Ben Ford

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Ben Ford

Ben Ford

@commandodev

Organisational Engineering as a service for scaling tech companies | OODA | Former Royal Marine Commando | ADAPT. RESPOND. WIN!

London, England Bergabung Ekim 2015
4.7K Mengikuti3.3K Pengikut
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Ben Ford
Ben Ford@commandodev·
Because OODA loops have come up a few times over the last couple of days. I want to say this: The military is full of excellent ideas and practices that can be used with a tiny amount of tweaking in civilian contexts. e.g. Mission Command: youtu.be/zyWyIVZA7K8
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Ben Ford
Ben Ford@commandodev·
Prep done!
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Inspector Gadget
Inspector Gadget@InspGadgetBlogs·
Ghosts of Christmas past.
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Ben Ford
Ben Ford@commandodev·
@jamesonhaslam Hell yeah! Opted to cut into smaller peices and flash on a plancha when I did it. Also - you have got to try it with sous vide egg yolk!
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jameson (big deck energy)
jameson (big deck energy)@jamesonhaslam·
This is Christmas Eve at my house We will have extra food feel free to invite yourself
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Ben Ford
Ben Ford@commandodev·
@SMB_Attorney Although volume of work combined with a shitty plan just gets you in a worse place quicker 😅
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Ben Ford
Ben Ford@commandodev·
@spikeyspud He's an utter raging bellend. So embarrasing! I bet Bea's glad she didn't go for the RM now :-(
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Rich Jordan | Strongpoint
Rich Jordan | Strongpoint@StrongpointRich·
Some will call me crazy for this. Maybe I am. I'm currently rebranding our 3 brands across the Northeast under a single banner. Brands we've built from $4m to $30m over the past few years. Distancing ourselves from the original founder names and leaning into our own brand. Posturing for further expansion. If you're in the Northeast, keep an eye out for High Ground Service Pros.
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John Wilson@WilsonCompanies

.@StrongpointRich ran 3 brands to $30M, then realized the complexity was slowing growth. He consolidated everything under one name. Result? Clearer marketing, stronger culture, faster scale. Expensive move? Yes. But it unlocked serious momentum and potential.

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Jon Matzner
Jon Matzner@MatznerJon·
3:00 p.m. rise 3:05 Chivas Regal with the morning papers, Dunhills 3:45 cocaine 3:50 another glass of Chivas, Dunhill 4:05 first cup of coffee, Dunhill 4:15 cocaine 4:16 orange juice, Dunhill 4:30 cocaine 4:54 cocaine 5:05 cocaine 5:11 coffee, Dunhills 5:30 more ice in the Chivas 5:45 cocaine, etc., etc. 6:00 grass to take the edge off the day 7:05 Woody Creek Tavern for lunch-Heineken, two margaritas, coleslaw, a taco salad, a double order of fried onion rings, carrot cake, ice cream, a bean fritter, Dunhills, another Heineken, cocaine, and for the ride home, a snow cone (a glass of shredded ice over which is poured three or four jig­gers of Chivas) 9:00 starts snorting cocaine seriously 10:00 drops acid 11:00 Chartreuse, cocaine, grass 11:30 cocaine, etc, etc. 12:00 midnight, Hunter S. Thompson is ready to write 12:05-6:00 a.m. Chartreuse, cocaine, grass, Chivas, coffee, Heineken, clove cigarettes, grapefruit, Dunhills, orange juice, gin, continuous pornographic movies. 6:00 the hot tub-champagne, Dove Bars, fettuccine Alfredo 8:00 Halcyon 8:20 sleep
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Ben Ford
Ben Ford@commandodev·
@EmeryEXP God damn I miss range days 😥
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Emery
Emery@EmeryEXP·
Egirl - outside edition
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Nozz
Nozz@NoahEpstein_·
been testing different ways to build n8n workflows for the past few months tried claude desktop with mcp tried gemini tried just raw prompting gpt tried vibe coding the whole thing none of them really understood n8n like yeah they could spit out json but the nodes were outdated, the connections were wrong, half the templates didn't even work anymore then found this tool that actually scrapes n8n's latest documentation, nodes, and templates in real time it knows what nodes exist TODAY not what existed when the model was trained built a full lead gen workflow in 4 minutes that would've taken me 2 hours manually the difference is stupid every other ai tool is guessing at n8n structure this one actually knows it if you're building automations and fighting with broken outputs, comment "WORKFLOW" and i'll send you what i'm using + the exact prompt structure that gets clean builds every time
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Ben Ford
Ben Ford@commandodev·
@BloodNelsons You normally find thise breeding in spring - it's very late in the season now!
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Anduril Industries
Anduril Industries@anduriltech·
Today and every day, Anduril honors our heroes. Veterans are core to our mission. They make up over 13% of our employee base. That’s more than twice the share in the US Labor Force. We asked our employees to nominate their Veteran teammates to recognize their impact. Here's what they had to say.
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Ben Ford
Ben Ford@commandodev·
@SMB_Attorney *voluntary adversity*... if its involuntary it's maybe 50/50
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Ben Ford
Ben Ford@commandodev·
@MahaultAlbarra1 this reminds of what you said on the no way out podcast - what if we looked at everything through a more collaborative supportive lens like this.
Thomas Reis@peakaustria

