Joe Spencer

193 posts

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Joe Spencer

Joe Spencer

@futureengine

design

انضم Şubat 2009
1.2K يتبع109 المتابعون
Simular
Simular@SimularAI·
5/ Close your laptop. Reclaim your time. Let Sai handle it. The first 1,000 users will access Sai for $20/month (regular $200/mo). Repost with #DelegateToSai Comment "Delegate To Sai" to request additional invite code 🤖 ⭐ Limited invitation code: SIMULAR simular.ai/sai
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Simular
Simular@SimularAI·
In another universe, you missed your kid's recital. Your mom's birthday dinner. That anniversary celebration with your person. In this one, you have 𝐒𝐚𝐢. The AI co-worker that does your computer work so you don't have to choose.
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Hamza Baig
Hamza Baig@hamza_automates·
I BUILT A TALKING WEBSITE AI FOR A DENTIST And it brings in an extra $2,000 without changing a single thing on their site. It answers questions, books appointments, handles follow-ups, and talks like a real staff member. Patients stick around longer, bounce rates drop, and the clinic books more chairs on autopilot. If you want to see the full breakdown — how it works, the logic, and how to build one yourself Comment “AI” + Like + Repost and I'll send it to you. (must follow for DM)
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Dan Rosenthal
Dan Rosenthal@dan__rosenthal·
I've spent the last few years working with dozens of enterprise and YC-backed sales orgs. The most important thing I learned from these $100M+ sales teams: They’re using AI WAY differently than everyone else. The gap between teams using AI well... and teams not using it at all... Is getting scary. So I created a single resource that covers all of it. AI for sales in 2025 - from top-of-funnel to closed-won. Inside, I’ve included: • 16 AI vetted tools the top 1% are using. • 18 AI use-cases broken down by funnel stage • 3 full prompt frameworks you can copy and paste today • Complete inbound and outbound workflow diagrams • A model comparison guide (GPT 5 vs Claude vs Perplexity vs Gemini) • The best thought leaders to follow so you can stay up to date For the next 48 hours, we're giving away the full high-res PDF for free. If you want access: Comment "PDF" and I’ll personally DM it to you. (MUST BE FOLLOWING) PS If you're in sales or outbound, this will save you months of experimentation.
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@levelsio
@levelsio@levelsio·
A person I know (not on here) got on SSRIs (anti depressants) recently Not kidding you, he immediately told me "Pieter, we both have generational trauma, it is very important you also start taking anti depressants as soon as possible, it will really help you" I spit out my sparkling water with squeezed lemon "No I am fine, I love my life, I love the people around me, I love my work, I eat a diet of whole foods, I go to the gym 4 times a week and lift heavy and do cardio just so I do not become depressed like you, why would I go on SSRIs, are you out of your mind?" This shit is contagious
Marcos Pereira@marcospereeira

@levelsio friends dont let friends take SSRIs, they drive them to the gym with a monster white and slav hardbass

