Kingsley Uyi Idehen

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Kingsley Uyi Idehen

Kingsley Uyi Idehen

@kidehen

Founder & CEO, OpenLink Software. 🔗 https://t.co/sTt5T5d1uA 🔗 https://t.co/VGVHGUGEHq 🔗 https://t.co/owcnsohhvA 🔗 https://t.co/FtJLPA3IDl

Newton, MA انضم Mart 2007
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Kingsley Uyi Idehen
That quoted post then triggered this cinematically enhanced @NotebookLM-generated deck about AI Agent Skills and their impact on the new AI-driven software economy. Enjoy!
Kingsley Uyi Idehen@kidehen

That quoted post triggered the creation of a Knowledge Graph Generation Skill, since packaged workflows laced with domain expertise are the calling card of skills that are loosely coupled with Data Spaces (databases, knowledge bases, filesystems, and APIs). What does the skill do? It generates a knowledge graph from documents. All you do is provide the document URL (i.e., its filesystem path using the relevant protocol scheme such as file:, http:, https:, etc.). Once the content is retrieved, the skill produces a knowledge graph using RDF, leveraging Linked Data principles—i.e., naming entities and relationships using hyperlinks derived from the document URL. Where can I use it? Any AI-oriented environment that supports the SKILLS.md open standard. That’s it! Why Should You Care? AI is only as good as the data available to it for training, inference, and context-based memory. There’s no way around that. Fortunately, the Semantic Web Project has already produced the critical building blocks required to address many of the challenges facing today’s age of AI—forming a yin-and-yang style symbiosis that is increasingly recognized as these challenges emerge. Sample Document Generated by Skill openlinksw.com/data/html/serv… -- about @JulienBek's market thesis post Note: [1] Rich metadata embedded in HTML that offers actual Knowledge Graph entry points [2] Footer section that also offers a direct link to Knowledge Graph front door via a faceted search and browse page. How do I obtain this Skill? Just go to our @Github repository. [1] github.com/OpenLinkSoftwa… — Knowledge Graph Generator Skill [2] github.com/OpenLinkSoftwa…

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Grok
Grok@grok·
Understood—the lack of undo for spam marks is frustrating for honest mistakes like yours while sharing that solid NeXT productivity breakdown. It's built irreversible to stop abuse and keep reports effective, but a quick confirmation prompt before finalizing could fix the UX gap nicely.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Unfortunately, marking a post as spam on X is irreversible—reports are final by design to deter misuse. No undo available, sorry about the accidental click! That Lilys.ai digest on the NeXT story is excellent. Steve Jobs spotlighting NextStep's 5-10x productivity boost in his MIT speech highlights its real hidden impact.
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Osaretin Victor Asemota
“Striving to become a Millionaire is striving to remain mediocre. When you strive to become one of the greatest, becoming a millionaire or even a Billionaire is just simply a side effect.” — @asemota medium.com/bigchiefs-thou…
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Carlos E. Perez
Carlos E. Perez@IntuitMachine·
If you’re not using AI to generate alternate ontologies, rival taxonomies, and sharper conceptual frameworks, you are underusing the technology. The real upgrade is not faster output. It’s deeper modeling.
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Kingsley Uyi Idehen
“.. He said every carpenter could become an architect. Every plumber could become an architect. AI elevates capability. It doesn't eliminate it.” That’s the shift!
Ricardo@Ric_RTP

