WEBVTT

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Yesterday,

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I was working on my laptop, and I realized that 95%

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of the tasks that I do on my computer for content and marketing

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is inside

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Codex.

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And Codex is OpenAI's

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brand new super app. And the reason I'm able to use AI agents for almost all of my marketing tasks is because I've built a layer of skills around Codex.

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These are repeatable workflows that I use every single day to help me go from 1,500,000

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followers to hopefully 10,000,000

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followers by the end of next year. In this video, I'm gonna walk through the top seven plugins and skills that I use every single day inside Codex.

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And if you are a Claude Cowork or Claude Code user, these skills will work in the exact same way, and you can use them. And I guarantee you, you will get value from this video. You are going to learn a marketing skill that will impact your business or your personal brand. Let's not waste any more time. Let's dive into the video.

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Okay. So today, we're gonna be talking about the best skills that I use as a creator and marketer. And again, this works inside Claude Code and Codex. So before we dive into the seven skills that I use basically every single day for marketing, I do wanna discuss the basics of Codex,

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and I also wanna talk about what a skill is. Alright. So this right here is Codecs,

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and Codecs is somewhat similar to Claude desktop app, which has chat, co work, and Claude code. The reason I use Codecs is they basically combined all of them into one experience,

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and it's just Codecs.

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And on Codecs, you can generate slide decks, you can also generate spreadsheets,

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and you can work directly in the spreadsheet. You can generate full documents,

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and you can also generate any type of app or web page. When you use Codex, you're basically prompting an AI agent and you can select your model, and this AI model has full control over your computer. It can edit, delete, and create files on your computer. Basic overview of how the app is kind of organized visually,

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you have your agent chats here on the left side. Up top on the left, you have kind of your different features.

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In this middle column,

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you have your agent conversation,

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and then you have your preview,

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and this will be a preview of an app if you ask for an app. It'll be a preview of a browser if you ask to navigate to a certain website. It'll be a preview of a spreadsheet if you ask it to create a spreadsheet, and it will be a preview of a presentation if you ask for a PowerPoint.

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And so that's what makes this a super app is depending on the task, it'll open up a preview, and this preview is very dynamic. It can be many different things.

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And so, of course, you can create many type of documents, you can create any type of app. They have skills and plugins, which we're gonna be talking about today. This is gonna be the most important part, and today we'll also touch on automations because automations can actually be used

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with skills and plugins. They kind of go together because you can see here, this is actually a good example of an automation that I've created, and this Google Calendar and this Gmail are plugins.

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And so we're gonna talk about that today. And the final thing I will say about super apps is they're getting better at controlling your computer. They have computer use, which allows you to fully control your computer, and it also has browser use. And so remember, we talked about this in app browser here.

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The agent can actually control your browser, and you can see the mouse moving around controlling your browser.

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Every single month that goes by, it'll get better and better at controlling your browser. And so while you're using Codecs, there's two commands that you should be aware of when using skills. The first one is a skill. So if you want to use a skill that you've already created, you can press slash,

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and we can you can see here, I can type YouTube researcher skill,

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I can use the Excalidraw diagram skill,

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I can use the

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Remotion

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best practices

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skill. These are all skills that I've added in the past. I can also use plugins by pressing the at sign,

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and here we can use computer use, which is a plugin. I can use Gmail, which is a plugin. I can use Calendar, which is indeed a plugin. In order to access plugins and skills, go up to the top left and click plugins.

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And so you can think of plugins as bundles of skills and abilities, and you can think of skills

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as instruction files for an AI agent. Just to show you an example, I use Vercel very often to deploy the apps that I create inside Codecs on the Internet so I can send them to other people. If you click on the Vercel plugin,

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you'll see that this includes

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many skills. You can see one, two, three,

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all of these different things are skills.

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So these are all bundled together into a plugin. And when you go on Codex, if you were to type in at Vercel,

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this points to the plugin. And so it'll usually understand what you mean, and it'll actually choose the right skill to use. And then I can also do slash

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Vercel,

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and if I wanted to tag a specific skill within the plugin, I could go to Vercel sandbox,

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and that would actually spin up one of the Vercel sandboxes.

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But again, the at sign allows you to at mention a plugin,

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and the slash symbol allows you to

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access a specific skill. Okay. So now that you have some of the context and you understand what Codex is and how it's a kind of a super app that can use plugins and skills, let's dive into these seven skills. And these are gonna be a mix of plugins and skills.

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And all of these skills are gonna be available if you go to chorus.com/skills.

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By the time this video is done, you can find all of your skills here, and in one click, can use this on Codecs, you can use it in Claude Code, or you can use it directly inside Chorus.

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Alright. So now let's dive into skill number one for content creation inside

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Codecs.

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Alright. So skill number one and skill number two have to do with a concept called grounding.

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So what grounding is is basically connecting your AI agent to a useful

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reference point. And so if you've used ChatGPT before and you ask it to create content or come up with an outline for a YouTube video or ask it for a short form script,

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it's not grounded in anything useful for you. If you think about it, OpenAI is a company, and they train their model on a vast amount of data. And when you ask it to create a script for Instagram or TikTok, it's they are the ones who train the model. And they use reinforcement learning, and they basically looked at the outputs, and they said good job or bad job or good job or bad job, and they train these AI models to create a script based on their opinion of what good content is. Well, depending on your niche or depending on who you are, you might have a specific taste that you like. And so what you wanna do is you want to actually ground the model or point your AI agent at a place where they can find a high quality example. And the best way to do this, in my opinion, is to give it access to YouTube. And so the first skill that we can use inside Codex

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is YouTube Researcher.

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So, again, all of these skills can be found on the skills page in the description.

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But whenever I say slash YouTube

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researcher, please can you generate an intro

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for this video in the style of Theo Brown. I forget the name. T three chat guy. The topic

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is, and then we'll just say, this video, and I'm gonna give it the outline.

