Nils Zeilon

847 posts

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Nils Zeilon

Nils Zeilon

@nilszeilon

Programmer, tinkerer

가입일 Ağustos 2013
375 팔로잉235 팔로워
Carlos Castellanos
Carlos Castellanos@karloscodes·
Kamal, kamal-proxy, active-storage, action-mailbox, flexxy This is the best tech stack for solos
Carlos Castellanos@karloscodes

I'm back again doing @rails didn't know how much I missed you old friend! This time I tried to go vanilla rails, fixtures, minitest. ~400 assertions run in 3 seconds, no optimization, out of the box. What kind of wizardry is this, @dhh? Feels good to be back 🫶

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Denis Loginoff ⚡️
Denis Loginoff ⚡️@DenLoginoff·
Is there any modern high-performing cross-platform Desktop app framework that doesn't rely on 100s of third-party dependencies? 🤔 Something that can't be easily compromised through supply chain attacks.. Works on macOS, Windows, Linux (Wayland+NVidia)?
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Matt Pocock
Matt Pocock@mattpocockuk·
I'm starting to think that DDD might be the answer to all of my problems - Model not doing what you want? Shared language - Can't navigate a massive codebase? Bounded contexts with global mapping - Don't know why a decision was made? ADR's It's just so freaking elegant
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Evadne W.
Evadne W.@evadne·
Recursive Language Models with Elixir. Of course. The solution was in front of us all this time.
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Nils Zeilon
Nils Zeilon@nilszeilon·
@neural_avb Depends on how you have your logs, if you selfhost something on the same server as hermes it should be super easy, just tell it your setup :)
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AVB
AVB@neural_avb·
@nilszeilon Interesting. How easy is that to set up?
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AVB
AVB@neural_avb·
Lots of good hype about Hermes Agent! I wanna try out of curiousity (never tried Openclaw either). But can't think of a specific use-case apriori. My work: youtube, articles, & bunch of dev work. I do use Codex/Claude Code quite a bit. What are yall using these things for?
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kache
kache@yacineMTB·
if you're unemployed - just tell people you're retired
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Nassim Nicholas Taleb
Nassim Nicholas Taleb@nntaleb·
Liars. They were civilians, children, old women, young women, people attending a funeral, people having lunch. It was a killing rampage by bloodthirsty lunatics. Liars.
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Peter Askew
Peter Askew@searchbound·
@nilszeilon in this case, godaddy (the registrar) owns & operates the auctionhouse, so they’re auctioning their own inventory that wasn’t renewed by the original owner.
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Peter Askew
Peter Askew@searchbound·
interesting domain auction underway - valuable 3-letter .com, simply valuable because of scarcity. but also interesting, is that someone decided to walk away from this asset (or failed to have succession plan), rather than spend $10 to renew. Now auctionhouse will pocket $30k+
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Nils Zeilon
Nils Zeilon@nilszeilon·
@levelsio This video just left me confused, in his argument for why it will never work he mentions a case where it works? (The ICC)
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@levelsio
@levelsio@levelsio·
There is this new trend of "experts" on YouTube who's schtick is to get lots of views by going against whatever progress and new ideas are being developed In this case AI data centers in space The other guy who's constantly joking about how everyone doing AI in Silicon Valley is retarded is the same It's usually the people with no credentials or achievements of themselves too I don't know how to call this maybe CopeTubers because it's all cope content
David Bombal@davidbombal

Why space servers FAIL Execs want to put data centers in space, but there's a massive physics problem: vacuums have no convection cooling. Discover why cooling servers in space relies purely on infrared radiation! Big thanks to @ThreatLocker for sponsoring my trip to ZTW26 and also for sponsoring this video. To start your free trial with ThreatLocker please use the following link: threatlocker.com/davidbombal

