Adishree Basnet

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Adishree Basnet

Adishree Basnet

@AdishreeBasnet

No point in knowing about me. Listen to an enlightened being 🌹

Nepal Katılım Haziran 2019
142 Takip Edilen37 Takipçiler
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Adishree Basnet
Adishree Basnet@AdishreeBasnet·
हेर्दा हेर्दै । A Visual Poem Writer and Narrator - Adishree Creator and Editor - Chuku youtu.be/QoN9zbDxEaU Follow my friend "Chuku" on Youtube He made this video in lockdown with just the clips he took on his trek and fitted them perfectly to make it look absolutely sick.
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Adishree Basnet
Adishree Basnet@AdishreeBasnet·
@trq212 @elwin1116 @steipete Didn’t expect this to happen to us, but our company account was also revoked. We rely on the Claude API for critical production functions, so this has real impact. We’ve requested a review, but in the meantime we’re planning a move to alternatives like Codex which is unfortunate.
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Peter Steinberger 🦞
Peter Steinberger 🦞@steipete·
Yeah folks, it's gonna be harder in the future to ensure OpenClaw still works with Anthropic models.
Peter Steinberger 🦞 tweet media
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Jesse
Jesse@jesse_vermeulen·
honest question: what do people do during the 5-10 min while Claude is running?
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aaronsim
aaronsim@aaronsiim·
We're commitment to invest 100 million in the Nepali market through a phased, long-term capital deployment program. aaronch.com/media/aaronch-…
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Adishree Basnet
Adishree Basnet@AdishreeBasnet·
@YankeeGunner Its the “clear and obvious error” bit, Elliot. It’s vague, subjective, and inconsistently applied. Ironically, the most unclear part of VAR is “clear and obvious.” And that’s what’s ruining it all.
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YankeeGunner
YankeeGunner@YankeeGunner·
I actually think if you get past how silly this is, you see the problem with VAR very clearly. VAR has the capability to correct erroneous decisions, but that’s not really its remit. The current guidelines favor on-pitch decisions to a degree that contrives to rubber stamp errors
Dale Johnson@DaleJohnsonBBC

The Premier League's Key Match Incidents (KMI) Panel has ruled there was no VAR error on Kai Havertz's penalty claim for Arsenal v Everton. However, it unanimously voted that the spot-kick for Michael Keane's foul should have been awarded on-field. 👇 bbc.co.uk/sport/football…

