tasks, with different phases and from there we start to do the graphic design with the idea and there we will have all the depth, uh coherent structure of such and such, the responsive design for mobiles, for tablets, for screens. Be careful because it's super annoying. I'm about to finish, or rather, start doing that one online, the video one, but you download it on Samsung, on Apple, on the... what's it called?
Android, right? It has screens, right? So that part of how to do all the design. And here we're going to learn that design is done on mobile first.
So, with that we built and we have all the screens designed before writing code, everything. So, first the idea, then the design, and then we start making the MVP. What is the MVP? Minimum viable product, the minimum product. I know we want to cram 5,000 features into the project, but let's try to define which features are the most important, the ones that add the most value to the platform we're going to create, and we'll build that, and then we'll start adding improvements. But if we start wanting to build on a huge scale, okay? No, we're going to have a methodology where we create an MVP and then we add modules and improvements to the MVP, okay?
So we're going to start working on that MVP.
Then we're going to work a lot on the infrastructure, everything you saw so quickly from Combes, Railway, Gitcup, Cloudf, don't worry. In other words, you don't need to know GitHub like an engineer. I'm going to teach you the five things about GitHub that you need to know: what a pull request is, what a push is, what a pull is, I mean, what a commit is. These are five things, five concepts that I can't fit into a two-day bootcamp, because we wouldn't get anywhere.
But of course, you need to have the basics of how to use Ghub, and when you know those five things, you can say them even without knowing, like, railway, the four things, right? Where do I put the public website? Where do you put the system variables that are the APIs that cannot be exposed? I mean, basically I'm telling you it's only 5 hours, uh, with 5 hours we see all the infrastructure platforms, the code rabbit, the other one, right? All of that. Number six is already the agents and skills, which we are bringing forward, we are bringing forward the agents and skills because there are already people who have already done all this, who have already done the design, you have already done such and such and you want more. So, I'm giving you more, but very importantly, you're going to put the previous things down to earth, because there are many things there that I have to give you properly, okay?
Version 7, module 7, is going to be the most security-focused part, because, of course, we can't talk about security if you haven't already written the code, okay? So that's where the quality aspect comes in, the optimization, making sure it's fast, works well on all devices, prevents hacking, and so on, right? Okay, the last one is going to be really going to delve into APIs and bots. Here, bots aren't harnesses; I'm talking about trading bots, bots that go on social media to do things and so on, right? And especially the part about native applications to upload them to the App Store, to upload them to Google Play, because it already involves a different methodology than putting up a website. You have to upload the revision, you have to register as a developer, there is a process that we will see as we go along. I'll probably also bring forward the topic of native apps for those who want to get a head start, so they can start doing something, sign up for development, do that kind of thing, and not have to wait until the eighth week.
But we're talking about finishing at the end of July, and in August, when you have your vacation, you're going to have the time to fully dedicate yourself to your project, getting to know it well, and coming back in September fully prepared, okay?
So, I don't want us to take more than two months because this is about doing, it's about you starting to film and letting the experience guide you. So, I don't want to delay you by 3 months, 4 months, 6 months, and then in 6 months you still won't even remember what you wanted to do. By week two, you'll have a clear idea and you'll start being able to do things like many people have already done, okay?
Community topic. You asked it here, Raúl, will there be a community later?
No, it's not that the community that is created, first of all, is through WhatsApp because look, I'm in I don't know how many Discord communities, of training programs that I never see, that I never see.
Slack is even worse, huh? Telegram is even worse.
The truth is that we all use WhatsApp, we all use WhatsApp. So, the community is without WhatsApp. Spot. That's it. And the community is for life, because in fact what we do is that when we do the new one, this is repeated every so often, so the new students go to the WhatsApp group with the old ones.
Here they go. Because? Because at the end of the day, what better place to ask a question you're just starting out than where people have already finished? Now you're all going to be first, the new ones. But in two months, when the new ones come in, they'll be paying €2,000 instead of €1,500, because right now it's at a special price for being the first edition and also to thank you for joining at the beginning, for your trust, well, it's going to be cheaper for you. Well, when they join, they'll be joining your own WhatsApp, so you 're always part of the live community.
