Meeting Title: Brainforge x Cursor Workflow Discussion Date: 2026-04-01 Meeting participants: Brylle Girang, Jorrel Sto. Tomas
WEBVTT
1 00:01:31.270 ⇒ 00:01:32.140 Brylle Girang: Hey!
2 00:01:32.880 ⇒ 00:01:43.390 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Okay, well, once again, Brile, right? Brile? I know you told me last time, and then I was like… I kept hearing Kayla say brill, and I’m like, I’m getting confused now.
3 00:01:43.410 ⇒ 00:01:45.779 Brylle Girang: It’s B. You can call me B.
4 00:01:46.050 ⇒ 00:01:52.710 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Okay, call you B, but, you know, like, how do folks in the Philippines, what do they pronounce? How do they pronounce your name?
5 00:01:52.710 ⇒ 00:01:53.750 Brylle Girang: It’s Bryle.
6 00:01:54.040 ⇒ 00:02:05.819 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Brile. Bryle. Okay, okay. Yeah. I can’t, I can’t take the shortcut. But everyone kept calling you different names, I was like, oh gosh, not this again, you know?
7 00:02:06.880 ⇒ 00:02:24.470 Brylle Girang: Thank you, thank you, thank you for thinking of that. But yeah, it’s okay with me, I think… well, I come from a customer experience standpoint, and it’s easier for people to reach out to me if they just type B, or call me B, so I am standing by it. But thank you, thank you for…
8 00:02:24.680 ⇒ 00:02:25.209 Brylle Girang: for my.
9 00:02:25.210 ⇒ 00:02:38.169 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Well, I mean… I mean, for me, it’s like, would people, like, you know, like, I’d hate it if they called me Jay. I don’t know, I don’t like it when people shorten my name, I just… I will just tell them it’s Jor-El, you know?
10 00:02:39.230 ⇒ 00:02:46.100 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: And so, like, yeah, so I would much rather do that than just call you B if it’s my…
11 00:02:46.100 ⇒ 00:02:46.650 Brylle Girang: Okay.
12 00:02:46.650 ⇒ 00:02:46.990 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: So…
13 00:02:46.990 ⇒ 00:02:58.210 Brylle Girang: Yeah, yeah, I’m fine, I’m fine either way. So, my agenda for this call is divided into two parts. So, first, I want to answer any questions that you might have regarding
14 00:02:58.490 ⇒ 00:03:11.569 Brylle Girang: how we use Cursor, how we use the forge the platform, and then my… the second part, if time permits it, is I also want to see, like, whatever you have shown Greg regarding your AI workflows, so…
15 00:03:12.420 ⇒ 00:03:14.489 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Oh, man, okay.
16 00:03:14.490 ⇒ 00:03:15.960 Brylle Girang: later part.
17 00:03:15.960 ⇒ 00:03:22.729 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah, sounds good. I mean, I… thankfully, a lot of, like, I’m still… I’m still adjusting my workflow to everything, and…
18 00:03:22.890 ⇒ 00:03:35.719 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: It’s not drastically different than what I’m doing on Cloud Code, but, it’s just the outputs are much easier for me to access via Cloud Code, so, but…
19 00:03:36.190 ⇒ 00:03:38.999 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah, well, I’ll show you, I’ll show you what I do.
20 00:03:39.000 ⇒ 00:03:39.320 Brylle Girang: Okay.
21 00:03:39.320 ⇒ 00:03:48.240 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: my workflow looks like later, but, yeah, let’s, let’s dive into, let’s dive into, yeah, how we use Cursor at Brainforge, so…
22 00:03:49.890 ⇒ 00:03:54.740 Brylle Girang: Okay, yeah, sure, I think I want to approach this by…
23 00:03:55.080 ⇒ 00:04:05.590 Brylle Girang: By directly attacking what your challenges are. So, can you tell me more about, you know, what’s confusing about our current workflow? What are you having problems with?
24 00:04:06.440 ⇒ 00:04:12.569 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: I guess, not necessarily it’s… it’s confusing, because I know the…
25 00:04:12.580 ⇒ 00:04:24.570 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: In general, it’s like, when you make stuff, it… the main way we interact with the information that sits within the BrainForge platform is through…
26 00:04:24.570 ⇒ 00:04:34.110 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: talking to the agent, right? So we’ll ask it, hey, can you use this skill, and do this, and whatnot. For me, what I’m trying to understand better is
27 00:04:34.160 ⇒ 00:04:40.640 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: How, how I can use it to…
28 00:04:41.630 ⇒ 00:04:57.470 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: in tandem, I guess, with the web version that is… that is here. Because I know there’s the actual… there’s the actual, web… the website, which is… which is, like, where… where things have the visual component. Yeah. And then there is the…
29 00:04:57.470 ⇒ 00:05:03.160 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: agent component, where, you know, we’re building skills, we’re asking them for things.
30 00:05:03.860 ⇒ 00:05:18.399 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: And I think for me, when I produce outputs, like, if I want to make a slide deck, or I want to, like, all those things get stored, it looks like, within the BrainForge platform, as opposed to, like, another repository, or another, like.
31 00:05:18.410 ⇒ 00:05:34.059 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: you know, visual layer somewhere else. And so that’s kind of what I’m trying to figure out is, like, what does the workflow look like when someone is querying into the RainForge platform so that we have access and easy access or easy visuals for, for those, for those outputs?
32 00:05:34.060 ⇒ 00:05:34.550 Brylle Girang: Okay.
33 00:05:34.550 ⇒ 00:05:51.079 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: That’s pretty much it, because, like, a lot of, like, a lot of what I was told is, like, oh, just make your copy in here, or make your slide deck in here, or… and I was like, okay, if I do that, where does that information get… get stored? Do I… is it gonna be in the repo that I have to pull it in Markdown and paste it somewhere else?