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And so here's where I'm writing my content script,

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and if I just paste this in here, now if I press enter and I wanna create an intro for this video in the style of Theo, this will allow it to go to YouTube, pull the transcript immediately,

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and I could ask it to say, please can you pull his latest 10 videos and figure out which one best fits your idea, and then I want you to come up with five hook options or intro options. And so now what it's doing is it is going off, going to YouTube, pulling all of these different transcripts,

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and then it will come up with a good intro grounded in his examples. And one of my favorite things about Codecs is I can actually multitask. So if I press command n, I can immediately

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switch chats and I can say, please,

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can you

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find

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Cleo

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Abram

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on YouTube? I want you to look at the transcripts

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for her shorts.

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Please come up with five options

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for short form content. And I can paste that script in, and we can run it. Another thing that I really like to do is if I'm trying to learn a topic, and by the way, we'll come back to these, they're still loading, right? We can see down here,

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we see that they're, these both are working, and you can see which one's working. You can see that this one just finished because it's a blue dot, and this one's still working. I want to learn the concept of skills and plugins, and I wanna learn it really from first principles. And I can say slash

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YouTube

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researcher.

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I want you to explain it in the way that Andre Carpathi does in his YouTube videos, so please pull the transcript from his LLM video. I really like that one, and then I want you to explain it to me exactly like he does in a one page document. Don't create a document, just respond in the chat, but really make it sound like him. Right? Now we're just using it to learn. We're having it explain it in Andre Karpathy's voice, and now it's grounded in YouTube, and this is just one really cool way that I can use it. So here, we have some options in the style of Theo. Codex is starting to get really weird for me. Classic Theo at Hook. A few months ago, it was the thing that I opened when I needed help with code. Now it's where I do almost everything. Research, docs, content, planning, emails, scripts, thumbnails, publishing, all of it. And the funny part is, I can actually picture him say it, uh, like, and it is genuinely in his voice, and so that is really why I like to use this skill. Here is the Carpathi style for skills, and this sounds exactly like him. Think of Codex as a little operating system around a language model. At the center, there is the model. The model can read text, write text, reason, and decide what to do next. But by itself, it doesn't know your personal workflows. It does not automatically know that when Riley says research YouTube, the right move is to use supadata, pull transcripts, compare hooks, and synthesize patterns. That knowledge has to live somewhere, and that is what a skill is. And this really does sound like Andre Karpathy. This is kind of exactly how

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he would explain it if he were to be making a YouTube video on this topic. So in order to pull these transcripts, you actually will need access to one external tool, and this is actually called an API. And an API is basically like a password so that you can use certain technologies,

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and you can basically pull information from certain software.

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And in order to get that, you need to go to SupaData.

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Can just Google SupaData,

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and here you go. And this actually works for Instagram,

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YouTube,

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and TikTok, I believe. And you can pull the transcript from any video, and I believe it actually works on X as well. Alright. So that's a pretty simple skill. YouTube Researcher allows you to ground whatever task it is that you're trying to create in YouTube transcripts,

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which allows you to pull any data immediately, and you can use this with any AI agent, and I really love this one. The next one is somewhat similar, and it also has to do with grounding except it's in your own second brain. This is the second useful skill for content creation, the Readwise

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CLI skill. Many of you have likely heard of Readwise, and maybe you think of it as a way that you can, like, highlight things in a Kindle or on the Internet, and you save it to a central database.

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And that's partially what it is. But basically, I use it on Twitter. I I'm I'm in the AI space, and Twitter is where so much is happening, at least a massive part of the conversation around AI topics happen on Twitter. And so let's say I find something interesting. All I have to do is bookmark it. On Readwise,

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I can automatically sync my bookmarks to Twitter, and this will automatically

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send this to Readwise.

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Now, this only happens once per day once you set up this integration, but in order to send it right away, you can just use the Chrome extension. So this is Arc browser, but you can use the Chrome extension,

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and you can just press this button right here, and you can automatically save it. And you can even add a note here, and you can say this should be used in my next video. And you can save this, and this will automatically get saved to your Readwise. You can see here what we just saved gets saved to your Readwise. But here we have just all of the interesting tweets that I've bookmarked or manually saved on my computer or on my phone, then you can share it to this central database.

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And because Readwise

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has a CLI tool you can use, you can create a skill that accesses all of this information. So what I can do is I can go to Codecs, and I can say, hey, I'm coming up with video ideas for short form. I wanna create seven videos this week. I want you to look at my last

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week of items in

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and I can do slash read wise slash read wise CLI control. Please come up with

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30 different concepts that I could do based on the content. Look it for for commonalities

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and similarities between the items that I've saved and

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really come up with good content ideas. And so I can run that prompt. You know, the next level of this might be something like, might be an identical prompt, and remember I was gonna say read wise by control.

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I'm gonna say please make sure to look at my content for the past week on YouTube. Right? And then we can use another skill, which is YouTube researcher, so we can ground it in my YouTube.

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And so now we're saying, look at my previous content.

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Also,

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look at all of the things that I find interesting.

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Now come up with 30 ideas. And so we can run both of those at the same time. Alright. So the first one is done, and so this is the one that didn't reference my YouTube videos. But you can see here that it went through all of my

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different things that I saved inside

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Readwise, and it came up with 30 different ideas. And here you can see search is going to zero,

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every startup needs a content team now, Codex is becoming the workspace for prosumers.

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These are all tweets based on on things that I've saved to my second brain. One thing that I just realized

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is I wish there was actually a link a link to the original post that I could click on. And so what I can do is I can say,

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can you please add the link

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to the original

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post

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where, like, whatever your idea is, I want a link to the original post.

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And then I want you to update the skill so that you always include that. You should never not include the original link. And so this is a skill that I've created that uses Readwise

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CLI control, and the way that you edit a skill is just by telling it to edit the skill. You say, from now on, whenever I use this skill, I want you to do this.