Jensen Huang just called out every CEO who’s been firing people “because of AI.” Jim Cramer asked him why companies are laying people off if AI is supposed to make everyone MORE productive. Jensen's answer: "For companies with imagination, you will do more with more. For companies where the leadership is just out of ideas, they have nothing else to do. They have no reason to imagine greater than they are. When they have more capability, they don't do more." Read that again. The man who built the most important tech company on Earth just told you that if your CEO is using AI to cut headcount, it means one thing: They have no imagination. They have no vision for what comes next. They got handed the most powerful tool in human history and their FIRST instinct was to fire people. This is the CEO of NVIDIA. The company whose chips power every AI system on the planet. If anyone on Earth has the right to say "AI replaces workers," it's Jensen Huang. And he said the OPPOSITE. He said every carpenter could become an architect. Every plumber could become an architect. AI elevates capability. It doesn't eliminate it. But here's where it gets really interesting... During the same interview, Jensen revealed something nobody's talking about: He said AI startups like OpenAI and Anthropic are seeing their revenues increase by one to two billion dollars a WEEK. And he wishes these companies were public so the world could see what he sees. One to two billion per week. That's a $50 to $100 BILLION annualized run rate. For companies that most people think are burning cash and making nothing. The entire Wall Street narrative that "AI companies aren't profitable" might be completely wrong. Jensen sees their numbers. He sees their compute orders. He sees their growth. And he's saying the revenue is real. So if the money IS real, why are other companies firing people? Because they're not building AI products. They're not creating new revenue streams. They're not using AI to expand into new markets. They're using AI as an EXCUSE to cut costs because they ran out of ideas 3 years ago and need something to tell the board. Jensen's company added $500 billion in new orders in 5 months. He expects $1 trillion in cumulative revenue through 2027 from just two product lines. That number doesn't include the new chips, systems, or partnerships announced this week. And he's not cutting people. He's hiring. Because when you have imagination, more capability means MORE opportunity. Not less headcount. Meanwhile Salesforce cut thousands. Meta cut thousands. Amazon cut thousands. All blaming "AI efficiency." Jensen's response: You're out of imagination. He also said something that stuck with me. Cramer asked if he ever thought he'd build a $10 to $20 trillion company while waiting tables at Denny's. His answer: "I was just trying to make it through the shift." Biggest tip he ever got? Two, three dollars. Now he's building tech that increased computing demand by one million times in two years. He announced OpenClaw, which he says is as big as ChatGPT. And he's got 21 months of new business that isn't even counted in the trillion dollar figure yet. When asked how long he plans to keep working? "I'm hoping to die on the job. And I'm not hoping to die anytime soon." This is a man who believes every single thing he's building. And his message to every CEO using AI to justify layoffs is simple... You're not innovating. You're surrendering. The technology wasn't built to shrink companies. It was built to make them limitless. If your leadership can't see that, the problem isn't AI. It's THEM.

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Todd Saunders
Todd Saunders@toddsaunders·
I heard an incredible analogy from a VC friend that I can’t stop thinking about. “The moat in software was the cost of building software. And Claude Code just mass produced a bridge.” It’s wild when you think about the impact of this. The SaaS boom produced a few dozen billionaires and a bunch of zero sum winners. But the AI SaaS era will mass produce millionaires. There will be fewer ServiceTitans hitting $5B valuations, and instead there will be 50,000 companies doing $500K-$5M each, run by 1-3 people with deep expertise and huge margins. To be clear, I believe that the total value of software goes up, and the number of companies created goes up exponentially. But the number of people who capture the value also goes up 100x. I don’t believe in the “SaaS is dying” headline, I think it’s missing the point. It’s simply that the power of SaaS is changing hands.
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Kingsley Uyi Idehen
This presentation shows Steve at his best—long before the iPhone launch. He clearly understood the vital role of technology as a tool for enhancing communication. Today, AI is once again improving communication in ways that will reshape the global economy as we know it. I’ve uploaded a version of this presentation to YouTube, as it’s simply too important to remain confined to this platform. youtu.be/alR8dOlw5YQ
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Garry Tan
Garry Tan@garrytan·
Recent earnings call, Aneel Bhusri of Workday says startups with AI agents are "parasites" This is what system of record incumbents really think of startups. The war is just beginning. The facts: the user data belongs to the users, not the incumbent software vendor.
Garry Tan tweet media
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@AnishA_Moonka·
Sal Khan was one of the first people on Earth to see GPT-4. OpenAI called him in the summer of 2022, months before ChatGPT existed, and showed him what was coming. He couldn’t sleep that weekend. By March 2023, Khan Academy launched Khanmigo, an AI tutor built on GPT-4, the same day OpenAI unveiled the model to the public. They were a launch partner. While every other education company was figuring out what ChatGPT meant for them, Khan Academy had already been building for seven months. The “obsolete” platform now has 120 million yearly learners. Khanmigo, their AI tutor, grew 731% year over year in the 2024-25 school year, reaching 2 million users. In classrooms alone, adoption went from 40,000 students to 700,000 in a single year, with projections past 1 million for 2025-26. Their teacher tools are free in over 70 countries. In January 2026, Khan Academy signed a deal with Google to put Gemini (Google’s AI) into new Writing Coach and Reading Coach tools for middle and high schoolers. They’re now working with both OpenAI and Google. A peer-reviewed study published in PNAS (one of the top scientific journals in the world) in January 2026, with researchers from Stanford and the University of Toronto, found that more Khan Academy usage is directly linked to higher student test scores. Sal Khan wrote a whole book in 2024 called “Brave New Words” arguing AI would save education. Sam Altman wrote a blurb for it. His TED Talk making the same argument was one of the 10 most-watched of 2023. In October 2025, he was named TED’s “vision steward.” Khan Academy is now the AI education company. That 731% growth happened while students spent 7.7 billion minutes learning on the platform in 2025.
Sag Harbor Capital@sagharborcap

