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I Spent $20,000 on AI Tools, Here's What Actually Works

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I feel like there's just a ridiculous

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amount of AI tools out there right now.

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And it's actually quite difficult to

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work out which ones are worth your time

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and money. For me especially, like I

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value my own time. I don't want to be

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messing around with all sorts of AI

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tools and just finding out that they're

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rubbish. But unfortunately, I have used

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quite a few tools. And in this video, I

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wanted to list some of the tools that

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I'm actually using, some of the tools

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that my team is using, some of the tools

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that other people are using that are

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actually useful and worth paying for.

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Some of these aren't also fully AI, but

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they do also sort of complement AI. Now,

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of course, Claude is the big one. Claude

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is the one that I've been covering a lot

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on the channel. I feel like a lot of

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people have been using because I think

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Claude is very well designed for

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productivity focused stuff. So, if

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you're someone who needs to do research,

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if you're someone who needs to work with

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files on your computer, if you're

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someone who wants to code, Claude, I

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feel like they've done such a good job

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of housing everything all in one,

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especially when you look at their app.

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So having the app and having the chat

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functionality, the co-work

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functionality, and the coding

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functionality all in one place just

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makes it super easy to use all of the

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tools without having to constantly

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change windows and sort of change

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context or whatever. And I find myself

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switching between all three very quickly

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and easily because it's in one app. It

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just makes my life a lot easier. Their

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chat functionality is like any other

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sort of chat AI tool which you can use

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to do research, find answers, sort of

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come up with strategies and stuff. I use

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it a lot for just day-to-day things.

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When I need to do some research or I

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need to be educated on something or I'm

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trying to find out about something, I

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use Claw to do all that sort of stuff. I

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of course change between the languages

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quite often as well because you don't

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want to be using their most powerful

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model all the time. However, I do pay

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for the max plan which is $200 a month,

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which I think is worth it. Like I think

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the sort of capabilities and stuff you

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get with it are insane. Because of that,

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I do actually tend to use OPUS more than

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I probably should, but I've never hit

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the limits, so I'm not really

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complaining. Their co-work feature in

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particular, I think, is super powerful

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because co-work,

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as the name suggests, it's kind of

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imagine it like an AI agent doing work

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for you in the background. And it can do

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stuff on your computer. So, if you give

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it access to a folder on your computer,

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you can have it do stuff within that

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folder. So, I've shown examples in the

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past where if you have sort of financial

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statements or something in a folder, you

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need to get information from those

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financial statements. You can do that

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with co-work. You can also have it sort

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of compare legal documents or whatever.

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Have it compare information. And they

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have a lot of other ideas here. So, you

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can have it do all these different

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things here. Organize my files. I think

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that's a good one. So, let's just say

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you have a folder which has a bunch of

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different files like your downloads

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folder and you wanted to organize all

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those files for you can do that. You can

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have it organize images, videos, or have

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it do a specific thing. Maybe you're

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looking for files with a specific file

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name and to put them all in a folder.

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You can have it do that sort of thing.

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You can have it write stuff for you,

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create a landing page, build a

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dashboard. Those are actually very

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similar to Claude code as well. You can

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have it analyze Google Drive documents

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because it doesn't just have to work on

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your computer. If you have it connected

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with the connectors functionality, and

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they have a bunch of connectors here,

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you can have it get information from

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those places. So, it doesn't necessarily

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just have to be on your computer. I

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think this is another good example of

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say you have information in a service

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like Linear or Figma or whatever. It

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could be Google Drive, but you want that

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information on your computer. You want

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it as a PDF, you want it as a CSV or

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something like that. You can have it do

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this for you without you having to do it

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manually. And then they also have clawed

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code which I've done a video on which I

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would highly recommend just showing how

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to use claw code in the app to make

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stuff to make a website or whatever. The

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app version is good. It's great. I think

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it's great for doing sort of more basic

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things um like building a website

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building an app. Maybe if you're not

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working on multiple projects at the same

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time, even though you can have multiple

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projects at the same time going, I think

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if you're starting out, this is what I'd

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recommend. If you're someone who's not

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really a developer, who's not messed

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around with code and stuff in the past,

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but wants to build things, this is what

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I'd recommend checking out and using.

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OpenAI have their own version of Claude

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Code, which they call Codeex, and

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Codeex, I'd say, is just as good as

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Claude Code. But it does depend because

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some people say that one is better than

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the other. I personally haven't seen too

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much of a difference. What I end up

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doing is if there's something I can't do

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in Clawed Code or Claude Code is

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struggling, then I switch to Codeex. And

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then if Codeex is struggling, I switch

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to Claw Code. So, I switch between the

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two models. I am not tied to any of

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these things. If a better model came out

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tomorrow, if a better app came out

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tomorrow, I would completely switch. I

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don't care about any of these companies

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or brands. I want to use whatever works

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for me, whatever I think is best. Codeex

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do have their own app as well, which I

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really like. I actually think they've

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done a really good job with this app

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because you can use it for multi- sort

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of agent coding. So, you can have a

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bunch of different things going in here

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and work on different projects all at

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the same time. And I actually think the

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app is really welld designed. Is it

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better designed than clawed code? Um, I

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think it depends on what you're looking

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for. I think that's the great thing

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about all of these apps and what they

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can do. Um, it really depends on what

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you're looking for. What I do like about

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Codeex is that you can connect it to

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your GitHub, you can connect it to an

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IDE, you can see your lines of code,

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what changes and stuff have been made.

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Um, you have the normal chat box like

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you would, and then you can see your

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projects on the lefth hand side. And

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again, you can work on multiple projects

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at the same time. So when one agent is

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working in the background on one

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project, you can then work on another

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project or another branch with codeex

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and have multiple agents working at the

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same time coding stuff in the

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background. I do like the app. I think

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they've done a really good job with it

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and I think they've done a good job of

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catching up to Clawed Code because when

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Claude Code came out, it was super

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popular. I feel like it blew up.

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Everyone was raving on about it. So it's

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good to see Chip now have Codeex, which

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I think is just as good. The app that

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I've been using though to code stuff and

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to make stuff and to build stuff is an

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app called Conductor. And what I really

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like about Conductor is the way it

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looks, the way it feels, and the way it

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works. The sort of UX of this and the UI

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design of this, I think, is awesome. On

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the left, you have all of your projects

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and repos. In the middle, you have your

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chat box and stuff. And you can see your

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branches at the top as well. And on the

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right, you can see your files, you can

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see the changes, and you can see your

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terminal. Everything all in this one

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