34 00:05:51.260 ⇒ 00:06:08.820 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Or does that all just happen, you know, within the Brainforge platform, and it’s somewhere I can download when I go into the website? So it’s stuff like that. I’m very process-oriented, so if I can understand that workflow, then I know how I can add it to what I’m doing.
35 00:06:08.820 ⇒ 00:06:20.810 Brylle Girang: Okay, perfect, gotcha. And are you aware that, like, the web version of the Forge, they’re calling it the Forge, is actually in the same repo as the BrainVerge platform? Okay, perfect.
36 00:06:20.810 ⇒ 00:06:22.110 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: I am more.
37 00:06:22.270 ⇒ 00:06:27.560 Brylle Girang: Okay, so I think the shortest answer there is that currently.
38 00:06:27.890 ⇒ 00:06:34.039 Brylle Girang: The usage rate of the web version might be at, like, 10-20%.
39 00:06:34.780 ⇒ 00:06:40.399 Brylle Girang: almost everyone here in Brainforge currently uses Cursor to, like, gather the information.
40 00:06:40.570 ⇒ 00:06:46.410 Brylle Girang: So, me personally, what I’m doing is, if I want to see transcripts, if I want to
41 00:06:46.600 ⇒ 00:06:51.380 Brylle Girang: If I want to know something, Cursor agent will be my first go-to.
42 00:06:51.660 ⇒ 00:07:02.379 Brylle Girang: And if I want, you know, some sort of a visual layer, maybe I want to watch a recording, and it’s mainly just because of that, I go to the platform, the web platform.
43 00:07:02.540 ⇒ 00:07:19.049 Brylle Girang: So, that’s where the platform… the web platform currently sits, and OTAM is working on, like, redefining what the web base should be in the future. For example, the web base should contain, you know, our training assessments.
44 00:07:19.370 ⇒ 00:07:28.219 Brylle Girang: Our learning modules, and it should be more interactive, rather than just, you know, here’s a knowledge base.
45 00:07:28.550 ⇒ 00:07:38.159 Brylle Girang: So, currently, when we talk about knowledge base, when you want to know something, Cursor Agent will be the… will be the best first stop.
46 00:07:38.490 ⇒ 00:07:49.230 Brylle Girang: And then, in the future, we want the web-based platform to be more about, you know, interacting. I need to do something, I go to the platform for it, etc.
47 00:07:50.180 ⇒ 00:07:51.210 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Mmm, okay.
48 00:07:51.210 ⇒ 00:07:52.679 Brylle Girang: Does that answer your question?
49 00:07:53.410 ⇒ 00:08:09.239 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah, it does. So, once again, I’ll, I’ll follow up with the, okay, let’s say I ask, I ask the cursor agent, make me a sales deck for X, right? Where does that get outputted?
50 00:08:09.920 ⇒ 00:08:17.779 Brylle Girang: So, there are… there are certain commands within the repo that already points cursor where
51 00:08:17.830 ⇒ 00:08:29.050 Brylle Girang: file should live. So if you ask it, hey, I need to create something, etc, you can actually ask, or you can actually say to cursor where that file can live.
52 00:08:29.050 ⇒ 00:08:39.089 Brylle Girang: And it will point you directly. So there are certain mappings for each folder, especially in the root folder, in the base folder, where it can point cursor
53 00:08:39.770 ⇒ 00:08:41.749 Brylle Girang: To where that file should live.
54 00:08:41.900 ⇒ 00:08:45.230 Brylle Girang: So, I would say that you don’t need to think about it.
55 00:08:45.380 ⇒ 00:08:47.780 Brylle Girang: There’s already systems where
56 00:08:48.050 ⇒ 00:08:53.820 Brylle Girang: the cursor agent will be taught where that… where those files should live. But currently.
57 00:08:54.020 ⇒ 00:08:59.480 Brylle Girang: Almost everything is in the knowledge folder within the BrainForge platform.
58 00:08:59.660 ⇒ 00:09:16.790 Brylle Girang: And we’re treating this as, like, a client-specific routing, where if you create a slide deck for one client, it gets saved to the client’s knowledge folder, etc. Or if you’re creating a slide deck for GTM, then there is a GTM folder under knowledge.
59 00:09:17.850 ⇒ 00:09:25.019 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Okay. And so, in that GTM, so what is the file type that it’s being stored at? Is this a PDF?
60 00:09:25.200 ⇒ 00:09:29.250 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Is this, you know, PowerPoint.
61 00:09:29.490 ⇒ 00:09:46.960 Brylle Girang: Okay, yeah. We try to avoid anything that is not a markdown file, so most of the slide decks, what we’re doing is we create a markdown, like, copy of it, and then we manually, in the meantime, we manually convert that to a Google slide deck.
62 00:09:47.770 ⇒ 00:09:54.880 Brylle Girang: The… we are… we are currently… I don’t know the… the progress, but we’re currently developing, like, a slide deck creator.
63 00:09:54.980 ⇒ 00:10:00.609 Brylle Girang: a workflow within Cursor, but as much as possible, everything should be a markdown file.
64 00:10:02.300 ⇒ 00:10:04.679 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: So… so basically the answer is.
65 00:10:05.260 ⇒ 00:10:10.639 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: everything is marked down, and nothing is stored.
66 00:10:10.770 ⇒ 00:10:22.140 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: or nothing, nothing is, like, in… in the full version of… or the full output form. Okay, that’s fine. That gives me clarity as to, like, what… what needs…
67 00:10:22.240 ⇒ 00:10:25.229 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Where I would need to push those outputs, then.
68 00:10:25.940 ⇒ 00:10:27.639 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Okay.