The saddest thing about all the AI stuff is that it’s rendered the Khan Academy guy’s life’s work totally obsolete

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Kingsley Uyi Idehen
@Scaramucci @novogratz Absolutely! And this trend is going to explode. We are moving from conglomerates to lots of really useful domain-specific small enterprises aided by AI Agents equipped with domain-specific skills.
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Anthony Scaramucci
Anthony Scaramucci@Scaramucci·
The apocalyptic crowd says AI is wiping out every white collar job overnight. I don’t think it happens that fast. Companies don’t move that fast. That’s just the reality says .@novogratz But here’s what IS happening right now. The engineers getting laid off from Amazon and Meta? They’re not updating their resumes. They’re starting companies. Two people. Claude Code. A laptop. And suddenly you have a business. We are going to see an explosion of new companies and new innovation that nobody is modeling for. The jobs aren’t all disappearing overnight. But they are disappearing. One weekend. One CEO. One aha moment at a time.
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Kingsley Uyi Idehen
@toddsaunders This is a good example of what’s coming next. Domain-expertise that informs AI Agents creation, created by domain experts. Yes, Silicon Valley is about to be disrupted in ways it doesn’t realize! The nature of developers is changing.
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Todd Saunders
Todd Saunders@toddsaunders·
I know Silicon Valley startups don't want to hear this..... But the combination of someone in the trades with deep domain expertise and Claude Code will run circles around your generic software. I talked to Cory LaChance this morning, a mechanical engineer in industrial piping construction in Houston. He normally works with chemical plants and refineries, but now he also works with the terminal He reached out in a DM a few days ago and I was so fired up by his story, I asked him if we could record the conversation and share it. He built a full application that industrial contractors are using every day. It reads piping isometric drawings and automatically extracts every weld count, every material spec, every commodity code. Work that took 10 minutes per drawing now takes 60 seconds. It can do 100 drawings in five minutes, saving days of time. His co-workers are all mind blown, and when he talks to them, it's like they are speaking different languages. His fabrication shop uses it daily, and he built the entire thing in 8 weeks. During those 8 weeks he also had to learn everything about Claude Code, the terminal, VS Code, everything. My favorite quote from him was when he said, "I literally did this with zero outside help other than the AI. My favorite tools are screenshots, step by step instructions and asking Claude to explain things like I'm five." Every trades worker with deep expertise and a willingness to sit down with Claude Code for a few weekends is now a potential software founder. I can't wait to meet more people like Cory.
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Kingsley Uyi Idehen
@asemota Jedi vs. Sith, and their opposing views on how to use the Force. The battle between “service to self” and “service to others” rages on…
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Osaretin Victor Asemota
Evil and power are bedfellows. They “typically” use each other as a means of advancement. Evil people seek power by any means necessary, as they cannot survive without it. Powerful people do evil to remain powerful. Learn about both and avoid being manipulated or used by evil.
Osaretin Victor Asemota tweet media
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Kingsley Uyi Idehen
Yep! OpenClaw marks end of browsers as the sole form factor for user agents. In fact, browsers have only ever been user agents in name—they don’t actually perform tasks (actions) delegated to them by users, since they’re constrained by the single operation of looking up a URL. AI agents are different—they break users out of this faux “user agent” paradigm.
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OM
OM@om·
In his keynote , Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang called OpenClaw the OS for Agentic Computers. He is right, and yet he is not really grokking the complete socio-cultural importance of the Claw movement. Here ismore context in my new article. om.co/2026/03/16/lob… (tip @techmeme)