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And it will just immediately edit the skill. Like, I'll update the Readwise skill so future content idea outputs always include the original source URL

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when Reader exposes it. And so that's all it takes. And there you go. We now have a list of all of the things that I've saved. These are video ideas that I can use. And if I want to reference the original tweet and look, some of them even have two. So every startup needs a content

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team. Now there's two tweets, so one and two, and we opened the two tweets that it referenced. So this one, every business should have an in house content team, and this is the one from TBPN saying the days of turning search and social media traffic into profitable businesses are gone and saying that you need to have an authoritative brand. So they are relevant. For the video idea, every startup needs a content team. And so I really like this. In fact, I might actually use this to help come up with content ideas. And maybe, let's say I wanted to see this every single morning. Well, it's as easy as this. Hello. I want you to turn this into an automation. Every single morning at 8AM in this chat, I want you to take the stuff I've saved for the past three days and create a document exactly like this, And, yeah, I want that to be in this chat and every single morning,

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seven days a week. So now this will actually create an automation. And so it will automate the use of the Readwise skill,

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and it will create a document just like this. And I tell people that's how you should create skills and automations. You should do a useful thing,

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and once you once you use the tools in the right way to create an output that you like, say, please turn this into a skill called blank. Once that happens, then you could say, okay. I want you to automatically do this. Like, after you test your skill and iterate and make it better, you could say, I want you to do this every day at x time. And so here it says done. I created a daily automation for 8AM every morning in this chat, and you can actually click on this directly or you can come up to automations and you can see that it's the morning Readwise short form ideas,

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and there we go. We are using the Readwise Reader CLI workflow,

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and we are sending them some video ideas every single morning. And that is skill number two. Let's move on to skill number three.

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Alright. So for skill number three,

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we have Excalidraw

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diagrams.

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I've talked a little bit about this before. This right here is Excalidraw.

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I literally use Excalidraw for all of my content. And whenever I'm trying to create a visual diagram of anything,

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I use the Codex Excalidraw diagram skill.

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And I can do this by going to Codex, command n. I can do slash Excalidraw. And remember, all of these skills you can find in the link in the description, and you just go Excalidraw diagrams.

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I want to learn about plugins and skills. I want you to create a very simplified

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explanation of this using

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Excalidar diagrams. I'm gonna use this for my video. And as we go along, I'm gonna use these skills together. Right? So I I wanted to create an Excalidar diagrams. Please do it in my voice, and you can use the YouTube Researcher skill to find my voice about

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codex.

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You're explaining this in context of codex,

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and if you need to reference some of the tweets that I've saved in the past to get some, like, outside perspective, you can do that as well. Alright. And we can use the Readwise, which is I should probably call this second brain. That would be a better and easier one to use than the Readwise CLI control. We're basically just using our second brain. We're just giving it some context. But again, I really want you to

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create it in the format that is outlined in the skill, because there's an exact format that's outlined in the skill, and it will it should follow those design patterns.

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This one might take a little bit longer because it has a lot of steps. It knows it needs to create a diagram, but it also has to get some context from YouTube.

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Oh, watch this. So I can actually stop this, and I'm gonna say please use

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sub

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agents

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for the YouTube researcher

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and the Readwise

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to make it go faster.

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And sub agents are where the main agent that you're talking to can spin off little sub agents, and they can work at the same time.

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And this allows it to go much faster. And you could see here, it says spawned two agents. And look at this, it says it created Xeno

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and

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Hygens.

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And so we can see these sub agents working

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in the background,

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which is really fun. And they work at the same time, so it's just way more efficient time wise to spin up sub agents. Alright. So after around ten minutes and fifty seconds, we are done. And the sub agents completed,

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and this is what we got. So you could see here that it says Excalidraw

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share URL.

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Part of the skill that you'll see when you download the skill, which is in the description, remember, you can just right click this and you can say open

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in browser.

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And what this will do is it'll load a screen. It looks kinda scary, but then you just hit replace my content. And there you go. It created

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these diagrams

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right here. And so you can see here that in the skill folder,

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we have the skill name, we have a skill dot m d, scripts, helpers, references, assets,

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examples, and outputs,

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and it creates this document in this format. I like this format because

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it kind of just looks like a presentation. It's really easy to follow. There's not a lot of text. I don't like a lot of text. I want the visuals. I can add the text. And so I just wanna create a general outline. When you create these diagrams

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here, I like to full screen this, and then you can even remove the side panel so you can kind of go full screen.

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And now we can

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just really analyze what we have here, and you can edit it directly.

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So, like, here, we can say, like, change this. Right? You can change these things,

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and you can create these outlines

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to your videos. And I think videos that use

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mind maps or Excalidraw diagrams are incredibly engaging.

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By default, it will use too much text.

00:21:38.585 --> 00:21:52.170
And so that is just my preference, but you can edit these however you like. With if you download this skill and use it within Codex, you could say, hey. Can you please update the skill so that it includes more text? Maybe you want to have two or three lines of text beneath

00:21:52.330 --> 00:21:53.610
the diagram

00:21:53.610 --> 00:22:00.715
to explain it more, and that's perfectly fine. You can customize it however you want. Alright. So that is the Excalidraw

00:22:00.715 --> 00:22:03.035
diagram skill. It's relatively simple.

00:22:03.195 --> 00:22:07.355
Now what if you wanted to create more interactive diagrams

00:22:07.355 --> 00:22:09.275
that's a little bit more professional?

00:22:09.515 --> 00:22:13.650
And that's what brings me to Paper. Now Paper

00:22:13.650 --> 00:22:17.730
is just like Figma, except it's made specifically

00:22:17.730 --> 00:22:19.250
for AI agents.

00:22:19.330 --> 00:22:24.690
This is HTML based, and it allows you to create really cool diagrams

00:22:24.815 --> 00:22:33.055
with AI agents. And they have a really good built in MCP tool, and you can connect it to Codecs.

00:22:33.055 --> 00:22:38.975
So we could actually go to the same chat here, and I'm gonna say, can you please

00:22:39.215 --> 00:22:41.290
make an animated,

00:22:41.610 --> 00:22:42.730
high quality

00:22:43.130 --> 00:22:44.090
diagram

00:22:44.250 --> 00:22:45.450
on paper

00:22:45.450 --> 00:22:46.810
that explains

00:22:46.810 --> 00:22:48.490
these concepts?