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Daniel Vassallo
Daniel Vassallo@dvassallo·
Since everyone is seeing who Garry Tan is today, let me remind you: WHY YOU SHOULD NOT JOIN Y COMBINATOR YC seems like a reasonable proposition. They give you some money to help start your business and promise you access to a community of people who can help you along the way. In exchange, they don't ask for much. The standard YC deal is $500K for 7% equity. That doesn't sound too bad, right? By the end of this post I will convince you that it's actually a terrible idea. ERGODICITY First, you have to understand a very important concept: in some systems, what's best for a group is not necessarily what's best for the individuals who make up that group. The total wealth of a group of people could be increasing while almost everyone in that group sees their wealth diminish. When this happens, we say we have a non-ergodic system. If the system were ergodic, what's happening to the collective would also translate to each individual. Silicon Valley is a non-ergodic industry (like Hollywood, book publishing, the music industry, and even your country's economy unless you're under full-blown communism). A non-ergodic system is not necessarily bad, but if you're not cognizant of the system you're in, you're going to get played like a fiddle. Those who benefit from the collective will take advantage of you while you, the individual, lose out. This is what YC will try to do to you. In fact, this is what YC has to do, otherwise it won't survive. Let me explain. LOOKING FOR TREASURE Imagine you're told there's a bunch of hidden treasure within a 100 acre area. What's the best strategy for finding some of it? One way is to pick a spot and dedicate your entire life digging as far down as possible in that one spot. You might reason that the deeper the treasure, the bigger the loot. You don't want to settle for a measly small treasure box. You want the full chest of diamonds buried near the earth's crust. This is your shot at glory. Another way is to use a search method employed by search and rescue teams. You divide the area into small squares and do a "reasonable search" in each one. You use probabilities and some common sense to guide how deep to dig, and then you move to the next square. If you encounter undisturbed compacted dirt, chances are there's no treasure beneath. If you run into bedrock, it's almost certain there's nothing below. So you use that information and move on. Your goal is to search the entire probable area as quickly as possible. Ideally within your lifetime. I'm sure you agree the first way is a dumb strategy. Almost every digger employing it will die treasure-less. But actually, it's only dumb for the individual treasure hunter. For a gold mining company, this is the optimal strategy. The company only needs one miner to hit the jackpot, and all the other miners can die penniless. If the cost of sacrificing an individual treasure hunter is low, the most optimal strategy is to recruit tens of thousands of them, allocate hundreds per acre, and make them dig all the way down to the earth's core. The treasure hunting economy would grow much bigger than if all the individual treasure hunters were optimizing for their own self-interest. Digging in one spot is a dumb strategy for the individual, but a very wise strategy for the collective. This is what happens in a non-ergodic system. We often hear politicians claim that the GDP of the country is growing, but all the gains are going to the 1%. This is the same thing. The wealth of a country could be growing while almost all its citizens get poorer. There's nothing inconsistent about this. The average is simply being dragged up by the freak outliers. The same thing happens in venture capital. The owners of the portfolio maximize their returns when the system is non-ergodic, because while the individual treasure hunter has one lifetime to strike gold, the VC portfolio has access to thousands of lifetimes: those of all the treasure hunters. PLANE CRASH YC will proudly tell you that you are more likely to end up with a billion-dollar business if you join them. That may be true. What they're more reluctant to tell you is that only about 50 companies met that bar out of the 4,000 or so that went through their program. That's 1.25%. To be fair, that's actually quite impressive. But let's say you have the stamina and willpower to go through YC three times in your lifetime. You'd still need approximately 26 lifetimes to hit the jackpot. See the problem? I don't know about you, but I want to be successful in this lifetime. I can't afford to rely on 26 lifetimes. But maybe you think you're special. You're not like those 3,950 dummies who failed. Maybe you are in fact special, but I wouldn't rely too much on that. Business is much more random than it seems. If business were predictable, YC wouldn't have a measly 1.25% success rate. You might think that those who failed still got something out of it. Maybe. But failure is a very expensive way to learn. You don't need to crash a plane to learn how to fly one. And whatever lessons come from going through YC are probably not very useful anyway, but more on that later. PIVOTS DON'T EXIST One of the bad lessons you get from YC is that there's a formula for success, and it looks like this: First you brainstorm. Then you come up with a good idea that can scale to a billion dollars (otherwise what's the point of getting out of bed in the morning?) Then you work hard until you find "product-market fit." And then if the signals from investors indicate you won't be getting a next round of funding, you start looking for a "pivot." This so-called formula is nonsense. Good ideas rarely come from a brainstorming session. They come from wandering about with an open mind until you stumble on an opportunity worth pursuing. Most of your ideas will be bad ideas, because unfortunately you're not a visionary genius. So the best way to find good ideas is to have many ideas, try them out, take what works, and throw away the rest. But this is not what YC wants you to do. YC wants you to pick an idea that has market pull (or the potential for it) and then dig a hole in the same spot until you reach the boiling magma. Because what if you stop digging just before you strike gold? When you're cheap and expendable, that's not an optimal strategy for the YC fund. You must go all in. Diversification is for your YC overlords, not for you. If you reach the magma layer and still have nothing, then you'd be encouraged to pivot. But that's not how you find