Sabil

1.9K posts

Sabil banner
Sabil

Sabil

@Sabilappdev

I help startups & businesses to create their app https://t.co/5B6hICLTgf DM to build fast, ship faster.

Joined Ocak 2026
76 Following84 Followers
Pinned Tweet
Sabil
Sabil@Sabilappdev·
I help early-stage founders turn their ideas into live mobile apps in 21 days. ✔ Lean MVP only ✔ Clear scope & timeline ✔ App Store / Play Store ready Building something? DM me “MVP”.
English
2
0
19
855
Sabil
Sabil@Sabilappdev·
@Austen Yeah, this is basically the shift toward an AI operating system.
English
0
0
0
70
Sabil
Sabil@Sabilappdev·
@dhh Nice, Sebring always delivers great racing.
English
0
0
1
142
DHH
DHH@dhh·
We are back in Sebring for the 74th running of the 12 Hours this Saturday.
DHH tweet media
English
12
3
175
9.1K
Sabil
Sabil@Sabilappdev·
@elonmusk Big move, open sourcing it could shift how people approach growth.
English
1
1
1
389
Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Major update to the 𝕏 AI recommendation algorithm rolling out next week. This will be open sourced at the same time.
English
4.5K
2.9K
30.8K
10.9M
Sabil
Sabil@Sabilappdev·
@a16z Yeah, new layers usually expand demand more than they replace it.
English
0
0
1
68
a16z
a16z@a16z·
Why OpenClaw will create jobs: " I can't see these as doing anything other than creating a lot more jobs. Like there's just so much more stuff that needs to get built and needs to get managed." "The same thing happened with cloud, right? When cloud came around, I remember sitting in my big corporate job thinking 'half of these people will be gone in five years.'" "And then, lo and behold, 10 years later, 20 years later, the IT organizations are bigger than they were then, and they're spending even more money." " Trying to ignore this new technology and waiting for it to go away usually doesn't work." @stuffyokodraws @appenz on the AI + a16z Podcast
English
10
12
62
10.4K
Sabil
Sabil@Sabilappdev·
@a16z Yeah, agent-native infra feels like an entirely new layer waiting to be built.
English
0
0
1
152
a16z
a16z@a16z·
The current internet wasn't built for agents. "There’s a huge opportunity for startups to create these proxies… if someone would give me a scoped Gmail, I’d adopt it today." "There are websites today where the majority of the revenue, and certainly the majority of profits, come from cross-selling. If this website is suddenly only used by agents, that doesn't work anymore, right?" "All of these large consumer sites... they don't want agents, essentially." "One interesting question here is: will the big incumbents catch up and offer their functionality for agents, or do we actually need new companies that cater to agents specifically?" "Do we actually need to replace some of the big sort of SaaS building blocks of e-commerce, of online services, and redo them for agents?" @stuffyokodraws @appenz on the AI + a16z Podcast
English
20
16
129
19.2K
Sabil
Sabil@Sabilappdev·
@chamath Stacked interview, Jensen always drops long-term vision.
English
0
0
0
86
Chamath Palihapitiya
Jensen Pod!!!!!!
The All-In Podcast@theallinpod

🚨MAJOR INTERVIEW: Jensen Huang joins the Besties! The @nvidia CEO joins to discuss: -- Nvidia's future, roadmap to $1T revenue -- Physical AI's $50T market -- Rise of the agent, OpenClaw's inflection moment -- Inference explosion, Groq deal -- AI PR Crisis, Anthropic's comms mistakes -- Token allocation for employees ++ much more! (0:00) Jensen Huang joins the show! (0:26) Acquiring Groq and the inference explosion (8:53) Decision making at the world's most valuable company (10:47) Physical AI's $50T market, OpenClaw's future, the new operating system for modern AI computing (16:38) AI's PR crisis, refuting doomer narratives, Anthropic's comms mistakes (20:48) Revenue capacity, token allocation for employees, Karpathy's autoresearch, agentic future (30:50) Open source, global diffusion, Iran/Taiwan supply chain impact (39:45) Self-driving platform, facing competition from active customers, responding to growth slowdown predictions (47:32) Datacenters in space, AI healthcare, Robotics (56:10) OpenAI/Anthropic revenue potential, how to build an AI moat (59:04) Advice to young people on excelling in the AI era