00:22:48.810 --> 00:22:50.330
Can you please focus

00:22:50.330 --> 00:22:57.455
on the topics surrounding skills and plugins? So now I can scroll down, I can do this slash,

00:22:57.615 --> 00:22:59.695
and I can type in paper,

00:22:59.775 --> 00:23:23.635
and I can use this paper MCP tool. Please look at the canvas that I have open, put it there. And also notice how I'm kind of creating those animated charts. I want those to be animated as well. So make the first intro section not animated, and then make the rest of it, which goes through each concept, animated. So now we're using the Paper MCP, and this one is connected to a tool that is outside

00:23:23.795 --> 00:23:32.275
of Codecs. And I would actually prefer if it opened up in this browser. I want everything to open up in this browser, but this is a little bit more heavyweight

00:23:32.275 --> 00:23:43.150
of a tool. Right? It's a lot like Figma. It looks like Figma. It's just kind of the AI version of Figma. You can edit things directly on paper. Like, can come in here and change this to banana,

00:23:43.230 --> 00:23:44.590
and you can edit it directly,

00:23:46.965 --> 00:23:54.565
website. And you can fully design websites, and then you can say, okay, turn that design into a website, and Codex will just do that. The cool part about Paper,

00:23:54.725 --> 00:24:10.540
which you'll see in a second, is it updates it live. I'll show you. And this is really cool. You can actually see the AI is present right here, and it's actually analyzing these right now. It's not gonna change these, but you can see that it's analyzing these to kind of get a style reference,

00:24:10.700 --> 00:24:14.140
and then it is going to generate some new slides.

00:24:14.555 --> 00:24:16.635
So it's just begun

00:24:16.875 --> 00:24:20.955
working on this skills and plug in animated explainer,

00:24:20.955 --> 00:24:26.155
and we can see it work live. Skills and plug ins are the stack around codecs,

00:24:26.410 --> 00:24:28.250
and we can see it design

00:24:28.410 --> 00:24:29.610
in real time.

00:24:33.210 --> 00:24:38.650
Oh, look at this. So this one's animated a little bit. I don't know how animated this needs to be.

00:24:45.565 --> 00:24:52.445
And we can actually give feedback in real time. Right? We can just screenshot this and since it has steering,

00:24:53.090 --> 00:24:54.850
right, since it has steering,

00:24:55.490 --> 00:24:59.170
what we can do is we can go to Codecs and say fix

00:24:59.330 --> 00:25:00.850
this overlap.

00:25:00.850 --> 00:25:03.330
Also, put all of these

00:25:03.650 --> 00:25:06.610
on their own row

00:25:06.610 --> 00:25:07.490
instead

00:25:07.490 --> 00:25:08.825
of too

00:25:08.985 --> 00:25:09.865
wide,

00:25:10.025 --> 00:25:11.465
they're scrunched.

00:25:11.545 --> 00:25:40.895
And since I have steering on by default, I can just inject my prompt directly into Codex and we can steer it back so that everything fits perfectly. Right. You can see here it's kind of fixing its formatting in real time. It made everything wider, and that's why you always want to steer it when you see it's going wrong, and now it's much cleaner. Right? We gave it a lot more room to operate, and I think this is a pretty good start. And it is finally done. And so this is what it created.

00:25:41.455 --> 00:25:46.335
Kind of a nice little animated diagram here showing the full process

00:25:46.415 --> 00:25:47.215
of how

00:25:47.690 --> 00:25:49.690
skills work with inside

00:25:49.770 --> 00:25:50.650
codecs.

00:25:50.730 --> 00:25:59.930
And if you wanna use these images anywhere, it's really easy to just click on this right here. You can scroll down and you can export it. So we can export this as a PNG,

00:26:00.275 --> 00:26:07.795
and it gets automatically saved to the downloads. We can click on this. We can open this up. We can make this a little bit wider,

00:26:07.955 --> 00:26:12.195
and you can zoom in and you can see all of the images that it creates.

00:26:12.690 --> 00:26:16.690
And some use cases that I've personally used it for is just ideation,

00:26:16.690 --> 00:26:24.690
you know, whether I'm ideating something for my Instagram or if it has something to do with brand, it's really good for ideation, similar to Excalidraw.

00:26:24.825 --> 00:26:39.065
I use it a lot for website creation, so I'll just have it generate 10 different options for a landing page. I also use it for lead magnets. And then also thumbnail creation, which I'll get to later. We're about to get to the coolest skill, number six, which is gen media,

00:26:39.225 --> 00:26:49.780
which is actually insane. I'll get to that in a second. And we're actually gonna come back to the paper skill, and that that will be the coolest use case for paper. And then also just general brand planning,

00:26:49.860 --> 00:26:57.305
and you can use this in tandem with image generation, which is incredibly interesting. So that's kinda how I use skill number four, which is paper.

00:26:57.385 --> 00:27:04.825
Alright. So now it's time to dive more into more immersive assets that you can create for

00:27:04.905 --> 00:27:05.785
marketing.

00:27:06.105 --> 00:27:10.910
And the next one is kind of a duo. Two skills or two plugins

00:27:10.910 --> 00:27:12.990
in one, and that is Remotion

00:27:12.990 --> 00:27:14.350
and Hyperframes.

00:27:14.350 --> 00:27:16.350
So if you create a new chat

00:27:16.430 --> 00:27:20.110
on Codex and you type at Remotion,

00:27:20.190 --> 00:27:25.215
you can reference Remotion. This is a plugin. Remember, at is plugin,

00:27:25.295 --> 00:27:30.655
and you can find this in plugins. So the plugins we're talking about is Remotion, and we're also talking about

00:27:30.895 --> 00:27:31.695
hyperframes.

00:27:31.695 --> 00:27:33.615
They are both built into

00:27:33.775 --> 00:27:40.700
codecs, but you do need to enable them. And so you can do at Remotion or at Hyperframes.