All new members are added to your WhatsApp, okay?
So, you never go out. There I put Talentoso, who is the one you have heard, he is in there, he is in there and he already has his beautiful voice, right?
So, uh, for me this, believe me, is the most valuable thing, because you're going to be talking to the people who are already doing this. Hey, how did you do this? Hey, you're stuck on this. I'm there to help. No, I don't have anyone there answering for me, apart from Talentoso, whom I train myself; I'm the one who answers.
Everyone who's with me in other academies knows on WhatsApp that it's me talking there, and he's talented, that I train him with what I want him to answer, but the most interesting thing is that he goes as a family and then when Taleslan arrives, for example, all of you in the academies have a free Taleslan LAN platinum ticket worth €400 and we always give it to you. It doesn't matter that your course has already passed. You all know it, all of you who are ahead of me know that I give tickets to everyone. Because? Because there you live together in Talenlán. You're going to eat together, you're going to have dinner together, you're going to conferences together. So it 's amazing when you meet up with people from other countries in Taland who you studied with, isn't it? So for me, that's the most important thing. I mean, having a video out there is fine, having some writing assistance is fine, but being alongside the people who remember the university, what was the most interesting thing about the university, what is the most beautiful thing about the university.
Why am I not against the university? Because what's most important to me at university is community and coexistence. People who pay millions to go to Harvard don't pay because Harvard teaches something better than somewhere else or at Stanford. It's because of the group of people you're going to meet. You go out right now to a restaurant, a bar, to talk to someone about whatever you want, and you talk to them about Hermes, about Arnes, you even talk to them about Cloud. Okay, Cloud is a bit like that, but okay, Codex, alright? And they don't know what you're talking about. Being able to be with people who know what you're talking about, who are talking about GitHub, well, that's one of the things that bothers some developers the most, that we, the non-developers, come and invade their sacred land, GitHub, and many are even leaving GitHub for another place. Well, I think it's becoming more democratic. Why can't I talk about pull requests? Why can't I talk about commit? if I'm not a developer. A pull request is when you upload the code you want to upload to the page; it's called a pull request, and CodeRabbit receives that pull request, processes it, and so on. So difficult, damn it, because he won't be able to use GZP, I'm going to say pull. So, having people with whom you speak the language, if you have a problem or see an idea or a methodology, because this AI thing has changed in two months and in another two months it's changed again. So, if a new model came out, a new agent came out, a new theme came out, hey, well, who tested it? Ah, well, I've tried it. How have you been? Did it work for you? No, it's not worth it. You wasted a huge amount of time because your partner has tried it. Okay? So, for me, the most important thing, the best thing, is that you stay in the group forever.
If you want to leave, you leave, or you mute it, or you archive it, but you're still there in the group, and that's not a Discord that you never open, or a Slack, or a Telegram. It's a live WhatsApp group of people who, like I said, a lot of people sometimes say, "Damn, I wake up in the morning, mate, and there are tons of messages here." Of course, it's a vibrant community. Speaking of that, right?
What bonds are there? The other day I didn't talk about them and the people at my agency were telling me, "Raúl, you haven't said this and you haven't said that."
Okay, so first of all, I'm going to give you the skills that I use.
I already have skills for Railway, Combex, GitHub, Cloudf, I have them all done. Because? Well, because of how I use them, the first thing I did was create a skill so that MA can use all of that perfectly. So, I 'll give mine, okay? He can teach you how to make your own, okay?
