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Source channel @githubtrending · Post #15561 · Mar 14

#python#agent#agentic_rag#ai_agents#clawbot#context_database#context_engineering#filesystem#llm#memory#openclaw#opencode#rag#skill OpenViking is a free open-source tool that acts as a context database for AI agents, using a simple file system to organize memories, resources, and skills under viking:// paths. It fixes issues like scattered data, high token costs, weak searches, and untraceable errors with tiered loading (L0 abstracts, L1 overviews, L2 details loaded on demand), recursive directory retrieval, visual traces, and auto-session memory updates. You benefit by building smarter, cheaper agents faster—like managing files—saving up to 96% on tokens while boosting task success by 50%+. https://github.com/volcengine/OpenViking

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@fluencyinenglish · Post #7908 · 02/17/2026, 07:57 PM

Difference Between “drop out” and “be dropped out” Many people make this mistake: ❌ I was dropped out This sentence is grammatically incorrect. The correct structure is: ✅ I dropped out. Meaning: I voluntarily left or withdrew from school/university. Why “was dropped out” is wrong “Drop out” is an intransitive verb. It does not take an object, so it cannot be used in the passive voice. ❌ You cannot say: I was dropped out of university. Because dropping out is something you do yourself. Correct Usage If it was your decision: I dropped out of university. If it wasn’t your decision: Use other verbs to express that: I was expelled from university. I was forced to leave university. @fluencyinenglish #EnglishGrammar#GrammarTips#DropOut#PassiveVoice#IntransitiveVerbs#IELTSGrammar#CommonMistakes#LearnEnglish#TEFL