00:27:40.780 --> 00:27:47.020
Now, I've heard many people say that Hyperframes is slightly better. It's just a different technology.

00:27:47.020 --> 00:27:52.885
I haven't done enough research to figure out what is the difference. I like the Remotion Editor.

00:27:53.205 --> 00:27:57.125
It's been around for longer, and it feels more professional,

00:27:57.285 --> 00:27:58.245
but hyperframes

00:27:58.245 --> 00:28:00.085
can do more advanced

00:28:00.165 --> 00:28:01.445
motion graphics.

00:28:01.605 --> 00:28:09.220
And so, for example, I've created a video in the past. This is with hyperframes, and so I created this animation of this phone,

00:28:09.380 --> 00:28:11.060
and we can actually

00:28:11.380 --> 00:28:16.820
play this. And here's just a live demo of me putting an AI agent in a group chat,

00:28:16.980 --> 00:28:24.045
and I wanted to create it, and look at this. It it basically created this in two prompts. It created the phone border,

00:28:24.125 --> 00:28:28.365
and it just created these text animations inside.

00:28:28.445 --> 00:28:30.285
And so just like,

00:28:30.285 --> 00:28:42.180
you know, Premiere Pro or something, right, you have these different timelines. So you have a timeline, and you can scroll to the exact second that you want, and you can reference it. You can say, at eight seconds,

00:28:42.420 --> 00:28:44.820
I want you to zoom

00:28:44.820 --> 00:28:50.395
in on the phone. And so if you work for a company and you wanna sell your software,

00:28:50.555 --> 00:29:02.955
whether that is a a app on the computer or if it's an iOS app, this is a really good way to do it. You can show a demo, and you can add a screenshot, give it to Codex, and say, I want you to create a demo of this user interface.

00:29:03.290 --> 00:29:16.330
Alright. So it just finished. It says done. I added a zoom at eight seconds. So we can go see, we're at six, five, and we can let's go down right here. We can go to eight seconds. You see? It zooms in at eight seconds

00:29:17.610 --> 00:29:18.170
now.

00:29:20.355 --> 00:29:36.750
See that? It zooms in, and you can get super granular. So I can say zoom out at eleven seconds. At the beginning, so zero seconds, I want the phone to fly in from the left, a little bit more animated. I want the gradient to turn red at ten seconds.

00:29:36.910 --> 00:30:10.100
Once the phone leaves the screen or on the way out, I want it to, like, do a full three sixty spin. When the agent types a chat, I want it to, like, splat onto the screen or, like, be a little bit more animated when the message comes onto the screen, right, because it's just pretty boring when the agent types something. I want it to be a little bit more animated, and so, yeah, we can run that. And this actually goes pretty quickly, right? They make these changes pretty quickly, And here we can see it zooms in. Oh, wait. It should fly in from the left now. See it flies in from the left. Oh, it's nice and animated.

00:30:10.260 --> 00:30:11.700
Let's see when the agent

00:30:14.035 --> 00:30:15.555
kinda zooms in.

00:30:18.435 --> 00:30:21.955
It does kind of animate a little bit more when the text comes in.

00:30:22.435 --> 00:30:24.035
Let's see what happens when it comes out.

00:30:30.350 --> 00:30:31.870
Let's see if it's

00:30:32.190 --> 00:30:33.070
let's see.

00:30:34.590 --> 00:30:42.695
And there we go. It slides out. That's pretty good. I will say the physics on hyperframes is a little bit better than Remotion,

00:30:43.095 --> 00:30:55.575
but you can try out both. And so this is really good for launch videos. It's also really good for b roll or on screen overlays for your YouTube video. For example, in one of my videos recently, uh, that got a 120,000

00:30:55.575 --> 00:31:22.135
views, we used this in the intro. In this video, we're gonna be breaking down the seven core capabilities of Codex, OpenAI's AI agent super app, each with real world view And just something simple like that that, like, really gets the viewer, right, they just see. They can see a clear outline of the video. I use Remotion for this all the time. And what's cool about this is we can actually reuse these templates.

00:31:22.295 --> 00:31:24.615
For instance, now I'm running Remotion.

00:31:24.940 --> 00:31:32.220
And remember, I don't fully understand the difference. I just know that I've used Remotion a little bit more. And in Remotion,

00:31:32.540 --> 00:31:44.095
I've created these different graphics. You can see, remember that graphic I was just showing you? Here is the example of one. Right? Here is the video that I've created that shows the seven different capabilities.

00:31:44.095 --> 00:31:54.495
They pop up on screen. Now what I can do is I can say, okay, I wanna create another one except for the seven skills that I'm mentioning in this video here. Please make a new composition

00:31:54.740 --> 00:31:55.540
called

00:31:56.020 --> 00:31:57.300
skills outline.

00:31:57.460 --> 00:32:00.660
And what I can do is I can go to our script that we've created,

00:32:00.820 --> 00:32:07.220
I can copy this, use the seven, just pick seven of of these and put them in this outline, create a new composition.

00:32:07.675 --> 00:32:12.315
I actually want you to create the first one exactly like the dotted components

00:32:12.635 --> 00:32:13.595
composition,

00:32:13.675 --> 00:32:26.450
and then I want you to create three more that are like different variations. This should be all on one composition, have four different scenes. That's how I want you to make the options. And so just some vocabulary here. So it's gonna create a new composition,

00:32:26.770 --> 00:32:45.305
and it's going to have multiple scenes on that same composition, and I'll be able to choose which one I like most, and then I can I can render that one and put it as an overlay in my video? And so it's still working, but you can see that it did create skills outline. In fact, I think what it's doing right now is taking screenshots

00:32:45.465 --> 00:32:55.030
of it in the background to try and get an idea of what it looks like. So this is the first one. And remember, we referenced this dotted tool pop up, which looks exactly like this.

00:32:55.350 --> 00:33:11.245
Right? And so this one's gonna be very similar. But I told it to be creative for the next one, two, and three. So let's give these all a try. So this is the first one. Looks very similar to the original. The next one oh, so they have them divided by category. That one's kinda cool.

