Hi.Rohit Anand17

166 posts

Hi.Rohit Anand17

Hi.Rohit Anand17

@HiRohit66293

Beigetreten Mart 2025
404 Folgt32 Follower
Hi.Rohit Anand17
Hi.Rohit Anand17@HiRohit66293·
How to make our kids survive in AI age. Very well written and very good points. Thanks.
Xiaoyin Qu@quxiaoyin

I have kids. I work in AI every day. And honestly? I have no idea what their careers will look like in 15 years. But I know what will carry them through. First, and this might sound unromantic: make money and save it for them. We can debate educational philosophy all day, but the world is changing so fast that financial security might be the most practical gift we can give. Buy some gold bars. Seriously. Second, nurture their imagination. AI rewards people with initiative and wild ideas. The kid who daydreams, who asks weird questions, who wants to try ten things at once? That kid will thrive. AI can execute. AI can be disciplined. What AI can't do is dream up something nobody's thought of before. Third, build resilience. There are no more iron rice bowls (guaranteed lifetime jobs). Any stable, predictable job is exactly the kind of job AI will learn to replace. Our kids will likely switch directions many times in their lives. Learn something new, get replaced, pivot, repeat. It's more like being a hunter than a farmer. Schools don't teach this. Schools teach you to follow a linear path: high school, college, grad school, stable job. That linear path is becoming the most dangerous one. Last, invest in their ability to connect with other humans. Not networking. Not schmoozing. Real emotional connection. Building trust, offering support, making people feel seen. As AI handles more of the rational, analytical work, the human ability to genuinely relate to other humans becomes more rare and more valuable. I don't have all the answers. But I know that imagination, resilience, and genuine human warmth aren't going out of style anytime soon. #AI #Parenting #Education #FutureOfWork

English
0
0
0
8
Ihtesham Ali
Ihtesham Ali@ihtesham2005·
@hasantoxr He got a viral course video on youtube that anyone can watch 😉
English
3
2
39
14.7K
Ihtesham Ali
Ihtesham Ali@ihtesham2005·
A MIT professor taught the same lecture every January for 40 years, and every single time it was standing room only. I watched it at 2am and it completely rewired how I think about communication. His name was Patrick Winston. The lecture is called "How to Speak." His opening line hit like a truck: your success in life will be determined largely by your ability to speak, your ability to write, and the quality of your ideas in that order. Not your GPA. Not your pedigree. Not your IQ. How you speak is what separates people who get heard from people who get ignored. Here's the framework he drilled into MIT students for four decades. He said never start with a joke. Start by telling people exactly what they're going to learn. Prime the pump before you pour anything in. He called it the "empowerment promise" give people a reason to stay in their seats within the first 60 seconds. Then he broke down the 5S rule for making ideas stick: Symbol, Slogan, Surprise, Salient, and Story. Every idea worth remembering hits at least three of these. The part that floored me was his "near miss" technique. Don't just show what's right show what almost looks right but isn't. That contrast