February 9th, 2026
AI can call you now
This newsletter was brought to you byLightfieldCalls, posts, and pair-programming
gm legends, happy Monday.
Clawdtalk gives your self-hosted agent an actual phone line, SuperX is for people who treat X like part of the job instead of a hobby, and Dropstone lets you stop coding alone by putting teammates and AI in the same workspace instead of hiding in a single-player IDE.
Give your bot a number

ClawdTalk lets you call your OpenClaw bot on a real phone line. You install the skill, verify your number, and it handles all the Telnyx voice plumbing so your bot just sees text in and text out while ClawdTalk deals with audio, latency, and the network. Your bot stays on your hardware behind a WebSocket, and you get a normal phone experience on your side.
🔥 Our Take: There is something very funny and very cool about having your own self-hosted agent show up in your contacts like a person. It also quietly solves a real thing for power users who want to check in, stash a thought, or kick off a task when they are away from a keyboard without wiring up yet another chat channel.
How far would you actually go with agents

Nika started a thread asking where people draw the line with AI agents. She says she is happy to delegate some work, but there is no way she is handing over full access to money, sensitive health data, or private conversations, especially now that you see stories about agents buying tools and courses on their own.
The thread is basically a gut check on boundaries. What would you never give an agent access to, what feels fine, and how are people thinking about “least privilege” and stop points before an AI can do something you cannot undo.
What if you only had to do your call prep routine once — ever?

You know the one. LinkedIn. Crunchbase. CRM. Inbox. Last transcript. Fifteen minutes, every time, before every call. Lightfield is an AI-native CRM that just shipped Skills. Describe any routine in plain English — and the CRM learns it. Next time: "Prep me for my call with Acme." That's it. It does the whole thing. "Score every deal in my pipeline using my criteria." Done. "Research this account the way I would." Done. Teach it how you sell and watch it go to work for you. 2,500+ startups already have.
Treat X like work

SuperX is a growth toolkit for people who actually show up on X every day. It pulls in viral posts from your niche, helps you research what is working, rewrites drafts in your voice, schedules posts, suggests who to engage with, and tracks what is landing so you are not guessing.
🔥 Our Take: This comes from the same founder who built Tweet Hunter, so it is made by someone who has lived in this space for a while. If X is already part of your job, having ideas, posting, and stats in one place just makes the whole thing less tiring.
Stop coding alone

Dropstone is a multiplayer AI workspace for building software together instead of soloing with a bot. v3 adds Share Chat: you generate a link to your local workspace and a teammate, designer, or client can jump in instantly, sharing the same AI context and live preview. Under the hood it runs on their D3 Engine for huge compressed context and Horizon Mode, where background agent swarms chip away at bugs while you are offline.
🔥 Our Take: The whole AI IDE wave somehow forgot that most real work gets unstuck with another human in the room. This goes the opposite way: keep the agents, but make it trivial to pull in a senior dev or a client and give everyone the same brain and screen. I am especially curious whether the “fix it while you sleep” swarms end up shipping real changes or just weird diffs, but as an experiment in how teams actually debug, this is genuinely interesting.
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