Then Talen Academy has a general AI academy, I mean, GPT, the typical, old-school AI academy, there are a lot of academies, okay? It's an academy that costs 30 a month and constantly... my colleagues there, I'm not there anymore, I started there, but I've already specialized in other things. Well, it's included, uh, it 'll be there for a year. So, all the topics of general AI, general AI, how to use HGP, how Claro uses it, at the end of the day, you're going to such a broad, or rather, such a deep level here that this is almost for beginners, but for example, making videos with AI, making music, a lot of things that are taught there, this WhatsApp community is very interesting, and then all this support and so on, the live streams, which is one live stream per week. And then we'll have other live streams reviewing pure projects. Okay, open your code. Okay, open this and let's see, and we'll go and go, reviewing. And I'm also going to give you, I don't know yet, I'll see which one I'm going to give you, a real repository of mine so that you can use it or review it or see how I did it and so on.
I'm still figuring out what it's going to be and all that, because these are the things the people at the agency tell me I have to include, and I'm a bit stuck, but we're going to give you something real, something well done, I mean, something that I'm going to make and that I'm going to give you so you have the code and can use it, see how it was made or whatever. Very important, registration closes on Thursday the 28th, okay? Because we start on Monday and on the 29th, all of you who are signed up will have that live session on creating custom skills and more, okay?
Since you can't be there live, you'll have the recording, okay? You can register on Thursday, you can request a call for Friday or Saturday because you can't. Yes, you can schedule it, but schedules close on Thursday, they close completely, okay? so that we do n't have problems later about me wanting to sign up and then not being able to. The architecture program we have is closed, okay? And you can't sign up anymore, there's a waiting list and I don't know what else. So, let me make this very clear, Thursday is the last day to schedule a call.
Below you have the QR code and everything else. If someone is paying for Talent Academy, we will cancel their subscription so they don't have to pay for Talent Academy. I'll give it to you for free for a year, okay? You can sign up again in a year because that academy has been around for 3 years and is consistent. You pay $29 and we'll get you there, but we don't teach you how to program, it's general use of AI. Okay, let's see, SAS companies can be created. Of course, SAS is software as sets.
What is SAS? Well, what this guy Bocila has done, he's done something that sells you out, right? So, what you always have to do is create software that serves you, since you are the main user, because it will be valuable software, because you are the right user profile, and when it no longer serves you, you can sell it to third parties. Uh, right now I don't have anything of my own and I want to dedicate myself to doing this. Look, my brother is selling a website to that Chinese restaurant.
And well, he's going to sell you 200 web pages in a year, I'm telling you, little by little. So, who does n't need websites? Well, listen to this, next to my house there's a store that has several branches and it's called La Tapatía, I don't know what, because they sell a lot of things there and when you go to order to have them delivered to your house, you have to call them on the phone and ask for a kilo of tomatoes, or something else, and they have a girl there taking the phone and taking notes. I mean, say, I don't have time to do that, but you go to the owner of that and sell him an app like Walmart's or Carrefour's or whatever and you make it in a month, so they can place the orders, like my brother did with the restaurant, the orders come out here and you don't have a person on the phone because you're getting 100 orders at once if you want. In other words, today we already have an application like the one Walmart has or the one Carrefour has or the one the countryside has. Well, in other countries I don't know exactly which supermarkets they are, but it shouldn't be a problem anymore and you should receive your orders via WhatsApp, everything should arrive.
Imagine a chain of hairdressers, one that has several branches and doesn't have a proper reservation system or uses third-party systems that cost a fortune.
So, I think the idea behind this training isn't for you to do work for others, but I think there's a sector of clients who are n't interested in the agency world because, well, what are you going to charge them? €1,000 €100 But damn, if you do three of these a month, you make €3,000 a month.
Superstitious, isn't it? So, yeah, that could be an idea, right? That's the idea. The idea is what you're seeing, people who have a business and suddenly say, "Wow, I'm going to have this here and I'm going to put a person with me, but I'll learn and then they'll help me." That's pretty much the ideal formula, isn't it? As I was saying, starting in August when we finish another group will come in, but they're going to pay 2000 because that's the price.