Dansk
47
43
523
75.8K
Sabil
Sabil@Sabilappdev·
@Suhail Yeah, finding 8×H100 right now is basically a scavenger hunt.
English
1
0
1
204
Suhail
Suhail@Suhail·
Having trouble finding 1 8xH100 today to launch some experiments I am working on. If you know of a provider, pls lmk! Crusoe+LL are out.
English
9
1
6
4.8K
Sabil
Sabil@Sabilappdev·
@andrewchen Yeah, the real shift is when supply becomes programmable, not just better matched.
English
0
0
1
103
andrew chen
andrew chen@andrewchen·
marketplace startups are destined to be massively reinvented by AI. The weak form is already happening, where we use LLMs for customer support, supply/demand matching, etc. That’s easy The strong form is to figure out how much of the supply side of the marketplace can be turned agentic and ultimately, robotic. “Uber for X” will have consumers requesting robots to do X. Every on-demand service of the 2010s will instruct a robotaxi or delivery robot. Or if you’re prev used a marketplace to hire X, then you “hire” an agent instead. You won’t need to app developer, because there’s agents to build your app This will impact marketplace cos differently. Of course some marketplaces - like Airbnb - inherently work in the physical and will leverage AI around the core value prop. And some are bound to lose their network effects as matching fragmented supply/demand turns into an AI problem. Much change is coming The next big business model for marketplaces will emerge when demand works at high abstractions and supply meets it by becoming programmable
English
47
10
165
16.5K
Sabil
Sabil@Sabilappdev·
@GrammarHippy Yeah, $0.42 US leads is interesting, would love to see the breakdown.
English
0
0
0
45
George Ten
George Ten@GrammarHippy·
Seems like a lot of people enjoyed this thread. I wanna write another one. How about showing you how a friend of mine is getting email leads for $0.42 - US leads. Using this system. Would you wanna read that?
George Ten@GrammarHippy

Claude writes better copy than I do. Butttt… It’s not Claude writing. It’s the best copywriters to ever live who are. It’s so good that after writing copy for 13 years - I never write copy anymore. Ever. Ads. Sales letters. VSLs. Everything. Let me show you how.

English
11
1
34
2.5K
Sabil
Sabil@Sabilappdev·
@Nicolascole77 Yeah, consistent follow-ups signal seriousness more than the first pitch.
English
0
0
0
17
Nicolas Cole 🚢👻
Nicolas Cole 🚢👻@Nicolascole77·
Something I tell writers about the importance of following-up with potential clients: As a business owner, I deliberately don't respond to the first email pitch anyone sends me. Not because I'm not interested—but because I want to see if they'll follow-up. It's a very easy litmus test to gauge someone's competence and persistence. If you pitch me once and give up, that tells me everything I need to know about your work ethic, how much you care, how far you'll go, etc. Whereas if you pitch me and follow-up for months in a row, that also tells me everything I need to know. Your persistence speaks volumes about your work ethic. And I'm significantly more likely to hire you.
English
22
0
33
1.6K
Sabil
Sabil@Sabilappdev·
@arvidkahl Timely topic, liability around agents is going to matter a lot.
English
0
0
1
12
Arvid Kahl
Arvid Kahl@arvidkahl·
My next newsletter/podcast "AI Liability: The Landmines Under Your SaaS" is coming tomorrow. I believe AI agents are liability landmines. I'll talk about how to protect your business before one goes off. tbf.fm (feel free to subscribe, I appreciate that!)
English
7
1
10
807
Sabil
Sabil@Sabilappdev·
@a16z Yeah, ease of use plus autonomy is what really unlocked it.
English
0
0
0
121
a16z
a16z@a16z·
Why did OpenClaw take off? “I found it relatively easy to set up and get going… I didn’t have to spend seven hours just to do the Telegram use case and start playing with it.” "I just think it's sort of that, like just that level of accessibility to users who are maybe not living in a codebase day-to-day." "The other agent frameworks were pretty difficult to use, incredibly flaky, [I] didn't really want to spend a lot of time debugging someone else's stuff." "There's another major part of this that it can extend itself." "It's the first agent I've seen where I can say, 'I want integration with something.' And it's like: 'well, I've never seen this before, there's no package for that, but let me try to put something together.'" "There is definitely a long-running nature of it. You leave it running for a night and you're like, keep working on this until you finish." @stuffyokodraws @appenz on the AI + a16z Podcast
English
19
21
150
21.2K
Sabil
Sabil@Sabilappdev·
@lennysan Yeah, it’s becoming a tradeoff between cost, speed, and quality on every decision.
English
0
0
1
49
Sabil
Sabil@Sabilappdev·
@noahkagan Yeah, optimizing for peace over complexity usually wins long term.
English
0
0
2
279
Noah Kagan
Noah Kagan@noahkagan·
The older I get the less money I want to make. And it's more I want less BS to deal with in my life. My old house was on AirBnB - took it off and put it up for long-term rental. Weekly complaints, city taxes, annoying my neighbors, etc...oy vey. Just rented it out for long-term today. And as it turns out long-term rental makes more money! Go figure.
English
25
0
108
8.6K
Sabil
Sabil@Sabilappdev·
@chamath Yeah, owning your stack and knowledge becomes a real advantage over time.
English
0
0
0
67
Chamath Palihapitiya
This is really well summarized here. People ask me why we focused 8090 on (complex) enterprise engagements from day 1 and not small entrepreneurs. The answer is that this is where all the action is. The second is that the concept of digital sovereignty will become part of the water table soon. If you don’t own your knowledge and processes, you will be disrupted. And the most powerful way to own your knowledge and processes is to have bespoke software that absorbs all of the tribal knowledge of your employees that enables it to grow and make money. This is what 8090’s Software Factory does. If, however, you stay as-is and don’t take back control from existing software vendors, your livelihood is on a shot clock.
Kym Coffey@kymcoffey