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Filip@Filipo_24·
@Rory_Talks_Ball They need to get rid of this "clear and obvious" no other sport is using ut during video review Fir example NFL or NBA if there is a faul that ref doesn't give and it goes to VAR if it is actual faul it is given as faul no BS about if it is obvious or not.
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Narayan Amrit
Narayan Amrit@amritna·
कसैले नानाथरी तर्क नगरे हुन्छ– २१ फागुनको निर्वाचन थिएन, विद्रोह–२ थियो। पहिलो विद्रोह–२३/२४ भदौको थियो, यो ब्यालेट प्रोसेस चाहिँ त्यही विद्रोहको दोस्रो भाग हो। त्यसैले हाम्रा सन्तानहरुले गरेको २३/२४ भदौको विद्रोहलाई अपमान गर्ने, हियाउने र त्यसका नाममा अनेक षडयन्त्र 'न्यारेट' गरेर पञ्चायकालीन मण्डले चरित्र नदेखाउनुहोला। जसलाई यो विद्रोहले भुँइ देखाइदिएको छ– आफैंले आफैलाई समीक्षा गर्नुहोला र उठेर हिँड्ने/दौडिने राजनीतिक ताकत आर्जन गर्नुहोला। यो विद्रोह निख्खर नेपालीले गरेको विद्रोह हो– विदेशी–सिदेशी भन्दै आकाशतिर फर्केर नथुक्नुहोला। 🙏
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Amjad Masad
Amjad Masad@amasad·
AI is compressing how we build. Roles collapse, roadmaps expire quickly, and you end up rewriting the product every few months. So we thought we’d give people a behind-the-scenes look. 21 Days to Launch, a Replit documentary.
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Josh Kale
Josh Kale@JoshKale·
Everyone’s saying OpenAI got the “same deal” Anthropic was banned for. Read the fine print. They’re not the same: On weapons: Anthropic asked for “no fully autonomous weapons without human oversight” = a human involved in the decision. OpenAI’s deal says “human responsibility for the use of force” = someone accountable, which can happen after the fact. Oversight ≠ Responsibility. One requires a human before the trigger. The other requires a name on the paperwork after. On surveillance: Dario said explicitly: current law hasn’t caught up with AI. The government can already buy your movement data, browsing history, etc without a warrant. AI can assemble that into a complete picture of your life, at scale. That’s mass surveillance without breaking a single law. Anthropic wanted protections beyond current law. OpenAI’s deal says the Pentagon “reflects them in law and policy.” That’s existing law as the safeguard, the exact law Anthropic said is insufficient. Same words. Different agreements. Read them carefully
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Adishree Basnet
Adishree Basnet@AdishreeBasnet·
@apligrg Wouldnt it be easier to overthrow Deuba by other means than planning the gen z protest, killing students secretly, then hypnotizing millions of nepalis to burn down everything, and then hypnotizing thousands of NC members? Now the challenge is bigher with balen and ra swa pa.
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Adishree Basnet
Adishree Basnet@AdishreeBasnet·
@YankeeGunner The sweetest thing about our goal aginst crystal palace was how the fear on their faces as soon as Saka was fouled 45 yards out. SAka used to get fouled everytime he got the ball. Now fucking deal with our freekicks which is even more dangerous.
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YankeeGunner
YankeeGunner@YankeeGunner·
Remember when they’d break our players’ legs & then say “Arsenal don’t like it up ‘em”? Well now we’re the toughest fuckers in the league. We stand up to any physical challenge & dominate the opposition in both boxes. Let them fucking cry about it. Just makes this even sweeter
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Trailokya Raj Aryal
Trailokya Raj Aryal@trailokyararyal·
There’s too much overanalyzing of the Gen Z revolution. Some of us are ignoring the elephant in the room and seeing things that aren’t even there. I still don’t see any foreign connection to the Gen Z revolution. Why can’t we just blame the years of mismanagement, nepotism,+
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Arnaud Bertrand
Arnaud Bertrand@RnaudBertrand·
I've lived in Nepal during a few months, a stunning country that's really dear to my heart. I was notably there during the 2015 earthquake, a time when one of the main leaders of the current "Gen Z" protests (Sudan Gurung, who founded Hami Nepal) lost a child, which was the trigger for his activism. I've seen the corruption. In fact the truth is that formal government structures barely function in much of Nepal - outside major cities, the state is more theoretical than real. It was crystal clear during the earthquake, but also at other times. For instance I've seen, with my own eyes, that when a petty crime occurs, people don't call the police but resort to mob justice by default (and it's not pretty). The people are left to care for themselves almost entirely on their own. Additionally, Nepal has the single most challenging geography in the world which, despite everything you hear about countries having agency, shapes virtually every aspect of national development. Nepal has: 1) the world's most difficult terrain, 2) the world's strongest storms (because all the clouds from the Indian subcontinent come crashing into the Himalayan wall). I've experienced dozens and, believe me, it's scary: village streets are transformed in torrential rivers in a matter of minutes. 3) regular earthquakes (how do you think the Himalayas got created?), 4) is landlocked, 5) is a buffer state between 2 great powers 6) is at India's mercy for virtually all imports and exports (due to the Himalayan barrier with China); which I witnessed firsthand when India brutally decided to impose a blockade after the 2015 earthquake (to express disagreement with a constitutional amendment), making a horrible humanitarian disaster even far worse Good luck with all that... To say that steering such a country towards prosperity would take extraordinary statesmanship is the understatement of the century. I see many people reflexively saying that the current protest movement is a US-backed color revolution (with, having briefly looked into it, no convincing proof that I could identify). I'm not so sure, given the country's crushing constraints. What would even be the point of orchestrating a color revolution in a place with such geography? Protesters' apparent enthusiasm for Balendra Shah (hindustantimes.com/world-news/who…), Kathmandu's mayor, further undermines the color revolution theory. He's a Nepali anti-India patriot with zero background related to the West, who won the mayor race as an independent in 2022 on a platform of fixing drains and fighting corruption. He's not promising to realign Nepal with the West; he's promising functioning traffic lights and demolishing illegal buildings - and he won't even lead the protests, claiming he's beyond the Gen Z age bracket. A color revolution with a chosen leader who doesn't want to lead, and whose "patriotic" views are inconvenient to US foreign policy? Hard to believe. But for the sake of argument, let's say it's true: what would the US gain? Even at the height of colonial land-grabbing, after having won the Anglo-Nepalese War (1814-16), the British - which colonized rocks in the Atlantic just to have them - took a hard pass on colonizing Nepal. Though they were impressed by the Gurkha fighters who, to this day, form regiments in the British Army (which incidentally adds yet another handicap: Nepal's finest fighters are contractually obligated to other nations). Occam's razor means that the more likely truth is that Nepal's dysfunction doesn't require foreign orchestration - its circumstances guarantee it for free. And in any case, the point is largely moot because even a successful color revolution would be a Pyrrhic victory for everyone involved. The US would gain influence over a government that can't govern, in a country in which you can't base meaningful assets, and from which you couldn't project power over China anyhow (there are 8km high mountains in between...). India wouldn't care - they've already proven they can economically strangle any Nepali government that displeases them. China would shrug behind its Himalayan wall. And the Nepali people would wake up the next morning with the same impossible geography, the same dependence on India, the same unforgiving terrain. I don't want to end this post on such a deterministic note, and make it sound like Nepal is condemned to a fate of perpetual misery. The Nepali people I met were among the most resilient, ingenious, and warm-hearted I've encountered anywhere. They've survived everything geography throws at them with remarkable grace. If any population could eventually find a way to make the impossible merely difficult, it would be them. The protests, whatever their origin, show this: that despite the odds, the young generation still believes in a better future for their country. That, in and of itself, is the most important fact about these protests - more important than who organized them or what foreign powers think. And that spirit, if channeled properly, is perhaps the most important asset Nepal has that doesn't depend on geography or geopolitics. Last word: please go visit Nepal. Visit Everest base camp. Visit the birthplace of Buddha. Take a trek in the blooming Rhododendron forests of the Annapurna. Go watch some of the last wild rhinoceros of Asia. Eat some of those delicious momos. Your tourist dollars won't solve Nepal's structural issues, but they'll meaningfully help real people living real lives, and you'll have the trip of a lifetime in the process. Geography might have dealt Nepal a difficult hand for development, but it also created one of the world's most extraordinary places and people.
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Adishree Basnet
Adishree Basnet@AdishreeBasnet·
@pr8ik Tetro paisa bhako manche le jabo 73 ropani ni kinne ho ta. 1000 ropani kinnu parne
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'@afckush·
This is actually insane omds, he gets away with everything
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YankeeGunner
YankeeGunner@YankeeGunner·
Michael oliver is gonna buy a private island when he retires and no one will be surprised.
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