Tetsuo Introduces AgenC and a Pocket-Sized Autonomous Agent
Summary
• Tetsuo, a longtime systems programmer with over 229K followers on X, launched AgenC on February 24 as the token tied to his autonomous AI agent project.
• AgenC centers around “AgenC One,” a pocket-sized device that runs a full autonomous agent continuously without needing a phone or laptop after setup.
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AgenC launched on February 24, introduced by Tetsuo, a software engineer and AI builder known for low-level programming, security research, and retro computing principles blended with modern systems. He has been coding since 1994 and has built a following of over 229K on X, where he documents his work on autonomous agent infrastructure.
The core concept behind AgenC is an autonomous AI agent system designed to reason, plan, execute tasks, and coordinate with other agents with minimal human oversight. One of its flagship implementations is “AgenC One,” a compact hardware device that runs the full AgenC protocol independently after initial setup. In this post, Tetsuo shared that early access is open and no payment is required to join the waitlist.
A separate video demonstrated the device in action, with @tetsuoarena suggesting that the best way to test it is to simply go for a walk and let the agent operate in a live environment.
After the token launch, Tetsuo announced that his team would participate in the Pump fun hackathon. The program will fund 12 projects with $250K each at a $10M valuation and includes mentorship from the Pump fun founders. Two teams have already been selected, with ten more to be announced.
