Brini 리트윗함
Brini
106 posts

Brini
@Sablinchik_
german girl in brussels ✨ building Sentia: exploring communication and making digital conversations easier
가입일 Şubat 2026
32 팔로잉17 팔로워

@tinytechfox Right now my main target are couples but the vision is for anyone who’s ever wished communication felt a little clearer 🤍
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Haiii builders! 👋✨
I need more of you in my feed, especially now that Communities are gone 😭
Looking to connect with anyone who’s currently building, launching, learning, or even just thinking about starting a project 🔨🧠
Drop what you’re working on + your current favorite song in the comments 🎶
I follow back 🤝💫
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@hellojaibu I’m building an app that helps people better understand the meaning, emotions, and intentions behind digital conversations ✨
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@nezbuilds I’m building an app that helps people better understand the meaning, emotions, and intentions behind digital conversations ✨
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@Robyn_Social I’m building an app that helps people better understand the meaning, emotions, and intentions behind digital conversations ✨ let’s connect
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-- if you’re building in public or working on creative projects, let’s connect
-> drop what you’re making and I’ll check it out
-- interested in:
SaaS,
indie hacking,
AI tools,
web apps,
design,
content,
side projects
-> say hi if you’re active
-- always better to learn from people actually shipping things
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@OhazBuilds I’m building an app that helps people better understand the meaning, emotions, and intentions behind digital conversations ✨ let’s connect
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@1Umairshaikh I’m building an app that helps people better understand the meaning, emotions, and intentions behind digital conversations ✨
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@_JohnBuilds_ Yesss, being away from the daily routine gives your mind the space to slow down and be open to new ideas:)
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@Sablinchik_ love that feeling of a vacation idea turning into something real
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@sherifgjini I’m building an app that helps people better understand the meaning, emotions, and intentions behind digital conversations :) lets connect
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@matt__makes Sentia is an app I’m building to help people better understand digital conversations. You can share a chat or screenshot, and Sentia helps uncover possible emotions, intentions, and misunderstandings behind the message:)
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Brini 리트윗함
Brini 리트윗함
Brini 리트윗함
Brini 리트윗함

after spending months working on my app everyday, today I am literally… chilling in public
first holiday week I give to myself since I launched my SaaS
no work planned besides urgent issues for my paying customers and answering some emails
I wish I could completely disconnect but that’s the reality of being a solo founder: there’s no one else to take over support when you want to take a break!
looking forward to come back energized and full of new ideas :)

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Brini 리트윗함

The smartest people I know are often the worst at turning their intelligence into income.
I think I finally understand why.
The political scientist James C. Scott had a useful word for it: legibility.
Scott studied why states succeed and fail. His argument was that governments can only manage what they can read at a glance. A traditional village with no maps, no surnames, no standardized weights is invisible to the state. So the state forces it into legible form before it can tax it, conscript it, or improve it.
Markets work the same way.
A market can only reward what it can read at a glance.
Smart people produce illegible work. The idea has six layers, four caveats, and a critique of the obvious approach. To them, every layer is essential. To the market, it is noise.
The buyer is not stupid. The buyer is busy.
A genuinely useful product wrapped in fifteen frameworks loses to a slightly worse product wrapped in one sentence. Every time.
Smart people resist this on principle. They feel that simplifying their work is a form of lying. They would rather be precisely understood by three peers than imprecisely understood by ten thousand strangers.
That choice is rational inside the closed circuit of smart people respecting each other. It pays in identity.
Outside that circuit, in the open market, it pays in nothing.
The richest people I know are not the smartest. They are the ones who decided early that being legible to a stranger was more valuable than being respected by a peer.
That trade looks small in any single decision.
Over twenty years it is the entire game.
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