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Clief Notes

40.7k members • Free

6 contributions to Clief Notes
My prompt to create an ICM workflow
I'm new to ICM, but figured out a powerful way to create workflows. Reference Jake's research paper and then your workflow. In my case my workflow was in a back and forth conversation with ChatGPT to create a video facebook ad using AI to create clips from images. In that conversation were all the mistakes, changes and ultimately the final result. I had also modified @Alyshia Perri 's spritesheet-animation-tool to use my fal.ai api key for image (and video) generation and put that in my prompt as well. I was able to immediately start using the workflow and tweaking it as I created a real ad. Here's one of the clips from my first ad with this workflow. Happy to share the workflow if anyone is interested.
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My prompt to create an ICM workflow
Knowledge graphs vs ICM
is the orchestration based on folder structure/ICM better that creating a knowledge graph and a semantic layer to get the required context from the knowledge graph. Which will yield better results if we evaluate both. What are the pros and cons of each approach?
1 like • 1d
@Muaaz Mashood Here's a simple example: Say stage 02_research needs background on a topic, but the relevant knowledge lives in a big graph you can't hardcode file paths for. You wire it like this: 02_research/ CONTEXT.md skills/kg-query/SKILL.md <- the query layer output/ <- retrieved context lands here The stage's CONTEXT.md stops naming a fixed reference file and points at the skill instead: ## Inputs - Layer 4: ../01_intake/output/topic_brief.md - Layer 3 (skill): skills/kg-query/SKILL.md ## Process Read the topic. Use the kg-query skill to pull the relevant entities + relationships. Summarize into research_context.md. ## Outputs - research_context.md -> output/ And the SKILL.md is just instructions for hitting the graph: --- name: kg-query description: Retrieve a scoped subgraph for a topic when the needed context can't be listed as fixed files. --- 1. Pull the key entities from the topic brief. 2. Query the graph for those entities + everything within 2 hops. 3. Write the result to output/research_context.md, grouped by entity, one line per relationship with its source. Don't dump the whole graph. So ICM still delivers the context: research_context.md is normal Layer 4 for the next stage, and you can still open and edit it at the review gate. The graph query just decided *what* went into it instead of a hardcoded path.
1 like • 1d
Sorry for the links to blank pages, those are just names, not intended to be clickable
🏆 WEEKLY COMP #8: THE WILDCARD 🏆
🎟️ PRIZE: FREE SEAT IN THE LYCEUM 🎟️ Pick your cohort. Technical, Business, or Creator. Your call. ---- 📋 THE CHALLENGE You are the client this week. No fictional Marcus. No fictional Sarah. No fictional Devon. Pick a real problem in your own life or work. Build the folder-based specialist you wish you had. This is the capstone of Month 2. The challenge flips. Instead of building for someone else, you write your own brief and solve it for yourself. ---- 🎯 THE TWIST The hard part isn't building. The hard part is scoping. Picking the right problem is harder than solving the wrong one. Most people pick problems that are too small or too vague. The skill this week is treating yourself like a real client. Be specific about what's broken. Be specific about what you need. Don't pick "I want to be more productive." Pick "I waste two hours every Sunday night writing the same kind of LinkedIn carousel posts and I need a folder that handles 80% of the draft work so I can focus on the hook and the visuals." That's a real brief. Specific problem. Specific scope. Specific desired output. ---- 🗂️ TWO DELIVERABLES THIS WEEK This is the only week with two pieces: 1️⃣ Your own client brief. 250 words or less. Describe the problem you're solving for yourself. Treat yourself like a real client. What's broken? What have you already tried? What do you need? 2️⃣ The folder system that solves it. Same structure as every week: - 📄 identity.md - 📐 rules.md - 💬 examples.md - 📚 reference/ - 📖 README.md Your brief lives at the top of the repo as brief.md so judges can read it before they look at the folder. ---- 🔥 THE ANGLE THIS WEEK Anyone can follow a brief. Writing your own, then solving it, then shipping it as a usable folder is a portfolio piece that demonstrates judgment, not just execution. This is the skill that separates "AI hobbyist" from "AI builder." Anyone can prompt their way through a problem someone else handed them. Scoping a problem, designing the solution, and shipping it as a system is what real work looks like. 💪
2 likes • 6d
@Mira Bradshaw Very touching ❤️
1 like • 5d
@Alyshia Perri I LOVE this so much. I tested it out with a character I have of my son playing bass. Here's the original image and the output with ZERO tweaks. 🔥🔥🔥
🏁 Playbooks 1.4 Check-In
The challenge: build a 30-second explainer on any concept. This is where you post it. Where are you at?
Poll
59 members have voted
1 like • 5d
Git basics https://share.voomly.com/v/u6HfDNOXi8lsDVIVB99w-WBHW1xFQjjq73dpPHZRBtD8V0gfE
I'm flattered! And it's a great breakdown!!
Someone shared that a person a reaction video was made about my method and at first I was nervous but immediately it was amazing praise. I have never met with this person one-on-one and I haven't paid them or done anything other than post my own videos ! I think they do a great job at breaking some of the concepts down. It does an amazing job of breaking down some of the logic especially some parts where I go ranting in my video he slows it down a bunch ! Much needed
1 like • 6d
@Carlos Cordova I learned that same trick at I company I am contracting at. Very cool 😎
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Craig Howard
3
42points to level up
@craig-howard-1055
Solo App Builder. Owner of Atomic Tattoo Removal in Wrentham, MA

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Joined May 26, 2026
Franklin, MA
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