Ä̤́̂̚ ̗u̗͓̜̥̭ͦ̄̈ͪͧs̲̬̝͕̲̦͚̙̍ͭ̓ͦe͕̬͕̰̔͛͌̒ͨ̈́r̯̠̦ͨ̌̑
2.5K posts

Ä̤́̂̚ ̗u̗͓̜̥̭ͦ̄̈ͪͧs̲̬̝͕̲̦͚̙̍ͭ̓ͦe͕̬͕̰̔͛͌̒ͨ̈́r̯̠̦ͨ̌̑
@0xauser
PM & ex cofounder, building autonomous workflows





msft, goog, meta, & amazon are on track to spend ~$700b on ai infrastructure in 2026. this kinda spending usually happens via govts or wars whereas this time, it’s four companies racing to build the foundational mechanics of agi. kinda insane that the next layer of civilization is being ~entirely privately financed before most govts even understand what’s being built. has this ever happened before?!



India doesn't need to lead the world in building the most advanced AI models. But it must lead in ensuring benefits of AI are widely shared. @rvenk and I have an op-ed in The @EconomicTimes economictimes.indiatimes.com/opinion/et-com…










Open letter to Indians in America. -- Dear brothers and sisters from Bharat: Like I did 37 years ago, you arrived in America with no money but with a good education and cultural heritage from Bharat. You achieved outstanding success. America was good to us. For that we must remain grateful - gratitude is our Bharatiya way. Yet today, a significant number of Americans, may be not the majority but not too far from it either, believe that Indians "take away" American jobs and our success in America was unfairly earned. You may think the next election will fix this, but your choice would be between people who hate our Bharatiya civilisation and people who hate civilisation itself. That is the "hard right" vs "woke left" battle. You are mere bystanders to that conflict. Meanwhile there is one thing that is true now and will be true in the future: the respect Indians command world-wide will substantially depend on the fortunes of India herself. If India remains poor, the woke left will give us moral lectures with pity and the hard right, different moral lectures with scorn ("hellhole") and we must not confuse either with respect. Respect in today's world, along with prosperity and security, comes from one source: a nation's technological prowess. India produces sufficient brain power to achieve that prowess but alas we exported so much of that talent, particularly to America. As we develop that prowess in India, our civilisational strength will assert itself. As difficult as it is for many of you to contemplate this, please come back home. Bharat Mata needs your talent. Our vast youthful population needs the technology leadership you gained over the years to guide them towards prosperity. Let's do it with a missionary zeal. Respectfully Sridhar Vembu









If you are an IT engineer and your company allows remote work, leave this concrete jungle. Sell your flat and use that money to build a nice home in your village. Live a simple life, keep a cow, grow your own food on a small piece of land, and enjoy fresh and chemical free foods. Enjoy clean air instead of traffic and noise. City life is overrated. It may not be possible for everyone, but if you get the chance, it is worth it.


GStack is an open-source toolkit built by YC President & CEO @garrytan that turns Claude Code into an AI engineering team — with skills for office hours, design, code review, QA, and browser testing. In this video, Garry walks through how GStack works, starting with Office Hours, a skill modeled after real YC partner sessions that pressure-tests your idea before you write a line of code. He demos it live, going from idea through adversarial review, design mockups, and automated QA in a single session.