Only people who know me know that I don't give discounts. So let's leave it at this. It can be paid in installments up to 12 installments. They can schedule a call there. Uh, they have several payment methods. There's a lot of stuff there. to have a team that attends to them and gives them all the possibilities to be able to do it. So, I'm telling you, if these people you've seen have done that in a week, what won't they or any of you be able to do in two months where you do your part? What's your part? I'm going to tell you something very important, I say it often. Do you know what the biggest investment you have to make is? This is not it. I'm telling you, this isn't it. Do you know which one it is? Consistency, time, priority. If you guarantee your 5 hours and then the live streams will be 2 hours or so. If you dedicate those 7 hours, which are 5 hours of doing things and coming to the live stream, take advantage of it, and really ask why you're doing it, that's more commitment than paying €100. Some people pay for this in this way; it doesn't hurt them, they don't care. He doesn't care. And if you do n't set the time, you don't set this time, but it's not a time of not doing anything else, 50 hours a week, no, no, no, no. 5 hours. Do the math on how many series or movies you watch in a week, or how many things you do that waste that time. So, this is not the investment. What's more, I'll tell you, this helps with the other thing. Because?
Because when you make this investment, it hurts your wallet and you put it at a high priority.
Because in general, it's normal for a person who spends €1500 on something to give that thing the highest priority. If I gave it to you for free or sold it to you for €100, which it's not worth and I'm not going to do, you wouldn't do it either. You know it. How many courses have you received as a gift? How many €100 courses have you bought and how many times have you taken them? You don't appreciate it, no matter how awesome it is. How many free courses are there on YouTube? Find free courses on YouTube. And why don't you do them? Because you do n't value it, because it hasn't cost you anything, because you haven't committed yourself. So, the point here is that you have to commit, you have to commit to dedicating the time. And my job is to create the right learning curve so that you can do it, so that you can do it there. And if you dedicate those 5 hours and come to the live sessions for 8 weeks and you're still not able to do it, I'm the first one to tell you, "Dude, tough luck, but I haven't met anyone who can do it. People who can't do it, you know why? Because they don't try. Because they just don't. Or because they come to a live session without having done anything beforehand and it all sounds like gibberish to them. Come on, man, it's five hours where you have to keep doing things, and you learn by doing. Theory and more theory.
I don't want theory, I want practice, practice. Show me what you want to do. Do you have a travel agency, a livestock farm, a restaurant, a hostel, a nutrition service?
If you don't have it, surely a family member does, a friend does, someone whose project you can take and do during the training.
If you don't have your own, well, then take a family member's, a friend's, hey, I'm going to take your project, and I'm going to work on it while I'm learning. I'm going to take on your project, okay?
Uh, no, there aren't separate modules, it's all continuous, it's a continuous system, I mean, it's comprehensive, okay?
Uh, student discount?
No, no, there isn't one. I mean, the discount is already applied, a big discount has already been applied. Uh, at the school, the curriculum is clear, the era of the digital age.
Look, I'm a big supporter of universities, but unfortunately, the greatest value of universities today isn't perhaps knowledge.
The greatest value of universities today is coexistence, it's networking, it's perseverance, having responsibility. There are many values that are trained at university, and well, there are some foundations, there are careers, for example, medicine, man, what are you going to say? No. Uh, but it is true that the world evolves, the content evolves in such a way that bureaucracy and resistance from people, professors, etc., to change are very difficult because they are very... Comfortable, and sometimes it's very complicated to make the change. But university—I mean, I'm someone who will take my children there, even though I don't know what will happen when they get there. They're six and a half years old, but when my children get to university, I think they'll go, not because I expect them to learn at university, but because they need the world, they need those friendships, they need that life that university provides. So, I think it's not a question of university, yes or no. What happens is that you have to be constantly learning. You can't say, "Not anymore, I've already learned this and I'm done." You have to be there learning with those who will give you value, right? That's also important, because sometimes there are people who don't teach well or who sell one thing and then it's not what it is.