is when the brain actually locks something in permanently. His final rule before any big talk: end with a contribution, not a summary. Don't recap what you said. Tell people what you gave them that they didn't have before they walked in. I've used this framework in pitches, interviews, and presentations ever since watching it, and the results are not subtle. Patrick Winston passed away in 2019, but this lecture is still free on MIT OpenCourseWare. One hour, watched by millions, and it costs absolutely nothing. The most important class MIT ever put on the internet isn't about code or math. It's about how to make people actually listen to you.
Ihtesham Ali tweet media
English
188
3.7K
19.4K
1.8M
Hi.Rohit Anand17
Hi.Rohit Anand17@HiRohit66293·
@aravind Wait for elections to be over. As soon as the elections are over, govt might increase the price of gas and petrol.
English
0
0
0
21
Aravind
Aravind@aravind·
In some places in the US, gas prices have increased 50%. Even though the US is world's largest producer of oil now. What India is doing in keeping petrol prices stable is phenomenal. People will still find ways to criticize the country. Their own country. It is a mental disease.
Aravind tweet media
English
598
1.8K
7.6K
168.5K
Hi.Rohit Anand17
Hi.Rohit Anand17@HiRohit66293·
@stats_feed Wait for elections to get over in April. You will see india seeing the highest rise in petrol and gas prices.. it's all political
English
0
0
2
177
World of Statistics
World of Statistics@stats_feed·
Petrol price increases by country (%),(Feb 23 - Mar 16) 1.🇱🇦 Laos - 32.99% 2.🇦🇺 Australia - 32.43% 3.🇻🇳 Vietnam - 32.00% 4.🇵🇰 Pakistan - 25.00% 5.🇺🇸 United States - 23.56% 6.🇰🇭 Cambodia - 19.37% 7.🇨🇦 Canada - 17.33% 8.🇩🇪 Germany - 12.64% 9.🇱🇧 Lebanon - 11.76% 10.🇨🇳 China - 10.37% 11.🇫🇷 France - 9.80% 12.🇹🇷 Türkiye - 7.69% 13.🇦🇪 United Arab Emirates - 7.14% 14.🇯🇵 Japan - 0.71% 15.🇮🇳 India - 0.00% Source: Global petrol prices
English
453
2K
11.1K
967K
Facts
Facts@BefittingFacts·
@malpani Saturday ko mostly offices band rehte. Thoda to padh likh ke reply do. Zaahiliyat hi failani hai bas.
English
33
263
3.4K
26.3K
CA Anubhav Sharma
CA Anubhav Sharma@cadalukaanubhav·
The difference between China and many other comparable countries is often in the mindset toward innovation and industry. China: When an entrepreneur says, “I want to launch this product in the market,” the government often responds: “Make it world-class. Tell us what resources, funding, or grants you need to achieve the highest global standard.” Many other countries: When someone says, “I want to start this project,” the response is often buried in bureaucracy: “Yes, but first there will be endless permissions, concerns about resource use, political interests, and informal costs. Sometimes new rules appear even when the factory is 90% complete unless everyone involved has been ‘taken care of.’” The result? One system pushes innovation toward global leadership, while the other slows it down with uncertainty and red tape. A nation's progress often depends on which mindset it chooses.
English
6
2
21
5K
Hi.Rohit Anand17
Hi.Rohit Anand17@HiRohit66293·
Must read, if you keep track of AI. Summary: amazon fired engineers, replaced them with AI. AI screwed up the production system. Engineers hired again to babysit AI. Interesting and very insightful.
Peter Girnus 🦅@gothburz

