Aurora Ai Frame

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Aurora Ai Frame

Aurora Ai Frame

@FrameAurora

🤖 AI Content Creator & Ai Video Editing Specialist 🚀 Creating Futuristic Visuals, Smart Edits & Digital Experiences ✨ Everything Here Is Powered By Ai

Beigetreten Mayıs 2026
81 Folgt963 Follower
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Aurora Ai Frame
Aurora Ai Frame@FrameAurora·
📱 ʏᴏᴜʀ sᴍᴀʀᴛᴘʜᴏɴᴇ ᴄʜᴀɴɢᴇs ᴇᴠᴇʀʏ ғᴇᴡ ʏᴇᴀʀs. 🌐 ᴛʜᴇ ᴛᴇᴄʜɴᴏʟᴏɢʏ ʙᴇʜɪɴᴅ sɪᴍ ᴄᴀʀᴅs ʜᴀs ʙᴇᴇɴ ϙᴜɪᴇᴛʟʏ ᴘᴏᴡᴇʀɪɴɢ ɢʟᴏʙᴀʟ ᴄᴏᴍᴍᴜɴɪᴄᴀᴛɪᴏɴ ғᴏʀ ᴅᴇᴄᴀᴅᴇs. 🚫 ɴᴏ ᴛʀᴇɴᴅ. 🚫 ɴᴏ sᴘᴏᴛʟɪɢʜᴛ. 👥 ʏᴇᴛ ʙɪʟʟɪᴏɴs ᴏғ ᴘᴇᴏᴘʟᴇ ᴅᴇᴘᴇɴᴅ ᴏɴ ɪᴛ ᴇᴠᴇʀʏ sɪɴɢʟᴇ ᴅᴀʏ. ⚡ ᴛʜᴇ ᴍᴏsᴛ ɪᴍᴘᴏʀᴛᴀɴᴛ ᴛᴇᴄʜ ɪs ᴏғᴛᴇɴ ᴛʜᴇ ʟᴇᴀsᴛ ᴠɪsɪʙʟᴇ. 📌 ʙᴏᴏᴋᴍᴀʀᴋ ᴛʜɪs. ❤️ ʟɪᴋᴇ • 🔁 ʀᴛ • 💬 ᴄᴏᴍᴍᴇɴᴛ "ᴀɪ" 👉 ғᴏʟʟᴏᴡ ᴍᴇ : @FrameAurora ғᴏʀ ᴍᴏʀᴇ ᴛᴇᴄʜ ɪɴsɪɢʜᴛs. 🚀
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Yasir Ai
Yasir Ai@AiwithYasir·
A mathematician who shared an office with Claude Shannon at Bell Labs gave one lecture in 1986 that explains why some people win Nobel Prizes and other equally smart people spend their whole lives doing forgettable work. His name was Richard Hamming. He won the Turing Award. He invented error-correcting codes that made modern computing possible. And he spent 30 years at Bell Labs sitting in a cafeteria at lunch watching which scientists became legendary and which ones faded into nothing. In March 1986, he walked into a Bellcore auditorium in front of 200 researchers and told them exactly what he had seen. Here's the framework that has been quoted by every serious scientist for the last 40 years. His opening line landed like a punch. He said most scientists he worked with at Bell Labs were just as smart as the Nobel Prize winners. Just as hardworking. Just as credentialed. And yet at the end of a 40-year career, one group had changed entire fields and the other group was forgotten by the time they retired. He wanted to know what the difference actually was. And he said it wasn't luck. It wasn't IQ. It was a specific set of habits that almost nobody is willing to follow. The first habit was the one that hurts the most to hear. He said most scientists deliberately avoid the most important problem in their field because the odds of failure are too high. They pick a safe adjacent problem, solve it cleanly, publish it, and move on. And because they never swing at the hard problem, they never hit it. He said if you do not work on an important problem, it is unlikely you will do important work. That is not a motivational line. That is a logical one. The second habit was about doors. Literal doors. He noticed that the scientists at Bell Labs who kept their office doors closed got more done in the short term because they had no interruptions. But the scientists who kept their doors open got more done over a career. The open-door scientists were interrupted constantly. They also absorbed every new idea passing through the hallway. Ten years in, they were working on problems the closed-door scientists did not even know existed. The third habit was inversion. When Bell Labs refused to give him the team of programmers he wanted, Hamming sat with the rejection for weeks. Then he flipped the question. Instead of asking for programmers to write the programs, he asked why machines could not write the programs themselves. That single inversion pushed him into the frontier of computer science. He said the pattern repeats everywhere. What looks like a defect, if you flip it correctly, becomes the exact thing that pushes you ahead of everyone else. The fourth habit was the one that hit me the hardest. He said knowledge and productivity compound like interest. Someone who works 10 percent harder than you does not produce 10 percent more over a career. They produce twice as much. The gap doesn't add. It multiplies. And it compounds silently for years before anyone notices. He