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deadphoenix
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Gumroad’s test suite of 16,000 tests has been flaky for years. This slowed down shipping tremendously.
This week, Gianfranco used @karpathy’s autoresearch and @steipete’s OpenClaw to stabilize our test suite overnight.
And his code is open source, so you can (have your agent) do it too.
(And our code is open source too so you can see every single fix on GitHub.)
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Living an Exuberant Life is only possible when you are able to dance upon the uncertainties of life. #SadhguruQuotes

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DARK HOSPITAL DEATH FACTS
1. Nurses often say 3-4 a.m. is when most patients pass away - the body is at its weakest during those hours.
2. Some terminal patients suddenly get a burst of energy before death - they seem normal.. then pass within hours.
3. Hearing is believed to be the last sense to fade - which means patients may still hear loved ones even when unrespossive.
4. In rare cases, bodies can make small sounds after, death due to trapped air leaving the lungs - which can terrify new hospital staff.
5. Some hospice workers say certain patients 'know` the exact day they're going to die - and mentally prepare for it.
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Beyond the Mind lies the Intellect, beyond Intellect the Soul, and beyond all — the Infinite Purusha.
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#Nachiketa #KathaUpanishad #vedanta #AncientWisdom #VedicPhilosophy #InnerJourney
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Relationships are not about compatibility, companionship, or seeking happiness from each other. They are an opportunity to create a Union that paves the way to a greater possibility. #SadhguruQuotes

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On Sanyasa in 2026:
1. I am not comfortable recommending Sanyasa in today’s world.
2. The quality of Sanyasa today has been degrading sharply over last few decades. In many places, what survives is outer costume without inner yogyata.
3. The modern hyper-connected world has destroyed the conditions that once supported deep Sanyasa.
Constant stimuli, constant access, constant interruption - this is not the ecology in which long solitude and severe Sadhana arise easily.
4. A true Sanyasi is meant to be a Yati - one in motion (Yatra), unattached, not rooted in permanent social identity or fixed residence.
Today, many do not leave society.
They merely shift from one social structure into another. That is not real detachment.
5. Many now enter Sanyasa not from mastery, but from exhaustion, confusion, heartbreak, failure, or inability to handle worldly life.
That is escapism - palaayan, not Sanyasa.
It harms both the individual and society.
6. Many also enter in emotional enthusiasm without sufficient conquest over senses, anger, Rajas, and Tamas. Later, cravings return. The result is damage to body, mind, and public trust.
7. Sanyasa demands a life of rigorous Swadhyaya, Tapa, and Ishwar Pranidhana. Veda Sadhana is not optional.
Yet shockingly, many modern Sanyasis are functionally illiterate in the Vedas. Some know little beyond a few inherited slogans. Some even drift into intoxicants and delusions while speaking of enlightenment.
8. Unless a Sanyasi is rooted in Veda Sadhana and stretches his mental powers to the highest degree, he does injustice to himself, to society, and to the very idea of Sanyasa.
The ancient texts do not permit dilution here.
9. Sanatan Dharma does not force one narrow path. The Vedic framework provides multiple valid routes to Eeshwar for different temperaments in different eras and situations.
10. For most people today, a better path is this: build Sattva, do Sewa, remain in Swadhyaya, and pursue disciplined Sadhana.
11. That path is safer, cleaner, and more practical for both self and society. That is what Krishna's Geeta essentially recommended to world via Arjuna.
12. In today’s world, Sanyasa should be treated as an exception for the truly exceptional - not as a refuge for those defeated by love, career, family, or the ordinary demands of life.
13. Unless a person has already demonstrated rare brilliance, deep discipline, and unusual adhikara, Sanyasa is usually the wrong recommendation.
14. For most serious seekers of Moksha today, Patanjali’s Yoga - especially Chapters 1 and 2 - offers a far more reliable framework than the degraded forms of Sanyasa now seen in many places.
15. If you are a young man or woman, unless you have some truly extraordinary god-gifted visible genius, Sanyasa is not for you, no matter what you have read or someone you admire says.
Instead be in the world, use world as your toolkit to Moksha. If you achieve extraordinary geniuses later, reconsider then. Till then, postpone Sanyasa and do your duties with Ananda.
16. Extraordinary genius will not come via mere Dhyana or some Kundalini Jagaran etc. Such claims are against Vedas. Dhyana will definitely help. But you will need to do Tapasya - hard work - to achieve genius.
Rama, Krishna - everyone worked hard to master their weapons. You simply do not have an exception.
17. In summary, Sanyasa is not for you, neither the best path for you, nor the aspirational path for you unless there is visible evidential genius to justify that.
(Think of Adi Guru Shankaracharya - are you in that league? Have you never felt anger, lust, depression? Are you always in Aanand? Are you having way higher aptitude than others? etc etc)
What is the proof? If not, be humble, be what you are and choose your best path.)
18. Today, we need warriors who can protect Sanyasa Dharma more than Sanyasa.
Why not commit to countering unlawful conversions on Bhoomi as an alternate to modern easy Sanyasa?
Why not work to protect innocent like Hanuman?
Why not teach masses by example and proof on what Dharma means?
Study Vedas. Judge yourself ruthlessly. And then take any step.
Sanjeev Newar
(Yes, there are still exceptional individuals and traditions that guard Sanyasa with rigor and choose candidates with real care. But they are few.
This post is about the widespread deviation from strict Vedic maryada, not about those rare exceptions.)
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Seedance 2.0
Prompt: Show what’s happening in Silicon Valley after the @Citrini7 article. Make no mistakes.
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My favorite part of the @Citrini7 piece
India is going to be absolutely decimated due to their entire economy being reliant on providing cheap white-collar workers to the West.
Probably spot on, actually.

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"I think listening to old people is the biggest mistake young people make. I think the traditional career advice is probably not going to work as well."
Sam Altman was answering the quetsion -
"what is the biggest mistake you see young people make right now when they apparently prepare for AI?"
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From 'IIT Delhi' YT channel. (link in comment)
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