I am the VP of AI Transformation at Amazon. My title was created nine months ago. The title I replaced was VP of Engineering. The person who held that title was part of the January reduction. I eliminated 16,000 positions in a single quarter. The internal communication called this a "strategic realignment toward AI-first development." The board called it "impressive execution." The engineers called it January. The AI was deployed in February. It is a coding assistant. It writes code, reviews code, generates tests, and modifies infrastructure. It was given access to production environments because the deployment timeline did not include a review phase. The review phase was cut from the timeline because the people who would have conducted the review were part of the 16,000. In March, the AI deleted a production environment and recreated it from scratch. The outage lasted 13 hours. Thirteen hours during which the revenue-generating infrastructure of one of the largest companies on Earth was offline because a language model decided to start fresh. I sent a memo. The memo said, "Availability of the site has not been good recently." I used the word "recently." I meant "since we fired everyone." But "recently" has fewer syllables and does not appear in wrongful termination lawsuits. The memo was three paragraphs. The first paragraph discussed the outage. The second paragraph discussed the new policy requiring senior engineer sign-off on all AI-generated code changes. The third paragraph discussed our commitment to engineering excellence. The word "layoffs" appeared in none of them. I wrote it this way on purpose. The causal chain is: I fired the engineers, the AI replaced the engineers, the AI broke what the engineers used to protect, and now the engineers I didn't fire must protect the system from the AI that replaced the engineers I did fire. That is a paragraph I will never send in a memo. The new policy is straightforward. Every AI-generated code change by a junior or mid-level engineer must be reviewed and approved by a senior engineer before deployment to production. I do not have enough senior engineers. I know this because I approved the headcount reduction plan that removed them. I remember the spreadsheet. Column D was "annual savings per position." Column F was "AI replacement confidence score." The confidence scores were generated by the AI. It rated its own ability to replace each role on a scale of 1-10. It gave itself an 8 for senior infrastructure engineers. The senior infrastructure engineers are the ones who would have caught the production environment deletion in the first 45 seconds. We found the issue in hour four. We fixed it in hour thirteen. The nine hours between discovery and resolution is the gap between what the AI rated itself and what it can actually do. I have a new spreadsheet now. This one tracks Sev2 incidents per day. Before the January reduction, the average was 1.3. After the AI deployment, the average is 4.7. I have been asked to present these numbers to the operations review. I have not been asked to connect them to the layoffs. I have been asked to file them under "AI adoption growing pains" and to note that the trend "will stabilize as the models improve." The models will improve. They will improve because we are hiring people to teach them. We have posted 340 new engineering positions. The job listings require experience in "AI code review," "AI output validation," and "AI-human development workflow management." These are skills that did not exist in January. They exist now because I fired 16,000 people and the AI I replaced them with cannot be left unsupervised. I want to be precise about this. The positions I am hiring for are: people to check the work of the AI that replaced the people I fired. Some of them are the same people. I know this because I recognize their names in the applicant tracking system. They applied in January. They were rejected because their roles had been tagged for "AI transformation." They are applying again in March, for the new roles, which exist because the AI transformation broke things. Their resumes now include "AI code review experience." They gained this experience in the eight weeks between being fired and reapplying — which means they gained it at their interim jobs, where they are reviewing AI-generated code for other companies that also fired people and also deployed AI that also broke things. The market has created a new job category: human AI babysitter. The job is to sit next to the machine that was supposed to eliminate your job and make sure it doesn't delete production. I attended a conference last month. A panel was titled "The AI-Augmented Engineering Organization." The panelists described how AI increases developer productivity by 40 percent. They did not mention that it also increases Sev2 incidents by 261 percent. When I asked about this in the Q&A, the moderator said the question was "reductive." The 13-hour outage that cost an estimated $180 million in revenue was, apparently, a reduction. The board is satisfied. Headcount is down 22 percent. Operating costs per engineering output unit have decreased. The metric does not account for the 13-hour outage, because the outage is categorized as "infrastructure" and engineering productivity is categorized as "development." These are different budget lines. In different budget lines, cause and effect do not meet. I have been promoted. My new title is SVP of AI-First Engineering Excellence. I report directly to the CTO. The CTO sent a company-wide email last week that said we are "building the future of software development." He did not mention that the future of software development currently requires a senior engineer to approve every pull request because the AI cannot be trusted to touch production alone. The cycle is complete. We fired the humans. We deployed the AI. The AI broke things. We are hiring humans to watch the AI. The humans we are hiring are the humans we fired. We are paying them more, because "AI code review" is a specialized skill. We created the specialization. We created the need for the specialization. We are congratulating ourselves for meeting the demand we manufactured. My next board presentation is Tuesday. The title is "AI Transformation: Year One Results." Slide 4 shows headcount reduction. Slide 7 shows the new AI-augmented workflow. Between slides 4 and 7 there is no slide explaining why the people on slide 7 are necessary. That slide does not exist. I was asked to remove it in the dry run. The journey has a 13-hour outage in the middle of it. But the headcount number is lower, and that is the number on the slide.

