Rob Grossman

54 posts

Rob Grossman

Rob Grossman

@digitalnomd

building software in my spare time

San Francisco, CA انضم Temmuz 2014
186 يتبع33 المتابعون
Rob Grossman
Rob Grossman@digitalnomd·
@DanielSmidstrup Right now I’m building a testable way to validate AI deep research reports by grounding them in conversations with real users. Market research conclusions should be verifiable just like how coding agents are because they can test their output.
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Daniel Smidstrup
Daniel Smidstrup@DanielSmidstrup·
Build-in-public has introduced me to many amazing people! Looking to meet more. What are you building?
Daniel Smidstrup tweet media
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Reads with Ravi
Reads with Ravi@readswithravi·
What’s a book you think everyone should read at least once in their lifetime?
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Rob Grossman
Rob Grossman@digitalnomd·
@Vapi_AI wondering for the curious out there: how often does the problem with deploying voice agents really just boil down to working with legacy systems of record? I’m curious how real-time voice agents that need fast responses get them when they need to work with backend systems that are slow and unreliable.
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Rob Grossman
Rob Grossman@digitalnomd·
@alive_ Agree with most but you still need to write code by hand for most technical coding interviews. LLMs are still strictly forbidden for most modern SWE interviews.
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Ali Yahya
Ali Yahya@alive_·
Barbell strategy for killing it in an age of superhuman AI: Simultaneously get as close to AND stay as far away from AI as humanly possible. 1. Get close — play with AI models, use them to help you think, ask them to teach you about the world, get them to help you create, work with them to write code, understand what makes them tick, embed them into your everyday life, have fun. 2. Stay far away — learn to tell stories, make eye contact, build a team, lead with courage, connect far-flung ideas, build lifelong friendships, debate persuasively, think forbidden thoughts, handwrite ideas, confess your fears, fall in love. Spend less time trying to master mental transformations that are purely mechanical — building spreadsheets, analyzing trades, balancing accounts, writing code by hand, following playbooks, searching for needles in haystacks. These are the emerging no-man's land, squarely the domain of AI. Venture to the extremes. That’s where all the fun is anyway.
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Rob Grossman
Rob Grossman@digitalnomd·
Being AI savvy is knowing when not to use it. It doesn’t mean using it to replace yourself in all situations, e.g. when writing a “personal” correspondence to someone else.
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Rob Grossman
Rob Grossman@digitalnomd·
Inspiring backdrop to build against at the @AGIHouseSF! Building something great for the Build A Company hackathon for this weekend. Stay tuned!
Rob Grossman tweet media
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@jason
@jason@Jason·
We started an AI founder twitter group... reply with "I'm in" if you're a founder and want to be added
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Rob Grossman
Rob Grossman@digitalnomd·
Just finished reading the chapter on Optimism in the Beginning of Infinity by @DavidDeutschOxf. A quote to start off 2025: “For if any of those earlier experiments in optimism had succeeded, our species would be exploring the stars by now, and you and I would be immortal.”
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Rob Grossman
Rob Grossman@digitalnomd·
@svpino I’ve typically seen integration tests used instead when you don’t use mocks.
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Santiago
Santiago@svpino·
Slow unit tests are better than too many mocks.
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Rob Grossman
Rob Grossman@digitalnomd·
I think of Starbucks as another fast food restaurant similar to McDonalds. The last time I was in one they had taken all of the chairs out of the restaurant and it was very dirty. I don’t even think they had a bathroom that was available to the public. And this was in an upscale neighborhood. Think +$MM homes.
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Andrew Yeung
Andrew Yeung@andruyeung·
Starbucks has gone to crap. I visited a Starbucks recently. It was nothing like I remembered: - Stores are empty—and some are kinda dirty and messy. - The community cafe vibe is gone. People are in and out. Purely transactional. - Drinks aren’t interesting anymore. - Staff are less friendly? Take a look: their stock price barely moved in the last FIVE YEARS (+2%). So sad to see such a legendary brand go to crap. The beginning of the end for Starbucks.
Andrew Yeung tweet media
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James Surowiecki
James Surowiecki@JamesSurowiecki·
Great question. The answer is obvious after a moment's thought, but will feel wrong.
James Surowiecki tweet media
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Eric Weinstein
Eric Weinstein@ericweinstein·
I love this. Do you want to fill an entire stadium debating this with me? I’m so game. For America. You love this place. So do I. We don’t know each other. I’m a US born STEM PhD with some background in this issue in the sciences. Dance with me.
Vivek Ramaswamy@VivekGRamaswamy