Personally, I like to make it clear what I'm going to promise you, what you're going to achieve, how much it's going to cost you. I think that the less time it takes, the more value it has. It's So, if this took four months instead of two, it should be cheaper. Okay? Why? Because you need to put in more time, more effort, and therefore I should charge you less because I have to put in more. But the more I help you get there faster, the more expensive it should be. I mean, you 're not buying eight modules, you 're buying a transformation, you 're buying the ability to create software yourself.
Not eight modules, or a video, or five minutes, you're not buying anything, you're buying a connection from point A to point B, okay? That's what you should be buying, right? 200 hours of video. Well, if you want 200 hours of video, there are millions of hours of free video on YouTube, okay? And the faster that is, the faster I help you get there, the more expensive it should be, because then I'm saving you time, I'm saving you the most valuable thing in the world that we all have: time. Okay, someone from Founders is talking here. You're absolutely right. I'm going to send you an email to The founders, with a small group of people, are the investors. I have something called Talent Funders, which are people who are talent investors, and I always do something special for them. Yes, also, when you are already students of the academy, the subsequent training courses we offer also come with a discount for you when you are already students and funders. I'll send you the discounts as well. Okay. Well, I don't know if there are any more questions if you want to ask anything else.
I think I've covered everything. I said it would take an hour. Uh, I've gone over by half an hour alone. Okay? So, well, AI, as you know, is the bridge, and let me tell you something, uh, I mean, I personally created this program with a lot of care and a desire to achieve success, success, and to see that with just the two free classes, this number of cases have started to come out of people who are doing it. I'm over the moon, I'm floating with it because it's truly incredible to see, isn't it? So, rest assured that if anything It won't be lacking; it's my personal commitment to making sure you achieve this. You need to do two things: one, commit to paying, and two, commit to the time I mentioned—your 5 hours a week plus the two live sessions. If you can't attend the live sessions, you'll have the recordings. I 'll give you the summaries, I'll provide the talent guide, I'll provide everything you need to learn. But you also need to put this among your "not important" things for these next two months, because the most important things are family and health. Of all the "not important" things, I want you to put me first.
If you promise me that you put me first among the "not important" things for the next two months, I tell you it will change your life, and we'll be here in two months reviewing it one by one. Okay, let's get to it. Just a reminder, registration closes on Thursday, and on Friday we have a fantastic session for personalized skills development, where I'll teach you how. Let's get started so you can begin preparing them; we'll refine them later, okay? But I'm going to give you some ideas so you can start getting started, right? And well, have a good late Friday night. That session will be on Zoom because it will only be for enrolled students, just like we did on Saturday.
The recording will be available. As soon as you register, I'll send you the recording from Sunday so you can set up your agent and get everything ready and catch up. I know you'll receive the recording immediately; you can work on it between now and Friday. You won't lose it; you couldn't attend the live session, okay? So, thank you all very much, and I'll see you again on Friday, for all of you who can join me. And I'm telling you, for the next two months, we have a commitment from both sides— yours and mine—that by August 1st, you'll be creating professional software, and you might even be able to earn an additional income from it. Thank you all, and I'll see you on Friday.
Related Videos
OpenHuman VS Hermes AI: Who Wins?
JulianGoldieSEO
285 views•2026-05-29
Long-Running Agents — Build an Agent That Never Forgets with Google ADK
suryakunju
142 views•2026-05-30
This computer is made from real human brain cells. And you can buy it.
Talktmsmedia
3K views•2026-05-28
BREAKING: Microsoft’s New Image Generating Model Beat Out GPT 1.5 and Nano Banana 2
aimmediahouse
122 views•2026-06-03
I Made the Same Anime Fight Scene in Every AI Video Generator
NobleGooseAnime
295 views•2026-05-30
Nvidia Bets Big On AI PCs | New Chip To Power Windows Laptops | Technology | AI Updates | N18S
cnnnews18
3K views•2026-06-01
I Tested NEW Opus 4.8 on Four Projects (Updated LLM Leaderboard)
AICodingDaily
298 views•2026-05-29
3D Platformer Update - NO CAPES
SolarLune
294 views•2026-05-30