69 00:10:27.870 ⇒ 00:10:41.320 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: I’m curious then, what is, can you walk me through, like, what you… how, like, your workflow and how you use, Cursor? Like, just like a day-to-day… from a day-to-day perspective of Bryle, I’m just… I just want to see…
70 00:10:41.490 ⇒ 00:10:47.770 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: yeah, how someone else uses it, just so that I can get a better understanding of your guys’ workflow.
71 00:10:48.080 ⇒ 00:11:04.290 Brylle Girang: Okay, gotcha. So, I might divide this into two parts. Let’s say the Bryle from the past, where I was sitting in as an EP, as a project manager for some clients, and then the current BRIL, where I’m focusing on learning and development within Brainforge.
72 00:11:04.540 ⇒ 00:11:09.919 Brylle Girang: Let me try to organize this.
73 00:11:13.900 ⇒ 00:11:18.469 Brylle Girang: Yeah, so, most of the stuff that I have been doing when I was an EP,
74 00:11:18.690 ⇒ 00:11:35.640 Brylle Girang: focuses on, like, auditing linear tickets, checking updates for each client, so I just make sure that I utilize our existing skills. So, let’s say I come in, I want to know where we are at for a client, so I run just
75 00:11:36.170 ⇒ 00:11:39.709 Brylle Girang: a linear skill, AP audit, let’s say for Element.
76 00:11:40.660 ⇒ 00:11:58.759 Brylle Girang: And I let it run. As much as possible, I try to do things in parallel, but when I was an EP, that’s not really happening, because I want to know about what the agent is doing. But most of my day-to-day tasks when I was an EP focuses on
77 00:11:59.230 ⇒ 00:12:06.249 Brylle Girang: Creating skills, running the skills, and then making sure that we are on track for our clients.
78 00:12:06.450 ⇒ 00:12:11.009 Brylle Girang: I’m just going to pause this, just to make sure that we don’t… I don’t update anything.
79 00:12:11.180 ⇒ 00:12:16.259 Brylle Girang: But that’s… that’s the gist of it, when I was… when I was working as an EP.
80 00:12:16.440 ⇒ 00:12:21.770 Brylle Girang: Now, when I am focusing on… Like, learning and development?
81 00:12:21.880 ⇒ 00:12:37.729 Brylle Girang: I mainly do brainstorming sessions with Cursor, and then helping, or… and then asking it to create plans for me. So, I think Cloud Code has the same, like, agent plan as modes, is that right?
82 00:12:38.470 ⇒ 00:12:41.010 Brylle Girang: Or are you… are you…
83 00:12:41.010 ⇒ 00:12:42.020 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah, it does.
84 00:12:42.020 ⇒ 00:12:42.690 Brylle Girang: This? Okay.
85 00:12:42.690 ⇒ 00:12:45.639 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah, it’s just a… it’s just a call, yeah.
86 00:12:46.000 ⇒ 00:13:04.130 Brylle Girang: Okay, perfect. Yeah, so right now, if I… if I want to brainstorm something, I just ask, and then once it’s… it’s all… it’s all good, me and the agent have come to an agreement, I just plan to create a plan, and then I build things out.
87 00:13:05.520 ⇒ 00:13:23.269 Brylle Girang: Yeah, and then I also mostly use Cursor if I need to, like, make some quick updates on files. Maybe Utam mentioned something, Utam asked me to update a document. I use Cursor for that. So, I would say most of my time here in Brainforge.
88 00:13:23.270 ⇒ 00:13:26.349 Brylle Girang: 90% of those is actually interacting with cursor.
89 00:13:26.510 ⇒ 00:13:37.759 Brylle Girang: 10% of those is interacting with other tools. So, I would say Slack, and then I don’t interact that much with Linear, unless it’s me just trying to get a visual sense of things.
90 00:13:38.350 ⇒ 00:13:39.520 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: I see, okay.
91 00:13:47.370 ⇒ 00:13:47.960 Brylle Girang: Yeah.
92 00:13:48.180 ⇒ 00:13:50.650 Brylle Girang: Does that make sense?
93 00:13:53.620 ⇒ 00:13:54.990 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah. Yeah.
94 00:13:55.110 ⇒ 00:13:57.640 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: There’s… This doesn’t make sense.
95 00:14:03.030 ⇒ 00:14:19.240 Brylle Girang: Yeah, and when it comes to, like, shipping updates, we’re trying to create a plan where, you know, creating a PR should be automatic, especially for non-technical people. For example, Kayla had some problems when it comes to, like, shipping her first PR.
96 00:14:19.240 ⇒ 00:14:25.239 Brylle Girang: Career-wise, so we’re trying to make that easier for our people, and we’re also trying to make it easier for…
97 00:14:25.240 ⇒ 00:14:34.209 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Are you just making a scale for it? Are you guys just gonna make a… because it’s pretty easy to call PR straight from, straight from the agent.
98 00:14:34.210 ⇒ 00:14:35.180 Brylle Girang: Yes.
99 00:14:36.880 ⇒ 00:14:47.240 Brylle Girang: It’s not in this branch, but yeah, we created a skill, a command, and, you know, a mapping using a markdown file, just stitching it how to… how to create a PR.
100 00:14:47.360 ⇒ 00:14:49.820 Brylle Girang: Immediately from the agent.
101 00:14:50.440 ⇒ 00:15:09.019 Brylle Girang: All right, now what, what we’re trying to do is try to make everyone create their own skills as part of our focus this quarter, and then by the next quarter, we’ll be consolidating those and making sure that, you know, we have a structured Brainforge platform.
102 00:15:16.640 ⇒ 00:15:24.579 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: And then who, who is, sorry, random tangent question, I just had a thought. Are you, are you the one who approves most of the PR?
