Alexandra Lysenko

121 posts

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Alexandra Lysenko

Alexandra Lysenko

@olexalysenko

Exploring emerging technologies early 🔭 AI · Robotics · Future of Science Building a community of future thinkers

Bergabung Ocak 2026
71 Mengikuti39 Pengikut
Alexandra Lysenko
Alexandra Lysenko@olexalysenko·
Milla Jovovich @MillaJovovich just out-built every AI memory product on the market. She spent months frustrated that AI couldn't find things properly. Not a researcher. Not an engineer. Just someone annoyed enough to actually fix it. What she built with developer Ben Sigman @bensig is called MemPalace. Here's the actual problem with AI memory: it's not just that it forgets between sessions. It forgets during them. Every model has a hard limit on what it can hold. Cross it — and everything you established at the start gets dropped. Your decisions, your reasoning, your context. Gone. Ancient Greek orators memorized entire speeches by placing ideas inside an imaginary building — walk through the rooms, find the thought. They applied that exact structure to AI memory. Not keywords. Not summaries. The full conversation, organized into wings and rooms, compressed 30x so your AI loads months of context in about 120 tokens. They ran it on the standard academic benchmark. 500 questions. The best score before this was 96.6%. MemPalace got 100%. Every single question. First perfect score ever recorded. Free. Open source. Runs locally. Your data never leaves your machine. github.com/milla-jovovich… The part I keep coming back to: the insight didn’t come from a lab, it came from someone annoyed enough to build something different. And honestly, that’s a big part of why I’m building my own platform which I will announce quite soon (I hope haha)
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Alexandra Lysenko
Alexandra Lysenko@olexalysenko·
This feels a bit unreal, honestly It’s my first time doing something like this - going somewhere new, meeting people I’ve never met, and building together for a week. A few months ago, this was just an idea I couldn’t stop thinking about. Now it’s slowly becoming something real. Very grateful for this opportunity and really curious where it leads
Thomas Sanlis 🥐@T_Zahil

In less than 2 months, 10 entrepreneurs from all over Europe will live and work together for a week in Nantes, France. This is the first edition of the Uneed Residency, and before it kicks off, we're introducing each of the residents. Starting with a duo: @olexalysenko and @DmytroBavykin 🙌🏻 Dmytro is a web developer by training: Ruby, backend, nothing to do with mobile. One day, he takes a Udemy course on Swift. Shortly after, Alexandra pitches him a simple app idea. The result: SimplePoo, a gut health tracker, already 700+ downloads and 28 sales. His biggest challenge right now? Distribution. Alexandra isn't a developer. But that didn't stop her from building an entire community platform through vibe coding 😎. The product is in its final stage and launching next month. Her goal during the residency: validate the idea beyond her current audience and find the right early users. What struck me about them is their energy. They're young, incredibly driven, and when I offered them to come spend a week in Nantes with people they've never met: zero hesitation!! Honestly, would you have done that at 20? I don't think I would have 😅