Digital Sovereignty Through Engineering Excellence Digital Sovereignty Through Engineering Excellence The collaboration between the EY organization and 8090’s Software Factory represents a fundamental shift in enterprise digital strategy. EY: “Leveraging 8090’s platform, we are moving beyond just code and prototypes to deliver complete, commercial-grade products at pace" By moving away from the historical cycles of fragmented outsourcing and compounding technical debt, this approach enables the delivery of commercial-grade, hardened software assets at an accelerated pace. For decades, the enterprise software lifecycle has been caught in a cycle of diminishing returns: internal development gives way to vendor lock-in, which eventually leads to fragmented offshore maintenance. This trajectory inevitably results in compounding technical debt and eroding quality. "We developed the 'Software Factory' to disrupt this legacy loop," notes @chamath Palihapitiya, Cofounder and CEO of 8090. "By combining our engineering precision with the EY organization’s extensive global footprint and strategic depth, we are empowering enterprises to reclaim their digital sovereignty." Strategic Pillars of the EY & 8090 Collaboration The focus is on two mission-critical trajectories for the modern enterprise: Systemic Legacy Transformation: Beyond simple "lift-and-shift" maneuvers to systematically decommission technical debt. By modernizing aging architectures, the reduction of heavy "maintenance tax" of legacy code, frees up capital for growth. High-Governance Product Engineering: While AI-assisted coding provides speed, it often lacks the structural integrity required for the enterprise. This strategic management and sofitware engineering approach ensures that new product development meets rigorous standards for consistency, security, and governance that automated tools cannot achieve in isolation. Through this collaboration, 8090 Software Factory and EY (Earnest & Young) are not just building software; they are re-egineering the future-state of the digital enterprise.

English
30
16
160
75.4K
Sabil
Sabil@Sabilappdev·
@Nicolascole77 Yeah, writing compounds over a much longer horizon than most careers.
English
0
0
0
21
Nicolas Cole 🚢👻
Nicolas Cole 🚢👻@Nicolascole77·
The real reason I picked writing as a career: Most careers have ~30 year time horizons or less. Doesn't matter the field, but it's very rare to see a CEO over the age of 65. But I can write until I'm dead. That's an extra ~20 years of mastery!
English
30
2
46
2K
Sabil
Sabil@Sabilappdev·
@ecomchasedimond Curious what the tips are, sounds like a solid framework.
English
0
0
1
21
Sabil
Sabil@Sabilappdev·
@a16z @deeptuneai Makes sense, better environments are key for real-world task performance.
English
0
0
0
32
a16z
a16z@a16z·
We’re excited to lead Deeptune’s Series A. @deeptuneai is building leading RL environments for computer-use and code. More data, more compute, and better architectures can only take us so far. As models move into real-world task execution, they need structured environments where they can learn to fully control computers and perform knowledge work tasks. Designing high-quality RL environments is extraordinarily difficult to get right, but Deeptune has proven they can, working closely with leading AI labs and developing environments for computer use that are already showing up in benchmark improvements. Deeptune’s founder and CEO, Tim Lupo, is an exceptional leader with a rare combination of technical expertise and product intuition. We’re thrilled to partner with Tim and the Deeptune team as they build this critical layer of the AI stack. By @Mascobot and @martin_casado
a16z tweet media
Tim Lupo@timlup

Excited to announce @deeptuneai has raised $43M Series A led by @a16z. Labs and enterprises must turn model capability into real-world performance. Doing so will require distilling the entire economy into environments for AI. We believe this to be the most critical work in the pursuit of AGI. We’re a small, focused team of engineers and operators in New York. If you want to work on the hardest (and weirdest) problems of your career, we would love to hear from you.

English
11
4
71
16.8K