103 00:15:25.210 ⇒ 00:15:25.690 Brylle Girang: It’s.
104 00:15:25.690 ⇒ 00:15:26.360 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: and…
105 00:15:27.070 ⇒ 00:15:38.960 Brylle Girang: Yeah, it’s OTAM most of the time. I think. I am an approver when it comes to, like, cursor skills, but that’s only it. When it comes to, like, the whole BrainForge platform vault, it’s mostly OTAM right now.
106 00:15:39.810 ⇒ 00:15:40.639 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: I see, okay.
107 00:15:42.530 ⇒ 00:15:47.129 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: And I wanted to follow up, how did, weren’t you proposing the,
108 00:15:47.320 ⇒ 00:15:53.080 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: That L&D, the Learning and Development, service, how did that go? How’d the proposal go?
109 00:15:53.080 ⇒ 00:16:10.540 Brylle Girang: Yeah, I’m creating the modules right now, so I will be asking for your feedback once the modules have been created. One… one blocker for me is that I want the modules to live in somewhere… somewhere that’s easily accessible, so I’m asking Uden to create
110 00:16:10.630 ⇒ 00:16:22.730 Brylle Girang: a dedicated page in the platform for the modules, and then that’s maybe when I will ask you to take a look and then review. But right now, it’s about creating the modules.
111 00:16:22.830 ⇒ 00:16:31.179 Brylle Girang: About preparing our team for certifications, because certifications are also a major part, a major push for Q2.
112 00:16:31.370 ⇒ 00:16:45.360 Brylle Girang: And then making some workflows revolving around feedback loops and change management within the business. So, most of what’s happening right now within this week is planning and making sure that we have a structured process starting next week.
113 00:16:45.580 ⇒ 00:16:55.050 Brylle Girang: But we’re expecting that the actual training sessions should start next week, and that starts with, you know, the standards, and actually how to set up cursor.
114 00:16:57.510 ⇒ 00:16:58.780 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Great. Okay.
115 00:16:59.600 ⇒ 00:17:00.570 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: That’s awesome.
116 00:17:00.730 ⇒ 00:17:04.920 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Well, you’ll get to do some… you’ll get to do some stuff, then.
117 00:17:05.160 ⇒ 00:17:13.960 Brylle Girang: Exactly. I am excited, I am excited. This also forces me to, like, learn things, because people won’t listen to people who doesn’t try to learn, right?
118 00:17:14.400 ⇒ 00:17:21.129 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah, always, always try to, always try to improve your game, Ryle. That’s all, that’s all I’ll tell ya. That’s, that’s, that’s what I do.
119 00:17:21.569 ⇒ 00:17:26.879 Brylle Girang: Exactly, exactly. With how fast the world is changing, we need to keep up.
120 00:17:26.880 ⇒ 00:17:28.180 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah, I mean, I…
121 00:17:28.180 ⇒ 00:17:28.735 Brylle Girang: I…
122 00:17:29.290 ⇒ 00:17:29.900 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah.
123 00:17:30.070 ⇒ 00:17:36.480 Brylle Girang: Speaking of keeping up, I want to keep up with your… with your workflows. Can you… can you show me, like, how… how you…
124 00:17:36.600 ⇒ 00:17:38.129 Brylle Girang: What’s your day-to-day?
125 00:17:39.130 ⇒ 00:17:45.899 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: That’s my day-to-day? My day-to-day’s chaotic. You don’t want to know what my day-to-day is, but I’ll show you how I use,
126 00:17:46.180 ⇒ 00:17:51.760 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: I’ll show you how I use, cloud Code.
127 00:17:51.950 ⇒ 00:17:55.909 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: So, this is… this is what CloudGood looks like.
128 00:17:55.910 ⇒ 00:17:56.460 Brylle Girang: Yeah.
129 00:17:56.460 ⇒ 00:17:58.319 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: You’re probably familiar with it.
130 00:18:00.870 ⇒ 00:18:09.679 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: But essentially, I… right now, I’m, like, doing some stuff on my Raspberry Pi, and so I have…
131 00:18:09.890 ⇒ 00:18:10.710 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: this…
132 00:18:11.890 ⇒ 00:18:21.719 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: But, really, the most powerful stuff that you can do in here that you can’t really do on cursor, I would boil it down to, like, 3 things. One is…
133 00:18:22.790 ⇒ 00:18:24.740 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: scheduled tasks. Okay.
134 00:18:25.260 ⇒ 00:18:36.159 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: I have… I have a scraper I run. I’m on my desktop right now, but I was telling Greg, like, on my Mac, I literally have scheduled tasks on my,
135 00:18:36.900 ⇒ 00:18:47.389 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: that just run automatically every morning. And so, like, a good example of this, right, is, like, for Cursor, you keep asking everybody to fetch, you know, your remote, or whatever, right?
136 00:18:47.390 ⇒ 00:18:47.940 Brylle Girang: Yeah.
137 00:18:48.370 ⇒ 00:18:50.350 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: in… inside of…
138 00:18:50.450 ⇒ 00:19:07.430 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: quad code, you can basically run a task like that, right? Either be a local task, which is similar to a cron job, or a remote task, which is similar to setting up a cron job on, like, an AWS server. Yeah. Right? And you can literally use any of the connectors you have access to.
139 00:19:07.430 ⇒ 00:19:23.299 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: And it will, yeah, on a cadence that you schedule it, it will do that task for you. So whether it’s collecting information, doing… sending out a specific email, a digest, all those lovely things. One of the things that I have my,
140 00:19:24.100 ⇒ 00:19:34.580 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: my stuff do is I have a… I have a digest, right, that I have… that I… because I… I manage so many different things, so I have a digest that gets sent to me, every 6 hours.