The trees were talking. And no one had been listening. For decades, foresters believed trees were competitors—silent giants fighting for sunlight, water, and space. Cut down the weak ones, they said, and the strong would thrive. But Dr. Suzanne Simard, a Canadian forest ecologist, suspected something else was happening beneath the soil. So she did an experiment that would change how we understand forests—and life itself.She discovered that trees aren't isolated individuals. They're part of a vast, intelligent, underground network—a "wood wide web" where they share resources, warn each other of danger, and care for their young.The forest, it turns out, isn't a battlefield. It's a community.Suzanne Simard grew up in the forests of British Columbia, Canada. Her family were loggers. She spent her childhood among towering trees, watching them fall and new ones planted in their place.She became a forester herself, working for the logging industry in the 1980s. But she noticed something disturbing: when forests were clear-cut and replanted with a single species—usually Douglas fir—the new trees struggled to survive.Foresters blamed the birch trees growing nearby. "They're competing for resources," they said. "Cut them down so the firs can grow."But Suzanne didn't think that made sense. In natural forests, birch and fir grew side by side, thriving together. Why would they compete in replanted forests but not in natural ones?So she designed an experiment to find out. In the early 1990s, Suzanne planted birch and fir seedlings in a forest plot. She covered some with plastic bags to isolate them from each other. Others, she left uncovered.Then she did something radical: she injected tiny amounts of radioactive carbon into the trees—different isotopes for birch and fir—so she could track where the carbon went.If the trees were truly isolated competitors, the carbon would stay inside each tree.But if they were connected somehow, the carbon would move between them.Suzanne waited. Then she used a Geiger counter to measure where the radioactive carbon had traveled.The results were stunning.The carbon didn't stay in one tree. It moved. From birch to fir. From fir to birch. Through the soil. Through their roots.But not directly. The trees were connected by mycorrhizal fungi—thread-like organisms that attach to tree roots and extend for miles underground.The fungi act as a living network, linking trees together. In exchange for sugars the trees produce through photosynthesis, the fungi provide trees with water and nutrients from deep in the soil.But Suzanne discovered something even more remarkable: the fungi weren't just passively transferring nutrients. The trees were actively sharing resources with each other. In summer, when birch trees had full leaves and were photosynthesizing, they sent carbon to the fir trees, which were shaded and struggling. In fall, when birch leaves fell and they could no longer photosynthesize, the fir trees—still green—sent carbon back to the birch to help them survive the winter.The trees were cooperating. Helping each other. Balancing the ecosystem.Suzanne called these networks "mycorrhizal networks"—and the largest, oldest trees in the forest became known as "mother trees" or "hub trees."These mother trees act as hubs in the network, connecting hundreds of younger trees. They send nutrients to struggling saplings. They share information about drought, disease, and insect attacks through chemical signals.When a mother tree is cut down, the entire network weakens. Younger trees lose their support system.Suzanne's research showed that clear-cutting forests—removing all trees and replanting a single species—destroys these networks. The new trees are isolated, vulnerable, and far less resilient.Her work was revolutionary—and controversial.Logging companies resisted her findings. Some scientists were skeptical. The idea that trees "communicate" and "help each other" sounded too anthropomorphic, too sentimental.

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Christian Ruf
Christian Ruf@pinpulleddrmf·
Imagine choosing hate, and displaying it here. And then blocking everyone who called you out on it.
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Ben Ford
Ben Ford@commandodev·
@hissgoescobra Probably NBD if you're only training to murder children though I guess.
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John Jackson
John Jackson@hissgoescobra·
Ok he can’t shoot for shit. That’s not how you hold a pistol. Support hand, arms, stance, sight picture, everything is wrong here.
Szabolcs Panyi@panyiszabolcs

💥📹Leaked video: Metropolitan Hilarion—Patriarch Kirill’s former no. 2, later head of the Russian Orthodox Church’s Hungarian branch, now posted in Karlovy Vary—seen at the FSB's Lubyanka Square HQ shooting range. 🔗More in @VSquare_Project's newsletter, see thread below.🧵👇

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Extropic
Extropic@extropic·
Hello Thermo World.
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