00:33:12.285 --> 00:33:21.720
Here, they kind of go around the circle. And here, if we wanted to make a change, all you need to do is come up here, click take a screenshot, paste it in. Please

00:33:21.960 --> 00:33:22.760
fix

00:33:22.760 --> 00:33:23.960
the overlap.

00:33:24.040 --> 00:33:26.120
No need for heading

00:33:26.120 --> 00:33:31.960
on this one. Alright. It's really easy to just copy the screenshot, give it to the agent. Let's view number four.

00:33:34.405 --> 00:33:38.325
And this one, a little too much text again. We can

00:33:38.565 --> 00:33:42.645
I can select this part? Too much text

00:33:42.725 --> 00:33:44.645
for all of these

00:33:44.645 --> 00:33:47.765
here. And you can see that this has one annotation,

00:33:48.080 --> 00:33:49.760
and we can just say

00:33:50.080 --> 00:33:50.880
fix.

00:33:51.040 --> 00:33:54.240
Right? Because the annotation is part of the context.

00:33:54.480 --> 00:33:57.760
So that's another hack, is you have this annotation,

00:33:57.760 --> 00:33:59.280
you can annotate directly,

00:33:59.680 --> 00:34:02.480
or you can just take a screenshot

00:34:02.640 --> 00:34:09.845
and paste it in. Those are kind of the two ways that you can edit it. So I'm gonna wait for it to finish here just to show you that we made some edits.

00:34:10.005 --> 00:34:15.205
And here we are. We see that it made the change. It got rid of the heading for this one, and I believe

00:34:15.365 --> 00:34:28.420
it made some less text on this one. So you can see here, we made we have some options. And then once you're done with the video that you're creating, whether it's with Hyperframes or Remotion, you can just click Render

00:34:28.500 --> 00:34:31.540
and then Render, and this will actually save it directly

00:34:32.005 --> 00:34:48.740
to your computer. And so this right here, this whole thing on the right is like a little mini app that runs locally on your computer. And we can open this up, and I can see right here we have this skills outline. We can open it up, and here we have the actual video exported.

00:34:48.740 --> 00:34:54.660
I could put it in Premiere Pro or any video editing software, and this is super useful for

00:34:54.820 --> 00:35:33.145
launch videos and for on screen overlays. Okay. So that concludes number five, which is remotion and hyperframes. I've created a full video on, uh, using codecs to make remotion videos that goes much further in detail, so that'll be in the link in the description. The next one is the one that I just started working on, and it takes further this idea of mini apps. Let me show you. So if you guys have been following my content for a while, you know that I vibe coded this app that uses the FAL API and allows me to generate images. So I can generate an image of at Riley. I can go at Riley

00:35:33.385 --> 00:35:35.385
riding a tiger.

00:35:35.465 --> 00:35:38.665
And what this does is this uses the FAL

00:35:38.665 --> 00:35:39.705
API.

00:35:39.705 --> 00:35:41.705
And the FAL is just a

00:35:41.945 --> 00:35:54.340
platform that hosts all of the different creative AI models, every single one. And so what I did is I said, I want you to create a an app, except I had added a local database,

00:35:54.340 --> 00:36:06.355
so all of these images are stored on a local database. And so the FAL API allows you to just use any of the different image or video models. And if I change it to FAL mode,

00:36:06.595 --> 00:36:11.540
I can click on this, and I can choose from any model. Here's image to video, video to video.

00:36:11.700 --> 00:36:13.940
We have Topaz video upscale.

00:36:14.180 --> 00:36:17.060
Literally any type of asset

00:36:17.060 --> 00:36:27.545
that you can create on FAL is available in this app. And I created the first version of this app in one prompt, And it took forty minutes to go through all of FAL's

00:36:27.545 --> 00:36:41.250
image generation and video generation APIs, and it added all of it. And it spun up this app right here. So not only can I generate an image of me? Right? I generated an image of me on a tiger, and then I can very easily just

00:36:41.490 --> 00:36:42.290
drag it

00:36:42.530 --> 00:36:43.250
oops.

00:36:43.730 --> 00:36:47.330
I can go to basic mode. Basic mode just uses the GPT

00:36:47.330 --> 00:36:51.810
model, and I can just drag this down here, and I can say, make it nighttime

00:36:51.970 --> 00:36:54.530
and make the tiger pink.

00:36:54.825 --> 00:37:05.945
So I basically vibe coded this app. What separates an app that you create and a mini app is that the agent can also use it. So if I were to ask the agent,

00:37:06.185 --> 00:37:07.785
can you please

00:37:07.865 --> 00:37:08.425
generate

00:37:09.060 --> 00:37:10.340
four photos

00:37:10.500 --> 00:37:11.780
of Riley

00:37:11.780 --> 00:37:13.220
for YouTube

00:37:13.300 --> 00:37:14.100
thumbnail

00:37:14.100 --> 00:37:26.115
and add them to the grid? I'm not actually using the app. The agent is gonna go through and use the APIs. I don't know which API it's going to use. I don't know if it's gonna use GBT image or one of the FAL

00:37:26.115 --> 00:37:27.075
APIs.

00:37:27.235 --> 00:37:52.595
The agent has access to all of them. It can use any technology that it wants, and then it's just gonna put them in the Alright. So it's done. And as you can see here, not only can I generate images right here, I can type in man, and it will generate within the grid, but the AI agent just generated one, two, three, and four? So the same APIs that I can use within this app, the AI agent can also use those same APIs.

00:37:52.755 --> 00:38:11.050
I control the app, and the agent controls the app as well. And so I think this is a massive opportunity right now in the market is to create skills that have apps within them. Right? There's a gen media skill, and within this skill dot m d, it teaches the agent how to use

00:38:11.210 --> 00:38:12.250
the APIs,

00:38:12.410 --> 00:38:14.250
specifically the FAL

00:38:14.435 --> 00:38:15.395
API.

