Nakshatra Saxena

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Nakshatra Saxena

Nakshatra Saxena

@nedwize

Product Engineer

Indiranagar, Bengaluru, India 参加日 Haziran 2014
1.2K フォロー中1.9K フォロワー
Arshita Dhiman
Arshita Dhiman@arshitadhiman·
I started practicing gratitude around third year of my college. I was completely lost, depressed, surrounded by toxic people and unsure of what to do. I even started praying as an atheist and somehow… things shifted. Better people, better energy and even career-wise things started working out. Gratitude and prayer didn’t just help me survive that terrible phase, they actually changed my life. The negativity faded and I found more positive, uplifting people (yes, that includes the amazing people I found here) Highly recommend practicing gratitude. I feel more optimistic, energized and glowing noww 😃✨ PS: grateful for cats and the amazing people I met on twitter 😆
The Curious Tales@thecurioustales

🚨BREAKING: 8 weeks of gratitude practice physically rebuilds the neural pathways between your memory and reward centers. Your brain physically rewires itself every time you feel grateful. Eight weeks of intentional gratitude practice creates measurable structural changes in the neural pathways connecting your hippocampus to your ventral tegmental area. The memory center starts talking to the reward center in a fundamentally different way. New synaptic connections form. Existing ones strengthen. The physical architecture of how you process positive experiences rebuilds itself. Most people approach gratitude like a mood they can choose to feel. A psychological vitamin they remember to take when life gets difficult. The neuroscience reveals something far more profound. Gratitude is a biological intervention that sculpts brain tissue. Researchers tracked participants practicing gratitude exercises for two months using brain scans. They watched new neural highways construct themselves in real time. The anterior cingulate cortex developed stronger connections to the medial prefrontal cortex. The brain learned to route positive emotional experiences through higher order thinking centers instead of storing them as fleeting feelings. Every positive experience you’ve ever had exists as a neural trace in your memory network. Most sit dormant, accessible only when something external triggers the specific sensory combination that originally encoded them. You smell coffee, suddenly remember a conversation from years ago. Random. Unreliable. Outside your control. Gratitude practice systematically rewires that retrieval system. After two months, participants could voluntarily access positive memories with increasing ease. Their brains had built stronger pathways between memory storage areas and emotional processing centers. They experienced deeper emotional resonance during memory retrieval. The quality of remembering itself had improved. The participants also started noticing positive details in their present environment they had previously filtered out. Their attention systems recalibrated. The same neural pathways pulling positive memories forward were scanning current experiences more thoroughly for elements worth encoding as positive memories. Their brains became biased toward collecting evidence that life contains meaningful moments. Most cognitive interventions try to change how you interpret negative experiences. Gratitude practice changes how thoroughly you notice positive ones. It teaches your visual and emotional processing systems to detect opportunities and pleasures that were always present but neurologically invisible. The timeline reveals something crucial about neural plasticity. Weeks one through three showed minimal structural changes. Participants felt slightly more positive, but brain scans looked identical to baseline. Weeks four through six showed the first measurable increases in gray matter density. Weeks seven and eight revealed entirely new neural network formation. Two months. Your nervous system can physically restructure itself with consistent practice. The method was almost embarrassingly simple. Participants wrote down three specific things they felt grateful for every evening, explaining why each mattered. No meditation apps. No guided visualizations. Just pen, paper, and the requirement to identify gratitude targets with enough detail that their brains had to actively search for positive elements. Specificity drives the neural development. General statements like “I’m grateful for my family” generate different brain activity than precise observations like “I’m grateful my daughter laughed at my terrible joke during dinner because it showed me she still finds me funny despite growing more independent.” The brain needs detailed targets to practice connecting memory specifics to emotional rewards. After eight weeks, participants developed a fundamentally different relationship with their attention and memory systems. Someone whose brain automatically scans for and emotionally amplifies aspects of experience that make existence feel worthwhile. The neural pathways remain permanent after practice ends. Gratitude carves lasting roads through consciousness.