141 00:19:35.000 ⇒ 00:19:35.470 Brylle Girang: Okay.
142 00:19:35.470 ⇒ 00:19:43.809 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: These are all things that, like, before, it would have required you to, like, set up a whole, like, cron job workflow. Can you see my screen?
143 00:19:44.140 ⇒ 00:19:44.990 Brylle Girang: Yeah, yeah, yeah.
144 00:19:45.310 ⇒ 00:19:50.400 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Alright, so this is my Raspberry Pi, and so I’ll just sign into this.
145 00:19:51.630 ⇒ 00:19:55.429 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: This was… this is the old, classic manual way we used to do things.
146 00:19:55.570 ⇒ 00:20:01.660 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: You have this, and then you see there’s this get this… all this, all these cron jobs?
147 00:20:01.720 ⇒ 00:20:17.480 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: that I have, that run Python scripts. You don’t need this anymore. You don’t need all this stuff on a Raspberry Pi. You just need Claude code and a scheduled tasker, and like I said, it will run fully autonomously. You can have, like, 100 tasks on here, and it will just…
148 00:20:17.590 ⇒ 00:20:20.039 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Procedurally do all the things you needed to do.
149 00:20:20.380 ⇒ 00:20:20.700 Brylle Girang: Yeah.
150 00:20:20.700 ⇒ 00:20:37.810 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: And so, so yeah, so this is one of the main things I use. Next time, Bryl, I’ll show you what I have on, on my Mac, and you’ll see just how ridiculous I have this just scraping everything I have, basically. The next thing here.
151 00:20:38.260 ⇒ 00:20:40.250 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: his coworker. So…
152 00:20:40.410 ⇒ 00:20:51.399 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: I was just showing Greg this, but I basically, you know, I run a startup, so I’m pitching some stuff right now, and I basically said, alright, I’m gonna go and… I’m gonna go and…
153 00:20:51.490 ⇒ 00:21:10.120 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: make an additional slide for my slide deck. And this has zero context of the stuff I work on within… it’s called DM360. And in the span of the 5 minutes we were conversing while this was doing its thing, so I asked it to make a financial projection slide in the appendix.
154 00:21:10.290 ⇒ 00:21:20.139 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: And… Here, let me… Let me pull it… From my folder…
155 00:21:21.130 ⇒ 00:21:27.489 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: it basically produced a… oh no, I deleted it. Give me a second, I’m gonna have to…
156 00:21:27.490 ⇒ 00:21:28.380 Brylle Girang: Okay, sure.
157 00:21:28.380 ⇒ 00:21:32.749 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: We’ll run it… we’ll run it again, actually. We’ll do the demo all over again, just so you can see it, so…
158 00:21:33.070 ⇒ 00:21:34.629 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Basically, you’ll add…
159 00:21:35.800 ⇒ 00:21:46.039 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: I’ll add my… my slide deck, and this is… this is the reason that I was asking about Brainforge. Yeah. Because this is how I… this is how I make all of my…
160 00:21:46.280 ⇒ 00:21:55.699 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: This is how I make all my decks now. Like, I used to spend hours, like, putting together a deck, or, you know, altering a template. Now I just upload it here.
161 00:21:56.240 ⇒ 00:22:02.429 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: I’ll say something like, oh, let’s modify the ask slide, the ask slide to ask…
162 00:22:05.760 ⇒ 00:22:06.869 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Was it ringing?
163 00:22:07.380 ⇒ 00:22:09.279 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Let’s do 3.5 mil…
164 00:22:12.300 ⇒ 00:22:13.619 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Or a seed round.
165 00:22:13.970 ⇒ 00:22:15.639 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Instead. And so…
166 00:22:17.030 ⇒ 00:22:25.799 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: I’ll just do this. It will look at the… it will… it will ingest all the information about my… my PowerPoint,
167 00:22:26.000 ⇒ 00:22:27.190 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: And then…
168 00:22:28.120 ⇒ 00:22:34.429 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: it will… it will create a slide for me inside of the PowerPoint. It will actually go in and edit the PowerPoint for me.
169 00:22:34.570 ⇒ 00:22:35.520 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Okay.
170 00:22:36.180 ⇒ 00:22:39.479 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: And so those are the… yeah, so basically, yeah, it’s tasks.
171 00:22:39.670 ⇒ 00:22:46.390 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: and co-work, that is basically how I do 99% of my job now. It’s like… If… if I…
172 00:22:47.210 ⇒ 00:23:04.469 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: And if I’m not at my desk, or if I’m not at my Mac, I use this thing called Dispatch. Okay. And Dispatch allows me to tell my computer what to do from my phone. Okay. So if I need… so if I’m on the go, and I’m, like, working on something, or I’m at a meeting, and I need to, like, make edits to a deck.
173 00:23:04.610 ⇒ 00:23:07.970 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: I will just, like, tell dispatch, hey.
174 00:23:08.480 ⇒ 00:23:13.590 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: make this edit to the slide and upload it to my… my Google… my Google Drive.
175 00:23:13.590 ⇒ 00:23:14.170 Brylle Girang: Yeah.
176 00:23:14.170 ⇒ 00:23:21.220 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: And then, while I’m at the meeting, I can literally pull out those changes with the new updated slide deck straight from my phone.
177 00:23:22.430 ⇒ 00:23:24.180 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: That’s how I do my work.
178 00:23:24.180 ⇒ 00:23:34.729 Brylle Girang: Yeah, so I have a question here. Right now, in Brainforge, we have, like, the GitHub repo as our harness. How do you…
179 00:23:34.950 ⇒ 00:23:40.040 Brylle Girang: Like, how do you make sure that Kalod knows everything about what you’re doing?