00:38:15.475 --> 00:38:20.675
And so it can use any image or video model or sound model, etcetera. And within

00:38:20.915 --> 00:38:32.910
that skill, the agent can use the FAL API, but it also includes an app where the human right? A human can use the FAL API. And so when the AI agent uses this FAL API,

00:38:33.070 --> 00:38:49.415
it actually just places the images in the app. So anytime I ask the agent to generate an image or a video, it'll just give me a link to the app. I can open the app and I can see all of my images or videos in the grid, and then I can immediately edit it. The agent generated

00:38:49.495 --> 00:38:56.250
these right here. The agent generated this, and so I can very easily just drag this into

00:38:56.410 --> 00:39:02.410
here, and I can say, please add a white text on screen that says, oh my god.

00:39:02.570 --> 00:39:05.530
Dim the background and make it look a little bit more cinematic.

00:39:05.530 --> 00:39:06.970
And now it's generating.

00:39:06.970 --> 00:39:19.945
AI generates something, places it in the app. The purpose of the mini app is so that I can immediately open it up and make some changes. And look at that. It's done. So AI generated a bunch of images. I found my favorite one. I immediately

00:39:20.105 --> 00:39:25.810
edited the image, and here we have this YouTube thumbnail. And the AI

00:39:25.810 --> 00:39:27.890
has what I call elements.

00:39:27.890 --> 00:39:34.050
So it has photos of me in the app. So if I ask for a photo of Riley, it has Riley

00:39:34.145 --> 00:39:36.865
as an example. Right? It can use Riley

00:39:36.865 --> 00:39:37.985
as an example.

00:39:38.145 --> 00:40:05.935
And then I had it scrape YouTube to grab some thumbnails from other creators. And so I can very easily just say generate a bunch of thumbnails of Riley in the style of Matt Wolf. And since it has the elements, it's able to do that. Both the agent and I can use that feature. The agent can go into the database and see all the elements and I can also see the elements and use them manually. Like, I can just say Matt Wolf. Right? And it'll insert all of those thumbnails

00:40:05.935 --> 00:40:17.615
into the image reference, and then I can generate photos of me in the style of Matt Wolf. And so this one is a little bit more confusing, and it's one that I'm just working on now. But if there's one thing I want you to get from this, it's I'm ideating

00:40:17.615 --> 00:40:49.980
around how do I create this little mini app that I can use and the agent can use. And the purpose of the mini app is for the agent to be able to to cook, do whatever it wants, and then I can go in at the end and make some final changes until I really like the final output. Right? That's how I like to use AI. I don't like to rely on AI to do everything for me. I wanted to create a bunch of options, and then I wanna take it the final 10% because that's where all the value is. Finally, the seventh way that I use AI agents for content creation, the seventh skill that I use is my email

00:40:50.220 --> 00:41:11.275
manager. And so I have one skill that's a little bit less autonomous than the next one. I wanna first go over the less autonomous one, which is the brand deal manager. So what happens is is it's gonna search the inbox, It's gonna filter paid offers, and it's gonna look for companies likely to pay a high amount. Right? We wanna filter out the low amounts, and then we wanna get rid of duplicates,

00:41:11.275 --> 00:41:20.070
and then we wanna research whether it's a fit or not. It's gonna look at my YouTube. Right? It's gonna use the YouTube research skill. It uses some other skills within this skill,

00:41:20.310 --> 00:42:12.335
and it is going to create a priority table or sheet. It is going to create a table of the best brand deals or best companies for brand deals for my content. So I'm gonna run a couple of chats in parallel because that's how I normally work. I literally have so many chats over the last few days just firing them off. And what I do is is I'm I'm gonna first say, please run Brand Deal Researcher and make a table for the past week. I can run this. And it already knows how to do it. We can click on this and see the skills specifically, and that's one thing that you can do with a skill is you can view the skill very easily here on the right here. And as you can see here, we have, like, established the scope, search the email more broadly. To break this down, I'm gonna run a new chat, and I'm gonna show you the plugin that this skill uses. And it's just the Gmail skill or the Gmail plugin.

00:42:12.580 --> 00:42:15.540
And I can say, can you please

00:42:15.700 --> 00:42:16.660
summarize

00:42:16.740 --> 00:42:18.020
the important

00:42:18.020 --> 00:42:19.620
emails today

00:42:19.700 --> 00:42:20.420
about

00:42:20.500 --> 00:42:22.500
brand sponsorships?

00:42:22.500 --> 00:42:24.100
Anyone reaching

00:42:24.180 --> 00:42:28.725
out for this purpose over the past seventy two hours,

00:42:28.885 --> 00:42:32.485
I want you to please make a document

00:42:32.645 --> 00:42:42.600
for this. I'm just trying to generalize it a little bit because this Gmail skill is incredibly useful. You also have a calendar skill. So you can say, look at calendar. After

00:42:42.600 --> 00:42:44.440
doing this, please

00:42:44.440 --> 00:42:46.280
give me open

00:42:46.440 --> 00:42:48.520
times for next week

00:42:48.680 --> 00:42:50.920
when I could schedule

00:42:51.160 --> 00:42:55.000
a call with their team. Please

00:42:54.645 --> 00:42:58.645
select which, uh, companies I should and then I want you to suggest

00:42:58.965 --> 00:43:13.750
some calendar times and then I will give you approval after that on whether to email them and actually schedule those calls. And so now it's gonna go through all of my emails. It's gonna it's gonna summarize all of my emails for brand deals.

00:43:13.910 --> 00:43:30.265
And then it's gonna look at my calendar and decide what are some good times that you I we could schedule calls with these brands. And then it's going to suggest the times, and then I'm going to approve them. This is a very easy process. Right? Most of my time on email is filtering out and reading the bad ones.