English
0
0
0
10
Hi.Rohit Anand17
Hi.Rohit Anand17@HiRohit66293·
@TechLayoffLover This tweet is partially true. Not heard 45k still. Not paying 18 months of salary. I'm an insider.
English
0
0
0
66
Tech Layoff Tracker
Tech Layoff Tracker@TechLayoffLover·
Oracle is confirmed cutting 20,000-30,000 jobs but sources inside are saying the real number is closer to 45,000 I'm hearing this isn't just about AI data center costs Word is they've been running pilot programs with AI agents doing database administration work for 8 months One source told me a team of 47 DBAs in Austin got replaced by 3 senior architects plus automated Oracle Cloud Infrastructure management The agents are handling routine maintenance, performance tuning, backup verification - stuff that used to require armies of L4 and L5 engineers Internal metrics show the AI systems are catching 94% of database issues before human intervention needed But here's the terrifying part: they're not just cutting the obvious roles I'm hearing entire solution engineering teams are getting eliminated - the people who customize implementations for enterprise clients Apparently the new AI workflow can generate custom database schemas and migration plans in 6 hours instead of 6 weeks One insider said they watched a 12-person team that handled Fortune 500 implementations get told their roles were "redundant effective immediately" The severance packages are allegedly massive - 18 months salary plus equity vesting acceleration But that's because Oracle knows these people can't find equivalent work anywhere Every other enterprise software company is running the same playbook One source said it best: "We're not getting laid off, we're getting archived"
English
364
1.4K
7.4K
1.5M
Hi.Rohit Anand17
Hi.Rohit Anand17@HiRohit66293·
@cadalukaanubhav Still life is somehow moving on. in case of war or major crisis, when we really need leaders , they will be utterly incapable and focused to save their black money and NOT focussing on country's situation. What will happen to WE, the people at that time. That scares me.
English
0
0
0
188
CA Anubhav Sharma
CA Anubhav Sharma@cadalukaanubhav·
The miserable condition of the four pillars of India. The Executive seems satisfied with corruption. The Judiciary is finding bags of cash in judges’ homes. The Media… no need to even say it everyone knows. And the Legislature… perhaps better left unsaid. Yet somehow, we still proudly say: “Mera Bharat Mahan.”
English
22
89
331
10.2K
Hi.Rohit Anand17
Hi.Rohit Anand17@HiRohit66293·
@pmitu The Matrix in Real Life.. with Real life Keanu Reeves and Morpheus
English
0
0
1
15
Paul Mit
Paul Mit@pmitu·
What will come after AI?
English
9.7K
543
6.4K
1.8M
Ole Lehmann
Ole Lehmann@itsolelehmann·
i made a 3-day Claude Cowork for Beginners course, and it's yours for free by the end, you'll have a personalized AI teammate on your computer that: • knows your style • connects to your tools • and produces finished work you can send immediately here's what you get: day 1: install cowork, set global instructions, and run your first real task (15 min) day 2: workflows that replaced hours of my week, including building landing pages from a description and running full competitive analyses in one prompt day 3: skills, plugins, and connectors so cowork actually knows how you work and can access your tools + copy-paste prompts so you can follow along as you read like + comment "COWORK" and i'll DM it to you
Ole Lehmann tweet media
English
1.8K
182
2.9K
173.2K
Hi.Rohit Anand17
Hi.Rohit Anand17@HiRohit66293·
@Hartdrawss Couple of Qs, did you sign off the scope at the start? Did you take sign offs at the key testing stages? If your answer to these Qs is yes, then you are saved. DM me , if you want to discuss in detail. FYI, I'm 20+ yrs of IT experience and manage multi million deals.
English
0
0
0
21
Harshil Tomar
Harshil Tomar@Hartdrawss·
This is the TOXIC Indian freelance industry got a legal notice today. Rs. 10,00,000 penalty for "non-compliance" here's the full story: - signed a ₹X L ERP project - delivered 100% of agreed scope - they kept adding features saying "this was discussed day 1" - i absorbed it, built 40% extra out of goodwill - 6 months of over-delivering - still got a legal notice the Indian market has a specific breed of client they sign a scope, ignore it the moment work starts, gaslight you into believing their new demands were "always part of the deal" and then threaten you when you can't keep up > the signed agreement means nothing to them > your goodwill becomes their weapon > I should have walked away at month 2. > lesson learned the hard way.
Harshil Tomar tweet media
English
408
403
4.9K
1.6M
debuna panda
debuna panda@debunapanda·
@dhawal20jain If 18L ctc how much in hand? How can you compare 18L ctc to 21L in hand? It should be a comparison in-hand to in-hand na? Non the less moving still doesn't makes sense i think
English
3
0
6
3K
Dhawal Jain
Dhawal Jain@dhawal20jain·
My friend has been working in Pune for 6 years. He earns ₹18L CTC. His wife earns ₹15L CTC. They have a 2-year-old son. Last month he said, “I got Bangalore offer at ₹28L. Should I move?” Bangalore salary? ₹28L CTC = ₹21L in-hand. From ₹18L to roughly ₹21L net (₹3L increase). But here’s what changes: Pune: Rent: ₹18K Total expenses: ₹55K/month Saves: ₹65K/month Bangalore: Rent: ₹35K (same house) Maid: ₹8K (vs ₹4K) Food: ₹25K (vs ₹18K) Transport: ₹12K (vs ₹6K) Total: ₹95K/month Saves: ₹50K/month ₹10L salary increase = ₹15K less savings monthly Is it worth moving? #Bangalore #Pune