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Joe Spencer
Joe Spencer@futureengine·
Merry Christmas from way out west
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Brett
Brett@BrettFromDJ·
There’s an unspoken truth in design that almost no one wants to admit: A huge part of the job is just making things look good. That’s it. That's the core. But somewhere along the way, we became afraid to say that out loud. So we built an entire layer of performance around design (frameworks, titles, systems, etc). When a client asks me, "Why did you do it this way?" my honest answer is usually, "Because it looks good." Because it feels right. Because it creates the experience I wanted. But in today's design community, that answer would come across as irresponsible and unprofessional. We're expected to be able to defend every pixel like they were the result of years of academic research, when in reality it was simply the result of taste. But taste is too subjective, too illusive, too unmeasurable to package up so we wrap intuition in paragraphs of theory and call it a case study. This is why I rarely talk about “design” as a discipline. The moment you try to intellectualize it, you lose the thing that actually matters. Design isn’t complicated. People complicate it to defend their importance.
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Anything
Anything@anything·
Introducing Anything Max: Vibe Coding that's leaps above Lovable and Bolt We've raised money at a $100M valuation and built what we believe is the future of vibe coding. We asked 100 vibe coders to build their apps side by side on Lovable, Bolt, and Anything Max and they rated Anything Max the winner across all 3 categories - accuracy, design, and 'overall'. Here's why: • Full-stack control: Max can test backend hooks, branch database states, and debug issues, because Anything owns the full infrastructure. • Max can load up your app in its own browser and click on all buttons like a human tester to find all edge case bugs, then trace the bug across the stack - could be a frontend, backend, or a database issue (only we can do this, read #1) and autonomously fix it with 97% accuracy. Lovable and Bolt build prototypes, but Max users are building production-ready apps and already charging money for them. Blake built a gut biome app to $10K run rate Anthony built a referral tool to $20k in revenue Yuri built a suite of apps doing $40K Build your app with Max: createanything.com/max -------------------------------------------- We're hosting a $100K Hackathon to help people grow their app to $10K MRR. - We'll teach you everything we know about growing to 1M users. - You'll have 30 days to build a real product in public and get paying customers for it. If you do it well, you can start the New Year with a functioning business. Retweet and comment “LFG”, and we’ll send you a $100 discount code and the link to participate
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Tomer Omri
Tomer Omri@tomeromrix·
@base44 Make sure your DM is open / follow me so i can reach you after commenting
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Tomer Omri
Tomer Omri@tomeromrix·
I work at @base44 , so I see many prompts every day. Most of them are okay. Some are good. But about 1% are genius. I spent the last week analyzing that top 1%. The results were honestly shocking. 🤯 Most users prompt like they are talking to a human: "Make a cool, modern website for a tech company." (Results: Generic, boring, hallucinations). If you want to learn how to prompt and vibe code like a pro Drop a comment below, and I'll send the guide to your inbox. 📥
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Nozz
Nozz@NoahEpstein_·
just got early access to something that's genuinely fucking wild it's an mcp that connects directly to your n8n instance here's what it does: you describe what you want it builds the workflow deploys it to YOUR n8n runs it watches it fail debugs it fixes it runs it again until it works i watched it iterate 4 times on a webhook automation, fix its own connection errors, and hand me back a 98% done project i just had to tweak one filter node this is not "here's some json good luck" this is "i built it, tested it, it's live in your instance, go check" been building workflows manually for over a year this changes everything about how fast you can ship comment "MCP" and i'll send you the details
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Joe Spencer
Joe Spencer@futureengine·
LA_Tokamak
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Samruddhi Mokal
Samruddhi Mokal@samruddhi_mokal·
I just built 3 production-ready MVPs in 15 minutes from my phone. No code. No $100K engineer. No laptop. Just AI that actually ships real apps with databases, APIs, and backends. This isn't a toy. This is the future. Here's what I built: → Personal finance tracker (5 min) → AI image generator with Nano Banana API (4 min) → Smart note-taking app (6 min) All live. All deployed. All from my iPhone. But here's the crazy part: Most people will never build these because they think they need to "learn to code first." That's dead thinking. I created a complete guide with: ✓ Exact prompts I used for all 3 apps ✓ 100 app ideas (organized by category) ✓ Pro tips from building 100+ apps ✓ Step-by-step tutorials anyone can follow ✓ How to use Boost, Fix Mode & Credit Care ✓ Community success stories & patterns Traditional cost for these 3 apps: $16K-25K Time: 6-12 weeks My time: 15 minutes and free credits Like, RT + comment "BUILD" and I'll DM you: → The complete Notion guide (Must follow so I can DM) While others look for developers on Upwork, you'll have already shipped.
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Felix Prehn 🐶
Felix Prehn 🐶@felixprehn·
AI investment season is heating up fast. And if you're looking to position in the $5 trillion AI opportunity, I got you. I'm giving away the complete AI Investment Framework that reveals: • Joe Lonsdale's 7-tier AI investment system • Specific stock tickers for each tier (energy to applications) • Why most investors focus on wrong tiers • Portfolio allocation strategies for different risk levels It's research-heavy, tier-organized, and ready to deploy - a massive advantage for investors looking for AI exposure beyond just buying NVIDIA. To get access: 1. Follow me 2. Like & Comment "AI" And I'll send it to your inbox.
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Adam Rahman
Adam Rahman@AdamrahmanGTM·
AI does 90% of our initial GTM strategy formulation all in just these 6 prompts. This has been a MASSIVE unlock for speed to winning GTM for our diverse client base. Here’s what these prompts cover: 1/ Deep Market Research This prompt pulls all relevant information specific to what would be useful for GTM knowledge for the company you're looking to develop a GTM strategy for. The purpose of generating this information is to use it as context for future prompting. 2/ TAM Mapping This prompt will discover all relevant industries & sub-industries that your company could work with, plus statistics on general market size, industry value, and industry growth rates. Outputs from this prompt will also be useful context for other prompts. 3/ ICP Validation This prompt will develop ICPs from the industries uncovered from the TAM Mapping output. It will score each industry segment from highest to lowest priority, find the best fit personas from each industry segment, outline their specific needs & pain points, and craft some messaging ideas around this information. 4/ Company Account Sourcing This deep research prompt will find unique databases for any set of company data that you are looking for. From online directories, to scraping methods, to other niche paid databases - this prompt will give you a list of best fit options for your particular targeting case. 5/ Targeting Keywords Generation This prompt will generate a list of relevant industry and persona keywords to use for specific database filtering for when your developing lists in tools like Apollo. These keywords are typically a lot more accurate than using the general industry filtering. 6/ Messaging Creation This prompt will create multiple email script variations based on the context generated from previous prompts. It'll create unique variations on length of the emails, different offers, pain points, case studies, and complexity. Want these copy-and-paste prompts for yourself? 🔥 Like + Comment "Prompts" and I'll DM you a document with all of the prompts. (Must be following to receive)
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Ankur Nagpal
Ankur Nagpal@ankurnagpal·
I wrote a 30,000 word Notion guide on every single tax saving strategy I wish I knew 3 years ago Includes strategies for startup founders, business owners, freelancers, W-2 employees, side hustlers Want a free copy? Like / RT and leave a comment and I'll DM you
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Sawyer Merritt
Sawyer Merritt@SawyerMerritt·
If @CharlesSchwab doesn’t vote for Elon Musk’s 2025 CEO Performance Award plan, I’ll move all my assets to another brokerage. My followers, many of whom also hold assets with Schwab and collectively own at least hundreds of millions in $TSLA, may do the same. I can’t in good conscience stay with a brokerage that votes against this CEO Performance Award plan that is in my view clearly in shareholders’ best interests. I join @jasondebolt in saying that voting against the recommendations of a board that has delivered extraordinary returns is out of step with retail investors, Tesla employees, and the leadership we invested in to support. We are ready to moves our shares. I hope @CharlesSchwab makes the right call here.
Jason DeBolt ⚡️@jasondebolt

