8 Insane Claude Fable Use Cases
A 38-minute walkthrough of the eight ways Claude Opus 4's long-running agentic loop rewires how you delegate work.
June 10thHow one creator wired Higgsfield Supercomputer to his phone, Google Drive, and YouTube account and now runs a full content repurposing operation by talking to a Telegram bot on a walk.
A persistent AI agent connected to your files, social accounts, and style history can fully automate content repurposing -- and the same system can be packaged as a $500-1,000/month service for brands that cannot keep up with multi-platform publishing.
Higgsfield Supercomputer gives non-technical users a managed Hermes agent they can control by voice from Telegram. The video walks through three levels: connecting the agent to your phone and accounts, using it to turn one YouTube video into clips, carousels, and articles on a walk, and running a full marketing campaign from a single product photo. Google latest models made the platform three times faster and eight times cheaper than at launch. The closing section frames the same workflow as a $500-1,000/month agency service anyone can cold-pitch by building sample assets first.
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Full content team from phone, three-level tutorial structure introduced.

Who this is for, gas station analogy for hosted vs. local Hermes, Medvi one-person billion-dollar company reference.

Logging into higgsfield.ai/supercomputer, task dashboard overview.

Creating bot via BotFather, entering token into Higgsfield, verifying connection from phone.

Introducing yourself by voice via phone, agent looks up YouTube channel, builds memory graph, identifies competitors.

Reviewing memory graph, skills library, Google Drive and YouTube Analytics connectors.

Voice memo sent outdoors, agent transcribes and generates two viral clips from latest YouTube video, sends to Telegram for approval.

Voice prompt generates carousels, Twitter article with visual aids, Google Doc guide -- all from one video on a walk.

Back at computer, agent has saved all assets to Google Drive folders. One piece of content, many pieces of value.

Agent uses stored Google Docs to match creator style. Cloud Club skills library mention.

Product photo of Qunol gummies auto-generates static ads, UGC ads, cinematic video ads, competitor research, and marketing brief.

Legible text in static images, realistic UGC avatar video, honest caveat on cinematic text quality.

Make-it-first cold outreach strategy, $500-1,000/month pricing, plug for local cheaper version in next video.
A persistent AI agent that knows your style and has access to your files removes the per-task prompt overhead that makes content repurposing feel like a second job.
“For the normal creator or business owner, this is way too much friction and too much to learn.”
“It's kinda like two gas stations. One is cheaper and out of the way, takes more setup but you have to know what you're doing. The other one costs more but it's right in front of you so you can fill up fast.”
“The easiest way to start doing that is not to just pitch them with a big complicated offer, but just to make something for them first.”
“Initially it was way too expensive. But after Google dropped their latest models it became three times faster and eight times cheaper.”
See every word as it's spoken — crank it to 2× and still catch all of it. The same dual-channel trick behind Amazon's Kindle + Audible.
The promise is aggressive: one person, one phone, an entire content operation running while you walk the dog. The creator makes that case in the first 43 seconds by listing every output the system produces -- scripts, clips, carousels, articles -- before explaining how any of it works.
The tutorial organizing structure separating setup, use, and monetization.
Cold outreach strategy that replaces the agency proposal with a live deliverable -- lowers objection barriers by showing capability before asking for money.
Cheap gas station = local/self-hosted Hermes (more setup, more control, lower cost). Expensive gas station = Higgsfield hosted (convenient, higher cost). Frames the trade-off without making either option wrong.
“If you wanna learn how to run a version of this that's local and probably one one-hundredth of the cost, watch this video next.”
Soft close seeding the follow-up tutorial. No subscribe ask, no direct product pitch. Ends on a cost-reduction promise.
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20:55A 38-minute walkthrough of the eight ways Claude Opus 4's long-running agentic loop rewires how you delegate work.
June 10thA screen-recorded walkthrough of building a custom Claude Code skill that watches any viral video, breaks it into timestamped beats, and recreates it with Higgsfield's Seedance 2.0.
July 6thA step-by-step playbook for building and selling AI agents as done-for-you labor instead of software seats.
July 1stA 24-minute tutorial on running Codex CLI headlessly on a VPS so your AI coding agent keeps working while you sleep, travel, or are offline.
June 19thA 10-minute walkthrough of Anthropic's internal classification of agent loops — four types, two slash commands, and the stop-condition rule that prevents a $6,000 night.
June 30thA 39-minute live build: one AI agent cloned from a template, one built from scratch, both running 24/7 in Slack and iMessage using the GRASP framework.
June 28th