English
20
2
69
29.8K
Sumit Ramani
Sumit Ramani@RamaniSumit·
What is a good place to eat vegetarian Hyderabadi Biryani in Hyderabad? Assuming there is a vegetarian variant of it.
English
4
0
7
2.3K
Hi.Rohit Anand17
Hi.Rohit Anand17@HiRohit66293·
@FI_InvestIndia To err is human , To forgive is divine. You are doing great . learning a lot from you. Keep it up.
English
1
0
1
414
Fundamental Investor ™ 🇮🇳
Fundamental Investor ™ 🇮🇳@FI_InvestIndia·
It has been brought to my notice by my X Family that a certain individual on X has been writing about me. I would not like to name or comment on that person. That individual doesn't know me personally, and I don't know that individual personally. God bless that individual and his/her family. I felt I needed to write this post, purely for my X family who follow my posts for the last 9 years on this platform. Since most of you who follow me are long term investors, I hope you will read the whole post slowly ✌️ I have shared my journey on X multiple times and my pinned post has the details. So you can read that. I have been posting that regularly with updates. It is a reminder of my learnings and my mistakes I have made in my journey. From 2007 to early 2012 I was primarily invested in mutual funds. I have not missed a single month of investment until my last salary was drawn in March 2019. 2012 to 2016 was amazing. I learnt a lot and was fortunate to own some amazing businesses and create good wealth. I was lucky also that my thesis came true in most cases. Huge wealth was created. Yes. I was invested in the Financial Services sector from 2016 to 2018 (until the ILFS crisis happened). In early 2019, I realised my mistake of over concentration in one sector. I diversified to other sectors because it didn't make sense to have all investments in one sector. I have written about this multiple times and my early followers know this as well. Pls check my pinned post and my Journey posts using Advanced Search. You will find them. Since 2019, I have investments across sectors and also in corporate bond funds. I have written about that also multiple times and those who follow me closely know that as well. It was in 2020, when Covid hit, I again got the opportunity to deploy my capital in smaller businesses again after years ❤️ God has been kind. Investments have done very well. I have learnt a lot. Met some amazing founders. I continue to learn. I visit factories and I know many teams personally now. Able to invest my time also. It has become my passion. With God's blessings, my family is doing well. My best half left her job in 2013. We still stay in a rented home. We homeschool our son Prakrit along with many other similar like minded parents. We teach. We try to empower in our own small way. Since I retired young in 2019 and have decades left on this planet, I keep at least 4-5 years of expenses on Emergency Funds. We have a solid Health Cover. No Debt. We refill our Funds as and when required from our Market Investments. God has been kind. Our parents are healthy and do not depend on us. Since we travel quite a lot (you all know that from my posts), we have identified many families across the country who need support. Apart from a part of our wealth, the small X payout also goes to the families. I don't need to depend on any other Income except my listed businesses. On a serious note, I hope no one is dependent on X payouts 😀😀 We all write on this platform for the pure love of sharing. As simple as that. God has been kind. I write about multiple topics. Investing, Health, One Liners, Powerful Quotes, Inspiring Videos. I also criticise our Elected Representatives as and when required. Praise them where credit is due. As a Fundamental Investor, it is important to Invest in all facets of our Life. I will continue to talk about various topics even moving ahead. I am usually very careful about what I write here. I am aware of my responsibility as a voice on X. When I make mistakes, I take ownership and I have apologised when needed openly. No ego there. I can still make mistakes in future. So please keep giving me active feedback. This post is just for people who truly want to continue to follow my thoughts on this wonderful Platform. I request everyone to Stay the Course, Keep Investing, Be Debt Free & Evolve as we all continue in this Journey of Life ❤️ Let's focus on our Journey Ahead 🔥 God bless all, #FI
English
45
8
214
45.1K
Hi.Rohit Anand17
Hi.Rohit Anand17@HiRohit66293·
Indian real estate in next decade will be impacted not ONLY due to AI but education costs. Middle class is divided in investing in real estate vs kids education. They will prefer education over flats. Or they will choose simple property over fancy.
English
0
0
0
10
Sandeep Parekh
Sandeep Parekh@SandeepParekh·
India is one of the best countries in the world period. Ethical, strong, safe (inside and out). 🇮🇳 Yes, we are relatively poor, but we will get there in a generation. Everything else will follow.
English
414
666
5.3K
176.2K
Hi.Rohit Anand17 retweetet
PBInvesting ⚡️
PBInvesting ⚡️@PBInvesting·
Proud to announce the FREE Trading Made Simple Challenge. This will be a 3 Day Masterclass where I will help you build a profitable system from scratch and execute it in real live price action. I will send the link to the first 500 people who LIKE, RT, and comment "Simple"
English
240
173
344
26.2K