business opportunities in the real world. You can't just say "I'm going to pivot" and suddenly a good opportunity lands on your lap from heaven. You get good ideas by embracing randomness for a long time, until something looks like it has a fighting chance of paying off. The pivot idea you were forced to come up with is extremely unlikely to be one. Your imagination is overrated. The YC execs didn't imagine Stripe or Dropbox or Airbnb. Random things came to them during demo days. The YC folks are smart because they know their imagination is limited. You should too. You can't just pivot a business idea. And if you're going to cherry-pick some pivot that worked out of the thousands attempted, you should stop reading now. Just go join YC. The second bad lesson from YC is the focus on the upside. If there's any formula for success in business, it's to focus relentlessly on staying in the game rather than hitting it big. Focus on the downside, and let the upside take care of itself. To thrive, you must first survive. To win the race, you must finish the race. But this is in tension with what YC wants you to do. They want you to dig deep to the middle of the earth, and if you don't come back alive, tough luck. You were a brave soldier, but now it's time for them to focus on the other 999 soldiers. YC is still alive, but you're not. Don't be a dummy. Don't be a bet in somebody else's portfolio. BUT YOU JUST WANT TO SELL YOUR COURSE!!! Aha, you caught me! It's true. I do sell something. I run a community for aspiring small-time entrepreneurs who are satisfied with reliably attainable mediocre success. The YC folks feel sorry for our joy with mediocrity while they're out there changing the world. And we reciprocate the emotion. So yes, I am promoting something that goes against everything YC stands for. But if you think YC is not also selling you something, I have a bridge to sell you. Maybe I'm being a bit too harsh though. Because what is it that YC is selling you exactly? Me, I charge you a one-time payment of $450 and you get access to my community, which includes live workshops, recorded classes, a group chat, and a few other things. It's very clear what I'm doing. I ask for money in exchange for access, and those who pay get access. Even my 9 year old understands it. But YC is not asking you for money. They actually give you money! It looks like you're the one selling to them. You're technically selling them a piece of your business, no? No, no, no. Hold on. The easiest way to see what YC is selling is to look at military recruitment. The military sells the narrative that serving your country is a noble endeavor. You'll get a shot at glory, and at the very least you'll gain some important life skills. You'll also get paid enough to feed yourself and cover your basic needs, but barely. The military wants to recruit expendable soldiers who will go out to the battlefield risking life and limb for the collective, while the generals with all the medals sit in an air-conditioned room giving orders. YC is no different. It wants to recruit wide-eyed young founders to pick a spot on the treasure map and dig all the way down through the earth's crust. Most of them will spend years or decades digging, and all they end up with is a ramen lifestyle. Usually bunched up with 4 roommates in a damp San Francisco basement living on takeout ramen noodles every single day. But hey, they're young. They'll have time to do adult things later, like starting a family or making decent money. And at the very least, they'll gain some important life lessons and make some good connections. Think about this for a second: the most successful business owners are typically in their 40s and 50s. Why is YC full of 20-somethings? Why aren't the 40 year old entrepreneurs taking up this incredible deal? YC will tell you it's because only the 22 year old kids can be true visionaries. BULL. SHIT. You're not a visionary. All those 4,000 kids who went into YC also thought they were visionaries, and where are they now? They're all in the startup cemetery, except for a dozen or so who despite the low odds managed to flip 26 heads in a row. The biggest indicator that YC is a bad deal is that only people who are easily duped take it. UNLEARNING IS HARD The best thing I learned about business is to avoid trying to predict what will work and what won't. YC knows this. That's why they only make small bets across thousands of businesses. But YC will try to teach you the exact opposite. Business is a lot more random than it seems. You can't treat it like a predictable project. You need to treat it like a financial investment. Instead of investing your money, you're investing your time, which is as scarce and as precious as money (if not more). Tell me, how do you invest your money? Do you pick one amazing stock, say NVDA, and put all your life savings into it? Of course not. You understand that finance is uncertain. What's good today might not be good tomorrow. There are hidden risks everywhere. And even if your stock pick doesn't go bust, the biggest gains are likely to happen elsewhere and you won't benefit from them if you're only exposed to one piece of equity. If you went all in on AAPL in 2022, you would have missed out on NVDA. Same thing in business. YC teaches you to try to be a visionary. When you fail... oopsie! Tough luck. The fund benefits from the non-ergodic nature of the system, but you're out years of your time. And that's not even the worst of it. You will have been taught things that not only won't work in the real world of business, but are actively counterproductive. You will have to unlearn almost everything. If you want to succeed in the real world (and within this lifetime), you need to try many small things, experiment, tinker, and build a portfolio of multiple income streams. You need to treat your time the same way you treat your brokerage account. You basically need to become a VC, but for your own ideas. To make the system ergodic, you must unleverage yourself from going all in on one thing and get access to many diverse income streams. The same way it's wise to invest in a broad ETF, you should be doing the same with your projects. YC will teach you the opposite, and you'll have to unlearn all of it. Unfortunately, unlearning is much harder than learning.
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AVB
AVB@neural_avb·
Paper Breakdown has reached 1K users I repeat, Paper Breakdown has reached 1K users!!! 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
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AVB@neural_avb