180 00:23:40.670 ⇒ 00:23:44.130 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: It’s fully… it’s all connectors, so…
181 00:23:44.390 ⇒ 00:23:52.039 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: While this is doing its thing, I can show you, I have connectors to every piece of information.
182 00:23:52.570 ⇒ 00:23:52.900 Brylle Girang: Okay.
183 00:23:52.900 ⇒ 00:24:06.780 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: And this is… this is, like, global, so it’s, like, throughout all my… like, I have access to this via my Mac, I have access to all this, like, via my phone. That’s how I get my… and the context window now for Claude is enormous.
184 00:24:06.780 ⇒ 00:24:07.630 Brylle Girang: Yeah.
185 00:24:08.740 ⇒ 00:24:15.480 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: that, it’s able to pull, like, as long as I know what documents I’m trying to pull from, or if I have a skill.
186 00:24:15.710 ⇒ 00:24:26.679 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: like, that… that basically says, okay, these are the… these are the specific docs you need to reference. Yeah, it basically, it basically does everything I need it to do.
187 00:24:26.870 ⇒ 00:24:27.920 Brylle Girang: Okay.
188 00:24:28.200 ⇒ 00:24:34.549 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Gotcha. Yeah. And so… Yeah, that’s basically… that’s basically how I do everything.
189 00:24:34.800 ⇒ 00:24:37.050 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Alright, so here’s the updated deck.
190 00:24:37.280 ⇒ 00:24:42.200 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: So, it just… oh.
191 00:24:42.680 ⇒ 00:24:47.650 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Sorry, it’s, it doesn’t like to…
192 00:24:48.150 ⇒ 00:24:51.269 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: There’s some… there’s some issue with this, like,
193 00:24:51.620 ⇒ 00:24:56.470 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: server component stuff. But anyways, this is the ask slide, so…
194 00:24:56.710 ⇒ 00:24:57.770 Brylle Girang: Oh, wow.
195 00:24:58.470 ⇒ 00:25:11.230 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: yeah, it altered everything for me. So, as you can see here, both slides are updated, as slide now raising 3.5 at 13 mil. And then the financial projection subtitle now
196 00:25:12.290 ⇒ 00:25:13.420 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: It edited it.
197 00:25:14.720 ⇒ 00:25:16.690 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: It altered all the numbers.
198 00:25:16.690 ⇒ 00:25:17.170 Brylle Girang: Okay.
199 00:25:17.170 ⇒ 00:25:17.690 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: that.
200 00:25:17.800 ⇒ 00:25:20.959 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: It would be based on a 3.5 million seat.
201 00:25:20.960 ⇒ 00:25:23.330 Brylle Girang: It’s properly formatted, so…
202 00:25:23.330 ⇒ 00:25:24.610 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: It’s perfectly formatted.
203 00:25:24.610 ⇒ 00:25:25.010 Brylle Girang: Yeah.
204 00:25:25.010 ⇒ 00:25:43.369 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: It is a hundred, like… I used to have a skill, this was a few months ago, I used to have a skill that, like, would be very specific about the formatting, so what I would do is I’d upload the PowerPoint, I would, ask it to, like, extract all of, like, the design, and then I would… I would turn that design document into a skill.
205 00:25:43.410 ⇒ 00:25:48.140 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: And then that’s what I would have… I would call it every time I would make edits to my PowerPoints, right?
206 00:25:48.410 ⇒ 00:25:53.000 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Claude just does it automatically now, so I don’t even need to… it will… it will, with its reasoning.
207 00:25:53.170 ⇒ 00:25:56.290 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Which you can see here.
208 00:25:58.180 ⇒ 00:26:02.329 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: It does it in the top, right here somewhere.
209 00:26:03.500 ⇒ 00:26:06.749 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah, so it does visual QA now, and so…
210 00:26:07.240 ⇒ 00:26:18.910 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah, it’s all… like, their agentic workflow is just really, really solid, and so I basically only use Co-Work now, which is basically, like, what Utam and Robert are trying to make open work.
211 00:26:19.690 ⇒ 00:26:20.649 Brylle Girang: Yeah, yeah, exactly.
212 00:26:20.650 ⇒ 00:26:30.619 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: So… but that’s basically, like, what I do. And so, eventually, Brainforge will just have something like this through open work.
213 00:26:30.850 ⇒ 00:26:35.159 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: And that’s where you would, like, pull out all the visual stuff. It’s just…
214 00:26:35.460 ⇒ 00:26:54.060 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: I don’t, like I said, I don’t work on my decks anymore. I just… I just have my designer give me, like, fonts and a design guide, and then I just run everything through Claude Co-work now for any type of… literally anything. Anything to do with slides, PDFs, briefs,
215 00:26:55.350 ⇒ 00:27:04.320 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah, it’s all done in here, and then it’s all done locally, because you just connect it to… when you’re… when you assign a new task, you just connect it to a folder that you’re working inside of.
216 00:27:04.410 ⇒ 00:27:23.770 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah. And so, that’s how I integrate it with the, I integrate it with our BrainForge workflow. Yeah. Like, the outputs from here, I’ll grab the markdown or whatever, and I’ll just copy and paste it inside here, and then that’s how I produce my slides, if I need it. Or a brief, if someone’s asking.
217 00:27:24.200 ⇒ 00:27:24.720 Brylle Girang: Oh, God.
218 00:27:24.720 ⇒ 00:27:31.889 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yesterday, someone asked me what the Brain Forge services were, and I just threw it in here, produced a brief, and then, like.
219 00:27:33.050 ⇒ 00:27:43.349 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: they’re sharing it with their team right now, but yeah, that’s it. Like, I don’t really… I don’t really spend very much time anymore, because then it just preserves all of the visual layer.
220 00:27:43.500 ⇒ 00:27:44.350 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Okay.