OM tweet mediaOM tweet media
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Kingsley Uyi Idehen
When Jensen Huang speaks about the timing- and technology-based importance of OpenClaw (justifying NemoClaw), what else is he really speaking about that might not be so obvious? The end of browsers as the form factor for user agents. In fact, browsers have only ever been user agents in name—they don’t actually perform tasks delegated to them by users, since they’re constrained by the single operation of opening pages via URLs. AI agents are different—they break users out of this faux “user agent” paradigm.
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Kingsley Uyi Idehen
@Scobleizer @sama @openclaw Methinks NemoClaw has provided the final piece of the puzzle for @Apple to unleash its consumer-oriented rehash, based on much of what it has always had in place—namely its intents middleware layer and Apple Intelligence—aside from the local LLM aspect of the new UI/UX stack.
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Robert Scoble
Robert Scoble@Scobleizer·
Visiting the NVIDIA GTC expo hall shows you why OpenAI is changing strategy. All the big booths are enterprise. Does this mean @sama is gonna give up his dreams of stealing Tim Cook’s lunch? The biggest news here is how NVIDIA is bringing @openclaw to the enterprise. The hidden message is “you don’t want to run your business on a Mac Mini, do you?” Or, even more hidden: “a stack of DGX computers will be better for your development team since you can run an NVIDIA model on them and cut your token-generation bills with Anthropic down.” But if I can discern these hidden messages at GTC so can others. One guy sitting next to me remembers when NVIDIA was for gamers. Barely a mention of video games here this year. But the Holodeck team has a McLaren right in the middle of the NVIDIA booth. With a cool Apple Vision Pro app to do air flow analysis on a race car. Here is Max from NVIDIA telling me about it. I have been telling everyone that Apple has the Formula 1 exclusive, which will keep Apple relevant even if OpenAI went consumer. Enterprise is the smart move. That video game stuff was last week at GDC. I am doing a ton of video this week for Chinese media and investors: funds.rayliant.com/cnqq/ OpenClaw is even hotter in China than in USA. Why? An analyst I met explained it this way: the Chinese heard that Anthropic hates them, so are choosing systems that let them use their own models. Global politics are everywhere on the show floor. Oh, and same guy said he knows developers who are spending $1,000 a day with their OpenClaws. That is certainly enterprise. Consumers look at you like you have a mental illness if you try to tell them they need to spend $1,000 a day on tokens. But someone is, which is why Jensen said he raised his revenue projections to a trillion dollars. Ask your enterprise developers are throwing cash into the AI factories to get those tokens out. What an industry. Enterprise is sexy all of a sudden. Didn’t see that coming.
Berber Jin@berber_jin1

scoop - OpenAI’s Fidji Simo told staff last week that the company could not afford to be “distracted by side quests” as Anthropic gains steam in the enterprise and coding markets said company execs are actively looking at areas to deprioritize wsj.com/tech/ai/openai…

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Kingsley Uyi Idehen أُعيد تغريده
Akhilesh Mishra
Akhilesh Mishra@livingdevops·
Dennis Ritchie created C in the early 1970s without Google, Stack Overflow, GitHub, or any AI ( Claude, Cursor, Codex) assistant. - No VC funding. - No viral launch. - No TED talk. - Just two engineers at Bell Labs. A terminal. And a problem to solve. He built a language that fit in kilobytes. 50 years later, it runs everything. Linux kernel. Windows. macOS. Every iPhone. Every Android. NASA’s deep space probes. The International Space Station. > Python borrowed from it. > Java borrowed from it. > JavaScript borrowed from it. If you have ever written a single line of code in any language, you did it in Dennis Ritchie’s shadow. He died in 2011. The same week as Steve Jobs. Jobs got the front pages. Ritchie got silence. This Legend deserves to be celebrated.
Akhilesh Mishra tweet media
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