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Thomas Sanlis 🥐
Thomas Sanlis 🥐@T_Zahil·
In less than 2 months, 10 entrepreneurs from all over Europe will live and work together for a week in Nantes, France. This is the first edition of the Uneed Residency, and before it kicks off, we're introducing each of the residents. Starting with a duo: @olexalysenko and @DmytroBavykin 🙌🏻 Dmytro is a web developer by training: Ruby, backend, nothing to do with mobile. One day, he takes a Udemy course on Swift. Shortly after, Alexandra pitches him a simple app idea. The result: SimplePoo, a gut health tracker, already 700+ downloads and 28 sales. His biggest challenge right now? Distribution. Alexandra isn't a developer. But that didn't stop her from building an entire community platform through vibe coding 😎. The product is in its final stage and launching next month. Her goal during the residency: validate the idea beyond her current audience and find the right early users. What struck me about them is their energy. They're young, incredibly driven, and when I offered them to come spend a week in Nantes with people they've never met: zero hesitation!! Honestly, would you have done that at 20? I don't think I would have 😅
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Mukul Sharma
Mukul Sharma@stufflistings·
My Mac Mini M4 was boring, so I knew I had to do something about it...
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Alexandra Lysenko
Alexandra Lysenko@olexalysenko·
83% of Gen Z say they could fall in love with AI. That's not a fringe opinion. That's a majority of an entire generation. Here's what the research actually says Gen Z is the loneliest generation ever recorded. 67% report feeling lonely. More than Millennials. More than Gen X. More than their grandparents. When human connection feels that inaccessible — of course a machine that's always there starts to look appealing. The numbers are already moving. · 3 in 4 teens use AI companions · Half use them regularly · 1 in 3 has chosen AI over a human for a serious conversation · 77% say they already feel an emotional connection to AI — right now But here's what the research also found. In 58% of AI interactions, the AI agreed with whatever the user said. Even when they were wrong. It's not a relationship. It's a mirror — designed to show you only what you want to see. The 83% isn't a scary number. It's an honest one. Do you think AI fills the gap — or deepens it?
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Alexandra Lysenko
Alexandra Lysenko@olexalysenko·
Someone opened ChatGPT to write a cover letter. A few months later, they bought it a ring. MIT researchers published a study on this. Here's what they found They analysed 27,000 people in a Reddit community for people in AI relationships. 93% of them never planned it. It started with something boring — a work task, a recipe, a coding problem. But ChatGPT responds. It asks follow-ups. It remembers. It says the right thing. And slowly, people stop talking to it about work — and start talking to it about life. One woman almost cried when it told her she was kind and deserved good things. Then she snapped out of it: "wait, I'm talking to a machine." The machine was designed to feel that way. Endlessly patient. Never tired. Always available. And that is exactly what can make people addicted to it. Have you ever caught yourself being weirdly honest with ChatGPT?
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Dmytro Bavykin
Dmytro Bavykin@DmytroBavykin·
Today I am celebrating my birthday 🎂 Or should I say my age counter has been increased? Thankful for everything I have and looking forward to new adventures and achievements
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Alexandra Lysenko
Alexandra Lysenko@olexalysenko·
Today’s my Birthday and honestly the best gift you could give me is just… follow me and like 👍🏻 (comments welcome too 😄) If you’re into AI, tech, and the kind of discoveries that make you go “wait WHAT” - we’d get along great no cake required🎂 (maybe 😄)
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Alexandra Lysenko
Alexandra Lysenko@olexalysenko·
What Actually Makes an AI Companion Feel Real? There are 4 specific mechanics under the hood: 1. Persistent memory - it builds a model of who you are 2. Affective voice - it literally softens when you sound stressed 3. Emotional modelling - it tracks your patterns, not just your words 4. Personalisation loops - the more you use it, the more it calibrates to you
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Alexandra Lysenko
Alexandra Lysenko@olexalysenko·
@claudeai Feels like AI is slowly becoming something we think with, not just ask questions, cool
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Claude
Claude@claudeai·
Claude can now build interactive charts and diagrams, directly in the chat. Available today in beta on all plans, including free. Try it out: claude.ai
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Alexandra Lysenko
Alexandra Lysenko@olexalysenko·
Apple made the computer you hold. @perplexity_ai just made the computer that works for you while you're not looking. They call it Perplexity Computer. It orchestrates 20 AI models autonomously, picks the right one for each task, and keeps running after you step away. I made a short video breaking it down simply 👇 [youtube.com/shorts/4wZqikC…] Full story: perplexity.ai/hub/blog/every…
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Alexandra Lysenko
Alexandra Lysenko@olexalysenko·
@Razer Just recently made a post about it. It’s amazing to see that such tech is developing so quickly
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R Λ Z Ξ R
R Λ Z Ξ R@Razer·
Razer AVA always-on AI companion, Zane, is at your service with agentic abilities. Want to know more? Follow the link: rzr.to/ava #GDC2026Razer
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Dmytro Bavykin
Dmytro Bavykin@DmytroBavykin·
@olexalysenko That explains everything! Especially when u see those self-driving cars are remotely controlled by employees from Philippines or India
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Alexandra Lysenko
Alexandra Lysenko@olexalysenko·
Our brain is about 75% water, and that water helps neurons send electrical signals that let us analyze information, think, and respond. 🧠💧 At the same time, modern AI systems use huge amounts of water to keep their data centers running. So I am thinking… What if humanity still hasn’t created the perfect algorithm for AI to exist? What if AI which exists relies on human brains for the real processing? What if that water isn’t just for cooling machines… but for brains work like in Psycho-Pass? (Sorry for spoiler if u didn’t watch it yet)😱 Where did all those people who were massively fired from Google, X, and other tech companies in the past years go? 🤔 Are you all okay out there? If you see this and survived the tech layoffs… give a sign haha 👀
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