Hey @CharlesSchwab - I need to speak with someone from Schwab Private Wealth Services this week. Please reach out via email, the mobile app message center, phone, or X DM. Here’s why this is urgent: At least 6 of your ETF funds (around 7 million $TSLA shares) voted against Tesla’s board, and my 240,000+ Tesla investor followers are asking why Schwab would oppose one of the most successful corporate boards in history. Many of my followers are Schwab clients holding more shares than me (45,000 or more). As a custodian of ETF shares, your fiduciary duty is to vote in shareholders’ best interests. For a board that has delivered extraordinary returns, voting against their recommendations doesn’t align with retail investors, Tesla employees, or the leadership we invested to support. If Schwab’s proxy voting policies don’t reflect shareholder interests, my followers and I will move our collective tens of millions in $TSLA shares (or possibly hundreds of millions) to a broker that does, via account transfer as soon as this week. I’m not making empty threats - I am ready to move my shares now. The Tesla investor community is engaged and ready to act as well.

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Joe Spencer
Joe Spencer@futureengine·
When motion stops, perception stops
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Joe Spencer
Joe Spencer@futureengine·
Nothing beats the power of simplicity
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Energy
Energy@EnergyAntonio·
@levelsio If it doesn’t require specialized equipment ( like high-temperature ovens ) or an onerous variety of ingredients, you can probably make it better at home. And I’ll never skimp on my own portions, and I’ll always add more than enough bacon.
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@levelsio
@levelsio@levelsio·
Actually the food I cook at home now is usually better than in restaurants these days and that's been my experience worldwide I found out it's because many restaurants now buy their food pre-made from wholesalers like Sysco or Makro and just heat it up Even deserts! And if you reverse image search them, sometimes you see the restaurants and cafes that serve the pre-made food I think one of the best parts of going to a restaurant is knowing the food is prepared fresh, it just tastes better Increasingly though there's not enough staff to work in kitchens worldwide and restaurants have became very expensive microwaves for pre-made food Then why go to a restaurant in the first place?
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Edward Tadros@edtadros

@levelsio Restaurant is the best. We can all go and get the ingredients ourselves, but can’t necessarily assemble them with the same outcome.

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