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Apoorv ( in SF )
Apoorv ( in SF )@apoorv_taneja·
switched to codex from claude code and it is a life changing experience. claude code has been throwing api errors and overloading 99% of the time. using gpt-5.4-high for building interfaces, pr reviews, and posthog data analysis is pure beast mode under the hood. i am just loving it
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Jordi Hays
Jordi Hays@jordihays·
TBPN has been acquired by OpenAI The world is changing quickly but TBPN will stay the same. Live every weekday just with a lot more resources. Thank you to everyone that has been a part of this journey big or small. We are 17 months in and unironically just getting started.
Jordi Hays tweet media
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Jitesh Luthra
Jitesh Luthra@jiteshluthra·
Is it just me or has @WisprFlow really degraded over the last few weeks? I feel like i have been moved to a lower model or something.
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Nakshatra Saxena
Nakshatra Saxena@nedwize·
So did anyone solve the cache bugs or not?
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Shantanu Goel
Shantanu Goel@shantanugoel·
claude code ain't gonna make it. Just 500k lines of code. These are rookie numbers. Purveyors of gstack do that in a week!
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Claude
Claude@claudeai·
Computer use is now in Claude Code. Claude can open your apps, click through your UI, and test what it built, right from the CLI. Now in research preview on Pro and Max plans.
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Claude
Claude@claudeai·
Your work tools in Claude are now available on mobile. Explore Figma designs, create Canva slides, check Amplitude dashboards, all from your phone. Give it a try: claude.com/download
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Naina
Naina@Naina_2728·
i’ve joined @emergentlabs as a product designer. it's been a month and i’ve gotten to work on crazy features with colossally talented people. i keep telling this to all my friends, at the pace we ship, it’s no surprise this is one of the fastest-growing startups. 🚀 funny thing is, last year, @nitprashant reached out to me for a growth role at emergent and though I really liked the idea, i kinda just wanted to continue doing design.😛 fast forward to jan this year, i randomly reached out to @mukundjha, he connected me with the team, I also gave my first in-person interview (here’s a picture, you can see the nervousness on my face :P ) and somehow everything just fell into place.
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Barry McCardel
Barry McCardel@barrald·
there's something truly sublime about cluely being scammed on their SOC 2
Ryan@ohryansbelt

Delve, a YC-backed compliance startup that raised $32 million, has been accused of systematically faking SOC 2, ISO 27001, HIPAA, and GDPR compliance reports for hundreds of clients. According to a detailed Substack investigation by DeepDelver, a leaked Google spreadsheet containing links to hundreds of confidential draft audit reports revealed that Delve generates auditor conclusions before any auditor reviews evidence, uses the same template across 99.8% of reports, and relies on Indian certification mills operating through empty US shells instead of the "US-based CPA firms" they advertise. Here's the breakdown: > 493 out of 494 leaked SOC 2 reports allegedly contain identical boilerplate text, including the same grammatical errors and nonsensical sentences, with only a company name, logo, org chart, and signature swapped in > Auditor conclusions and test procedures are reportedly pre-written in draft reports before clients even provide their company description, which would violate AICPA independence rules requiring auditors to independently design tests and form conclusions > All 259 Type II reports claim zero security incidents, zero personnel changes, zero customer terminations, and zero cyber incidents during the observation period, with identical "unable to test" conclusions across every client > Delve's "US-based auditors" are actually Accorp and Gradient, described as Indian certification mills operating through US shell entities. 99%+ of clients reportedly went through one of these two firms over the past 6 months > The platform allegedly publishes fully populated trust pages claiming vulnerability scanning, pentesting, and data recovery simulations before any compliance work has been done > Delve pre-fabricates board meeting minutes, risk assessments, security incident simulations, and employee evidence that clients can adopt with a single click, according to the author > Most "integrations" are just containers for manual screenshots with no actual API connections. The author describes the platform as a "SOC 2 template pack with a thin SaaS wrapper" > When the leak was exposed, CEO Karun Kaushik emailed clients calling the allegations "falsified claims" from an "AI-generated email" and stated no sensitive data was accessed, while the reports themselves contained private signatures and confidential architecture diagrams > Companies relying on these reports could face criminal liability under HIPAA and fines up to 4% of global revenue under GDPR for compliance violations they believed were resolved > When clients threaten to leave, Delve reportedly pairs them with an external vCISO for manual off-platform work, which the author argues proves their own platform can't deliver real compliance > Delve's sales price dropped from $15,000 to $6,000 with ISO 27001 and a penetration test thrown in when a client mentioned considering a competitor

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Jay Kadam
Jay Kadam@j4ykadam·
apparently, according to the marathi calendar it is my birthday today
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asif
asif@theonlysif·
….
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svs 🇮🇳
svs 🇮🇳@_svs_·
Ferrari will be constructors and might even have a drivers championship this year.
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