Paper Breakdown will organically reach 1000 users this week 🥹🚀 No AI UGC. No Ad spent. No big viral moment on X. I haven't even reached out to my awesome network via DMs to help me promote this. When PBD started I had 3k followers, my reach was dead. This is a personal win for me. I am obsessively focused on retention and UX. I have like 5 jobs, and I take everything seriously. I am an old school stupid brain, and my marketing strategies will turn many new-school people away. I will still mention them incase it helps someone: - I write 3-4 paper reviews a week. On X, and sometimes on TDS. The content I write won't be possible to ship at this speed, volume and quality without Paper Breakdown. At the end of each article I give a link - that's it. It's non intrusive, but avid users will usually click. These articles and posts do well, they've helped me get monetized on X. - Every youtube video I make, I shout out the product. 30 second showcase in a 30 minute video. I am not accepting sponsors currently. For a educational channel like mine, there is no better platform I would rather shout-out than a website that literally makes it easier to understand complex research papers. My viewers know I am a no BS person coz they have seen my journey since I had 100 subscribers (now I am close to 30k). - I make one openly promotional post on X every day. They get 20-25 likes, maybe 1k-2k views. If it encourages even two new people to sign up that's good. I'll take that. - I obsess over retaining existing users. I respond to every bug report, I respond to every DM about PBD. Bugs get squashed in 10 minutes. Feature requests are taken seriously. I hand out promotional code to anyone who email me they don't have money/wanna try out pro-tier. Emails are powerful. - Since I am funding PBD out my own pocket, my motivation is to convert free users to paid users, more than increase the number of free users drastically. PBD will always have a free tier, despite that being objectively a bad idea for solo-funded SaaS. - My paid tier churn rate is <10%. Avg session duration is 20+ minutes -> these are two stats are what I am proud of the most. - The obsession is with retention and giving all my users the best paper-reading experience possible. I obsess over the happiness of my paid users especially, and the features we have for paid tier is UNIQUE and no other website has them (ex multi-paper citation chat). I celebrate every sign-up, I mourn every cancellation. Disclaimer: By no means am I doing something insane here, but small wins are still wins and I will take it as a solo dev. This is my first SaaS and I can enumerate 10 things that I could've done differently. Thankfully this won't be my last SaaS so I will be applying my newfound knowledge to good use in upcoming projects. I am doing the highest quality "founder-led" content. Content is hard, but PBD an easy subscription for anybody who wants to read papers, and write good technical content. I am a daily user, and I actually embody both archetypes (i.e. the learner and the content-writer). The amount of projects I work on and articles I get to ship regularly because of PBD is out there in public for everybody to verify.

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Paul Graham
Paul Graham@paulg·
I now get so many AI-generated replies that it's just too much work to report them for spam and block them, so I'm downshifting to muting.
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Nils Zeilon
Nils Zeilon@nilszeilon·
@seloesque I’m waving mine in my girlfriends face whenever she lights more than 4 candles. Pro tip to just connect it to your computer and let claude figure out the api for automations
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SELO
SELO@seloesque·
life changing purchase
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Nils Zeilon
Nils Zeilon@nilszeilon·
Tried out conductor.build today, really liked the interface. Their work on diffs is actually so nice, showing the diff since the last pass of the agent instead of the whole git diff is a step in the right direction when working with agents I think
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