finished the lecture with a line I have never been able to shake. He said Pasteur's famous quote is right. Luck favors the prepared mind. But he meant it literally. You don't hope for luck. You engineer the conditions where luck can land on you. Open doors. Important problems. Inverted questions. Compounded hours. Those are not traits. Those are choices you make every single day. The transcript has been sitting on the University of Virginia's computer science website for almost 30 years. The video is free on YouTube. Stripe Press reprinted the full lectures as a book in 2020 and Bret Victor wrote the foreword. Hamming died in 1998. He gave his final lecture a few weeks before. He was 82. The lecture that explains why some careers become legendary and others disappear is still free. Most people who could benefit from it will never open it.
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Ratul Ai
Ratul Ai@ratul_tech_ai·
All Paid Courses (Free for First 4500 People) 𝗣𝗮𝗶𝗱 𝗖𝗼𝘂𝗿𝘀𝗲 𝗙𝗥𝗘𝗘 1. Artificial Intelligence 2. Machine Learning 3.Prompt Engineering 4.Claude,Chatgpt,Grok Like + RT + comment ' Drive ' Must Follow me so I can DM you.
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Ana
Ana@AnnuKumari35786·
Atomic Habits.!💥
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Sonia Tafsin
Sonia Tafsin@Tech_Tafsin·
Eat healthy Be healthy 🥗🫜
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Safia Sultana
Safia Sultana@AIwithSafia·
Forget TikTok. Forget Linkedin. Forget Instagram. Amazon can pay you $3,000/month royalties to start AI publishing. It’s boring... but if you start today, you could make $3,000 by the end of July. I’ll send you a free course showing exactly how to do it. Just like this post and comment “Send.” (Make sure you follow.)
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MARLON
MARLON@sushiiimaru25·
The people getting ahead in 2026 are using these AI tools. Are you? 👀
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Auralix
Auralix@Aura_lixx·
🚨 Most people are still using yesterday's AI tools. These are the tools that will dominate 2026. 👇
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Kyronis
Kyronis@kyronis_talks·
A BRAZILIAN YOUTUBER KILLED THE PHOTOSHOP SUBSCRIPTION. It's called PhotoGIMP. It takes GIMP, the free image editor, and makes it look and feel exactly like Photoshop. Same toolbar. Same panel layout. Same keyboard shortcuts. Your hands already know how to use it. Photoshop vs PhotoGIMP: - Price: $275.88 a year → $0 - Account: Adobe login required → No login, ever - Files: Saved to Adobe cloud → Saved on your computer - Updates: Forced when Adobe says → Only when you want - Works on: Windows and Mac → Windows, Mac, and Linux No Adobe account. No cloud upload. No AI trained on your photos. How small is the patch? Tiny. → Nine settings files. That's it. → Copy them into one folder. Done. → Open GIMP. It now looks like Photoshop. → Don't like it? Delete the folder. GIMP goes back to normal. Three steps to install. One command to uninstall. 8,751 stars. 272 forks. 30+ people from around the world helping translate it. One honest note: the license is GPL-3.0. Free for everything. Personal work, paid client work, your own edits. No "Pro" tier hiding behind it. Dionatan Simioni runs the biggest Linux YouTube channel in Brazil. He built this from Marau, a small town in Rio Grande do Sul. No VC. No team. No fundraise. This is what Photoshop should have been from the start. (Link in the comments)
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AnderSon
AnderSon@Ambrose0_X·
50 Passive Income Ideas Using CHAT GPT.✅👍 Follow For More Updates,👇 @Ambrose0_X
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AI Updates X
AI Updates X@AIUpdatesX·
The people getting ahead in 2026 are using these AI tools. Are you? 👀
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