The reason top tech companies often hire foreign-born & first-generation engineers over “native” Americans isn’t because of an innate American IQ deficit (a lazy & wrong explanation). A key part of it comes down to the c-word: culture. Tough questions demand tough answers & if we’re really serious about fixing the problem, we have to confront the TRUTH: Our American culture has venerated mediocrity over excellence for way too long (at least since the 90s and likely longer). That doesn’t start in college, it starts YOUNG. A culture that celebrates the prom queen over the math olympiad champ, or the jock over the valedictorian, will not produce the best engineers. A culture that venerates Cory from “Boy Meets World,” or Zach & Slater over Screech in “Saved by the Bell,” or ‘Stefan’ over Steve Urkel in “Family Matters,” will not produce the best engineers. (Fact: I know *multiple* sets of immigrant parents in the 90s who actively limited how much their kids could watch those TV shows precisely because they promoted mediocrity…and their kids went on to become wildly successful STEM graduates). More movies like Whiplash, fewer reruns of “Friends.” More math tutoring, fewer sleepovers. More weekend science competitions, fewer Saturday morning cartoons. More books, less TV. More creating, less “chillin.” More extracurriculars, less “hanging out at the mall.” Most normal American parents look skeptically at “those kinds of parents.” More normal American kids view such “those kinds of kids” with scorn. If you grow up aspiring to normalcy, normalcy is what you will achieve. Now close your eyes & visualize which families you knew in the 90s (or even now) who raise their kids according to one model versus the other. Be brutally honest. “Normalcy” doesn’t cut it in a hyper-competitive global market for technical talent. And if we pretend like it does, we’ll have our asses handed to us by China. This can be our Sputnik moment. We’ve awaken from slumber before & we can do it again. Trump’s election hopefully marks the beginning of a new golden era in America, but only if our culture fully wakes up. A culture that once again prioritizes achievement over normalcy; excellence over mediocrity; nerdiness over conformity; hard work over laziness. That’s the work we have cut out for us, rather than wallowing in victimhood & just wishing (or legislating) alternative hiring practices into existence. I’m confident we can do it. 🇺🇸 🇺🇸

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Rob Grossman
Rob Grossman@digitalnomd·
@elonmusk The replacement number is 2. Although concerning, as long as we don’t go below that, it’s not contracting.
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Rob Grossman
Rob Grossman@digitalnomd·
@loganthorneloe @svpino The lack of focus on code is precisely the reason the software sucks most of the time. Higher quality code is usually the solution to software that sucks. Software that’s solving the wrong problem isn’t something that an AI can solve with more auto-generated code.
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Logan Thorneloe
Logan Thorneloe@loganthorneloe·
@svpino I think it'll completely change the role of a developer. Less of a focus on code. More on actually solving problems.
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Santiago
Santiago@svpino·
We need unlimited software, and we need unlimited increase in quality (most software today sucks.) I believe AI will help us build *more* and *better* software. I believe AI will help *more* people become developers, not fewer. AI should add, never subtract.
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Rob Grossman
Rob Grossman@digitalnomd·
@svpino Curious if you have any high-profile examples of software that should be improved.
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Rob Grossman
Rob Grossman@digitalnomd·
@dibuenio Stop doing whatever you’re doing and do something enjoyable. Get outside and enjoy the fresh air.
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Dmitry Buenkov
Dmitry Buenkov@dibuenio·
me → burnout any hacks?
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Rob Grossman
Rob Grossman@digitalnomd·
@sama What sorts of problems can ChatGPT Pro solve that ChatGPT Plus or sonnet can’t?
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MichaelRapaport
MichaelRapaport@MichaelRapaport·
A privilege & a blessing
MichaelRapaport tweet media
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Rob Grossman
Rob Grossman@digitalnomd·
@ericweinstein Why besides wishful thinking? The universe doesn’t bend to our hopes and desires. I’d love to believe this however the rational part in me fears Einstein’s speed limit will remain.
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Eric Weinstein
Eric Weinstein@ericweinstein·
Assume a traversable cosmos.
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Albert Mao
Albert Mao@AlbertZMao·
My co-founder and I live in NYC making $40K / year as YC founders even after raising millions. That's $9.61 per hour (based on 80 hour work week). Many people think that if a founder raises millions, it makes them a millionaire. But here’s the reality of being a founder: - I am on my parent’s health insurance - I share a 1 bedroom apartment with my co-founder to cut costs - I eat microwave meals because they're fast and cheap - I take the subway everywhere instead of ubering We could be making 5-10x more in our past corporate jobs. When we started @VectorShiftAI, a no-code platform that allows anyone to build AI workflows, we decided that we needed to fully align our incentives to growing the company. We wake up every day thinking about our users instead of how much money we are making this year. Founders need to be all in.
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