221 00:27:44.350 ⇒ 00:27:51.700 Brylle Girang: Why don’t you… I guess, one question, why don’t you clone, like, the GitHub repo for BingeFrench platform, and then…
222 00:27:52.110 ⇒ 00:27:53.440 Brylle Girang: Added to Claude.
223 00:27:53.980 ⇒ 00:28:01.230 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Oh yeah, I already did. I just… the thing is, it’s like, I… want… I don’t want to use my own usage.
224 00:28:01.540 ⇒ 00:28:03.590 Brylle Girang: Oh, okay.
225 00:28:03.590 ⇒ 00:28:09.499 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: That’s why, like, for example, cursor here, I logged in via the team… the team profile.
226 00:28:09.500 ⇒ 00:28:09.972 Brylle Girang: Yeah, yeah, yeah.
227 00:28:11.950 ⇒ 00:28:17.120 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah, so the team plan. Okay. And then, as you can see here, I’m using my own plan.
228 00:28:17.120 ⇒ 00:28:17.560 Brylle Girang: Okay.
229 00:28:17.560 ⇒ 00:28:26.130 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: So, if I were to pull in, it’s like… If I were to
230 00:28:26.340 ⇒ 00:28:32.450 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: go in and use the Braidforge platform, which is somewhere in here.
231 00:28:33.910 ⇒ 00:28:36.049 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Like, I could do that, right?
232 00:28:37.260 ⇒ 00:28:42.220 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: And so I could, like… Do the whole… the whole shenanigans, but…
233 00:28:42.220 ⇒ 00:28:42.570 Brylle Girang: Yeah.
234 00:28:42.570 ⇒ 00:28:47.149 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: when the PR happens, I have to go back to cursor to push the PR.
235 00:28:47.390 ⇒ 00:28:49.560 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah. And so…
236 00:28:49.720 ⇒ 00:28:57.109 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah, and I wouldn’t be able to use all the skills that you guys have in there, because I would need to import those skills into my Cloud Code instance.
237 00:28:58.040 ⇒ 00:29:02.029 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: So, so yeah, there’s certain… so there are some limitations, because…
238 00:29:02.630 ⇒ 00:29:09.839 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: there is a… there is a way for me to import all of those skills, it’s just via, like, customize, and then I could just…
239 00:29:10.470 ⇒ 00:29:13.110 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Add the plugin via,
240 00:29:14.230 ⇒ 00:29:18.240 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: So if I go Marketplace, I literally can just copy and paste the Brainforge repo in here.
241 00:29:18.670 ⇒ 00:29:19.160 Brylle Girang: Yeah.
242 00:29:19.160 ⇒ 00:29:22.569 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: But once again, I’m not trying to use my own… my own usage, so…
243 00:29:22.570 ⇒ 00:29:25.470 Brylle Girang: Yeah, I agree, I understand, okay?
244 00:29:25.910 ⇒ 00:29:35.370 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: So… so yeah, that’s… that’s the reason I’m not, pulling in those skills. But, but yeah, I’ve done it a few times, but,
245 00:29:36.300 ⇒ 00:29:45.180 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah, the Claude code doesn’t really produce, slides and stuff. That’s really a co-work thing, and so,
246 00:29:45.760 ⇒ 00:29:46.610 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah.
247 00:29:46.750 ⇒ 00:29:58.560 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: That’s… that’s kind of the… that’s kind of the thing. But yeah, on my work… on my Mac, because I only have, like, one drive in my Mac, I actually… when I… I have, like, a project
248 00:29:58.810 ⇒ 00:30:05.210 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: that is the Brainforge platform project, and so I can actually pull the markdown files directly for
249 00:30:05.430 ⇒ 00:30:08.380 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: for use within Co-work on my MacBook. So…
250 00:30:08.900 ⇒ 00:30:14.009 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah, so I would rec- that would be my recommendation if, like, you do want to use Claude, is, like.
251 00:30:14.350 ⇒ 00:30:18.519 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: quadco work, and then just, like, have it work within the BrainForge repo.
252 00:30:18.650 ⇒ 00:30:28.069 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: And, like, if you want to make slides, you want to make, like, presentations, you want to make, like, mock-ups, I think is the craziest thing you can do on this.
253 00:30:28.290 ⇒ 00:30:30.599 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: You know what artifacts are, right?
254 00:30:30.840 ⇒ 00:30:31.990 Brylle Girang: Yeah, yeah.
255 00:30:31.990 ⇒ 00:30:38.580 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Okay, so, like, these artifacts, like, you can literally make an interactive game.
256 00:30:39.120 ⇒ 00:30:48.690 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: for, like, you just, like, pull in… pull in, like, whatever you’re trying to do with your learning and development, and just turn it into an artifact, and, like, you have a JSX interactable…
257 00:30:48.870 ⇒ 00:30:54.770 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: That you can, like, use as a, you know, as, like, a proof of concept.
258 00:30:54.770 ⇒ 00:30:55.810 Brylle Girang: Yeah, yeah.
259 00:30:56.320 ⇒ 00:31:01.410 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: So, there’s, like, a lot of cool things you can do just within the Cloud, like…
260 00:31:01.640 ⇒ 00:31:14.840 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: application, and so… and it’s just, like, stuff that, like, only… if you only work within the agent… the agent client, you just, like, wouldn’t be able to see, like, visually. And,
261 00:31:15.440 ⇒ 00:31:22.050 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: And a lot of people are visual, like, even if our team at Brainforge is mostly technical, our outputs need to be visual.
262 00:31:22.160 ⇒ 00:31:36.709 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah. And that’s… that’s why, that’s why I’m such a strong advocate for… for Cloud, you know, for… for Cloud Code, Cloud Co-work. But like I said, if Utam is able to develop, like, the… the… the forge, you know, the open work forge.