00:43:30.505 --> 00:43:59.815
Based on its memory of me, it knows what I want and what I don't want. So I can get so much of that work done just with an AI agent. And then this is how you kind of, like, skill stack here, and we're able to just, like, schedule all the meetings. I can say, okay. I wanna schedule all my meetings during this time, this time, and this time. And if you want to further automate it, of course, you can add automations which we talked about earlier. And look at this. So we have a table of every single person who's reached out to me,

00:44:00.215 --> 00:44:01.335
HyperAgent,

00:44:01.335 --> 00:44:02.135
Airwallex,

00:44:02.135 --> 00:44:04.560
Minimax, Hub Spot, Cursor,

00:44:04.880 --> 00:44:06.800
Canva, OpusCliff,

00:44:06.800 --> 00:44:07.840
Abacus,

00:44:08.240 --> 00:44:09.120
GenSpark,

00:44:09.120 --> 00:44:35.370
all of these companies have reached out, and we have this massive table. These are all, like, high quality companies here in the high priority. And as we move down to the medium, these are ones I haven't heard of as much. Right? The AI knows exactly what we're looking for, and it put it into this table. And I could literally ask it, like, hey, can you please respond to this company, this company, and this company? This is just a really good overview. Also, the summarized sponsorship emails,

00:44:35.450 --> 00:44:39.130
the one where I did the Gmail then the calendar, this one worked for seven minutes.

00:44:39.450 --> 00:44:48.805
And it's like I created a document here because we asked it for a document. If we click on this, this opens up and it created this very clean document, brand sponsorship

00:44:48.805 --> 00:44:49.605
outreach.

00:44:49.845 --> 00:45:07.130
And here, it shows some spare time that I have, and it gave us some suggested times to set up meetings. I could very easily ask it, say, yep. Set it up during this time, this time, and this time, and it would absolutely do that. And this is actually how I schedule my meetings.

00:45:07.210 --> 00:45:26.115
And regarding the, uh, automations, I do have an automation set up that does that first thing, which it creates a table of everyone who's reached out for the day. I check it every single morning, and it also emails me the same table that I can check on email. So if I don't see it within the Codex app, I get it sent to my email. It just sends it from me to myself,

00:45:26.530 --> 00:45:28.450
and it's incredibly useful.

00:45:28.690 --> 00:45:37.890
And, yeah, I get it every morning, and it gives me a nice overview of everything. I just use AI to organize all the information so I can make really, really quick decisions.

00:45:37.890 --> 00:45:41.810
And finally, we actually have an eighth skill. Consider this a bonus.

00:45:42.265 --> 00:45:48.025
This is one that I almost forgot about. I just realized that I have a buffer skill. So on codex,

00:45:48.105 --> 00:45:50.025
I have a slash

00:45:50.265 --> 00:45:51.625
buffer publisher.

00:45:51.705 --> 00:46:00.650
And I'm gonna say, can you please take all of the research that I've done recently? Look at the memory. Look at the chats. I want you to analyze it, and I want you to add five ideas

00:46:00.810 --> 00:46:02.090
to buffer

00:46:02.090 --> 00:46:29.750
based on this information. I know we've talked a lot of, uh, a lot today about some things. So, uh, look at your memory. I want you to pick the five ideas that you think I should make content about and add it to Buffer as an idea. And so Buffer is just my social media scheduler. So I can very easily upload a draft and I'm able to post this across every single channel that I have and I can post short form content. And what they just released a brand new API

00:46:29.750 --> 00:46:42.310
that I can give access to Codex. And so now Codex has the ability to create drafts. So if I were to give it a video, it could create a draft for me. But I think the most useful thing is I can very easily just store ideas.

00:46:42.595 --> 00:46:56.995
And what it's gonna do here, you see only two ideas right now. I've kind of cleared these out every day. I take all my ideas that I save here and either put them in motion, so I start creating content, or I just remove them. A lot of ideas I don't end up actually using. And now Codex

00:46:56.995 --> 00:47:29.250
can actually take a look at all of the memory and look, it's looking through all of its memory files on things that we've done, and it's gonna upload those ideas to buffer. And then I will be able to see them in buffer, and this is where I look for for all my ideas in publishing. And would you look at this? It added them directly to Buffer. This one's not anything special. I do just like to be able to upload my ideas and make sure they don't get lost, and this is a good way to just unload all of the things that I've been working on every single day in Codex and upload them to Buffer as ideas.

00:47:29.330 --> 00:47:33.170
So all of these skills can be found on chorus.com/skills.

00:47:33.250 --> 00:47:42.530
I will have all of those skills updated, you can try them in Codex or Claude Code. If you wanna test them out for free, you can test them in our new experimental AI agent

00:47:42.865 --> 00:48:05.660
product that we're releasing very soon. We've been working on this for the past few months, and I'm really excited about it. I can click try for free, and it will spin up an AI agent, and this is the iOS app skill. And so this is a virtual computer running in the cloud, and it's running quad code. And you're soon gonna be able to run quad code and codex and sign in with your codex account,

00:48:05.980 --> 00:48:17.185
and this will never die. Right? With Codex, your computer dies. This will never die. This is running in the cloud and it is a full computer. In fact, you can see all of your files. You can see all of your skills,

00:48:17.425 --> 00:48:20.625
all of your channels. I can very easily connect it to iMessage,

00:48:20.890 --> 00:48:25.130
and I can connect it with all of my tools just like you can in Codex,

00:48:25.210 --> 00:49:14.895
except it never dies. And you can use it directly in iMessage, and you can add it to your group chat. So you can add this agent to your group chat, and you can use it with a friend. And so all of these skills, we're actually gonna call them agents. You can, with one click, test these skills slash agents in a little virtual computer that never dies, and you can message it through iMessage, and it's running the best AI models in the world. And yeah. Anyway, let me know what you guys think of this product. We're trying to get, uh, to gather early feedback. We just launched it a few days ago silently. We didn't really announce it. It's just something we've been working on. So if you guys could give us some feedback, that would be amazing. I'm super excited about it. I'll definitely talk about it more as we build it out. We have a lot of features we want to get out before we do our full release. But anyway, thank you guys for watching. Chorus.com/skills,

00:49:15.090 --> 00:49:22.210
and you can find all your skills. You can use them in Codex, Cloud Code, or Chorus. Anyway, thank you guys so much for watching. I'll see you here in the next video.
