固定されたツイート
sieg
282 posts


Introducing Shiroku
A sharper view into your payments — detect anomalies early.
shiroku.app
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@robin_faraj Introducing Shiroku
A sharper view into your payments — detect anomalies early.
shiroku.app
English

@robert_shaw Introducing Shiroku
A sharper view into your payments — detect anomalies early.
shiroku.app
English

SaaS/Startup founders
What are you building currently?
Show your amazing product below, join 100+ founders here every week.
#indiehackers #buildinpublic
GIF
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@mscode07 Introducing Shiroku
A sharper view into your payments — detect anomalies early.
shiroku.app
English

@trashh_dev An Ai market platform where u can train ur algorithm to trade.
Create, share or even sell your trading secrets
Each day it will make prediction against actual and correct itself, even after deployment.
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sieg@codedan0
Shiroku is a post-payment intelligence dashboard designed to help small businesses detect unusual patterns early. It is being built to support PSP integrations, so businesses can monitor payment activity in one place and get flagged when something looks off. No digging through spreadsheets. No finding out too late. Just clearer visibility into what is happening. Join the waitlist now: shiroku.app #startup #buildinpublic
QME

.@JoinPond is giving away $5,000
to any founder who has a problem.
Yes lol we mean it.
If you are looking for more users,
user feedback,
content promo,
looking to raise,
literally any one-off task,
We will quite literally pay you $50 to let us solve your problems for you :)
Book a call below 🫴
#giveaway #bookacall

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Shiroku is a post-payment intelligence dashboard designed to help small businesses detect unusual patterns early.
It is being built to support PSP integrations, so businesses can monitor payment activity in one place and get flagged when something looks off.
No digging through spreadsheets. No finding out too late. Just clearer visibility into what is happening.
Join the waitlist now: shiroku.app
#startup #buildinpublic
English

Man, what a trip the Japs are:
Leaving shoes behind when committing suicide in Japan is a deeply ingrained cultural practice symbolizing a transition to another realm, respect for the location, and preparation for the afterlife. It acts as a final act of order and personal resolution, often signaling that the individual is leaving the physical world behind.
Key reasons for this practice include:
Cultural Etiquette: In Japan, removing shoes before entering homes or sacred spaces is mandatory to keep them clean. Leaving them at a suicide site, such as a bridge or forest, is a continuation of this ritualized, respectful behavior.
Symbolic Transition: It signifies stepping out of the material world and leaving one's physical, societal, and functional "identity" behind.
Orderly Departure: Leaving shoes, often neatly paired, allows the individual to depart "cleanly" without creating a mess or causing unnecessary disruption to others.
Signal of Intent: The shoes act as a clear sign of the person's final resolve, separating the act from a momentary or accidental incident.
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@priyankapudi I hope we stop ai generation and actually let us make decisions...
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Her name was Leonie, she was a 13-year-old Austrian girl.
While she was out with friends, 3 Afghan immigrants secretly put 11 ecstasy pills in her drink. Stunned and unable to defend herself, she was taken to the house of one of the three.
The ecstasy dose was way too high, the girl started overdosing but the 3 immigrants, completely indifferent to her suffering, began to undress her and took turns raping her, putting their hands around her neck, strangling her. All of it recorded by themselves on a mobile phone video.
That’s how Leonie died, naked, in atrocious suffering, while the beasts raped her. The autopsy would later confirm the cause of death was triple overdose and asphyxiation.
When they were done, they wrapped the body in a carpet and dumped it roadside, under a tree.
The girl’s body was found the next morning by some passers-by, wearing only her underwear and with clear strangulation marks on her neck.
One of the perpetrators fled to the United Kingdom, but was quickly tracked down in a hotel and extradited, the 3 Afghans were sentenced:
- Zubaidullah R. life imprisonment;
- Ali H. 19 years in prison;
- Ibraulhaq A. 20 years in prison.
During the closing arguments, the Public Prosecutor told the court she was “stunned” by what the defendants said throughout the proceedings, stating that “there is not a trace of remorse”.

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