263 00:31:36.960 ⇒ 00:31:46.970 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Like, that would help you guys tremendously, because I, like I said, I produce visuals all the time for my end, you know, for my end customer, so…
264 00:31:46.970 ⇒ 00:31:47.600 Brylle Girang: Yeah.
265 00:31:48.190 ⇒ 00:32:01.579 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: But yeah, that’s… that’s pretty much the stuff I showed Greg, was just, like, co-work, like, the speed to which you can create slides, and, like, the power of combining co-work and, like, scheduled tasks is unmatched. Like, if you can… if, like.
266 00:32:02.560 ⇒ 00:32:16.219 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: I will do that on occasion, just, like, if information has changed, or if stock market tickers have moved and stuff, you can, like, pull all that information, throw it into a deck, and, like, because there are, like, web scraper connectors and stuff in Cloud.
267 00:32:16.390 ⇒ 00:32:23.000 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: You can… you literally can get all the information you want, like, put into your inbox first thing in the morning.
268 00:32:23.890 ⇒ 00:32:28.910 Brylle Girang: Amazing. Okay, gotcha. I, I have been… I have been looking at the cloud for some…
269 00:32:29.320 ⇒ 00:32:42.169 Brylle Girang: well now, I think they’re the fastest moving harness in the market. This is… this… this helps me a lot when it comes to making decisions. That’s amazing!
270 00:32:42.170 ⇒ 00:32:59.129 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: I think, yeah, a lot of people, they try to… or they’re, they’re… they’ll have, like, the Mac Minis and stuff for open claw and whatnot, but I will tell you, this is, like, the easiest entry point, to… to get used to the idea of a 24-7, like, agent.
271 00:32:59.240 ⇒ 00:33:15.570 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: It’s just, like, it’s super easy, super easy, like, if you’re willing to spend a lot of money, you know, every month, right? But, yeah, it’s, like, if you have any questions, like, more than happy to. Like, I demo Cloud Code and Claude Co-work all the time, because people
272 00:33:15.570 ⇒ 00:33:25.510 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: are still on ChatGPT, and I’m like, you know you can automate 90% of your work now? Yeah. And like, I just told Greg, like, what I’m testing today is webhooks.
273 00:33:26.070 ⇒ 00:33:32.519 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: And, like, webhooks are crazy. Like, you can do so much, like… Basically, like,
274 00:33:32.880 ⇒ 00:33:46.950 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: when a URL is updated, or, like, there’s a… there’s… there are things that happen on a website that changes, yeah, CloudNow, you can, like, deploy it so that it, like, when a change happens on the website, it pulls that information in, which is crazy.
275 00:33:47.100 ⇒ 00:34:04.960 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Right? Wow. And so, that’s how, like, Discord, if you’re familiar with Discord, that’s how Discord bots work, is they, like, fully operate off of webhooks. So, Claude is essentially going to have, like, or has the current capability to just, like, put an ear on, like, changes on a website, and, like, push…
276 00:34:05.150 ⇒ 00:34:06.649 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Push out some sort of…
277 00:34:06.930 ⇒ 00:34:21.119 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: task based on those, those changes. So, it’s a very, very powerful tool, and it… it does, like, pretty much 100% of what OpenClaw can do. Yeah, it… so…
278 00:34:21.360 ⇒ 00:34:27.389 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: So if you want to use it, like, I highly encourage using it if you want to automate most of the stuff you’re working on.
279 00:34:27.880 ⇒ 00:34:45.060 Brylle Girang: Yeah, this is amazing, this is amazing. I have also tried to, like, go down the rabbit hole of running a local LLM, but I don’t think my MacBook Air will be able to handle that heat. But I have seen people going above and beyond buying two Mac Ultras.
280 00:34:45.139 ⇒ 00:34:48.270 Brylle Girang: Just to run the local office. But yeah, this is…
281 00:34:48.270 ⇒ 00:34:48.850 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah.
282 00:34:48.980 ⇒ 00:34:54.180 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah, I mean, like I said, if you have any questions, or, like, if there’s anything you want to, like…
283 00:34:54.300 ⇒ 00:35:07.400 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: understand better, like, I… me and my… my CTO, like, like, we exclusively… exclusively use Cloud now for every… like, I… I used to use way more automation and, like, way more…
284 00:35:07.400 ⇒ 00:35:14.310 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: AI tools to do my work, but now I just converted everything to Claude, because it’s just…
285 00:35:14.510 ⇒ 00:35:17.610 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: The outputs are better, it’s more consistent, and like…
286 00:35:18.120 ⇒ 00:35:26.540 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah, so much of the work is just… is literally just taking notes, turning them into action items, and then pushing them out somewhere. That’s it.
287 00:35:27.300 ⇒ 00:35:28.130 Brylle Girang: Exactly.
288 00:35:28.340 ⇒ 00:35:36.650 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah. Alright, but anyways, yeah, I know it’s, like, super late over there, Bryl, so, but yeah, like, let me know, let me know if you have any other questions. I’m on Slack, so…
289 00:35:36.650 ⇒ 00:35:39.690 Brylle Girang: Yeah, definitely. Thank you, Jarrell. I appreciate you taking me through.
290 00:35:39.690 ⇒ 00:35:45.070 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Yeah, thank you, and likewise, thank you for showing me cursor. I’ll make sure to use it in that way now, going forward.
291 00:35:45.070 ⇒ 00:35:48.870 Brylle Girang: Yeah, yeah, we’re trying to make it better, so your feedback will be appreciated.
292 00:35:49.360 ⇒ 00:35:51.239 Jorrel Sto. Tomas: Perfect. Alright. See ya.