Alex Klarfeld

565 posts

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Alex Klarfeld

Alex Klarfeld

@AlexKlarfeld

https://t.co/YWxJDRptrL

San Francisco, CA Katılım Aralık 2010
1.1K Takip Edilen528 Takipçiler
Paul Klein IV
Paul Klein IV@pk_iv·
Live from the $100,000 @MonacoGTM poker tournament - ace on the river KEEPS ME ALIVE!
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Alex Klarfeld
Alex Klarfeld@AlexKlarfeld·
this is cool and all, but didn't Ross Ulbricht do this like 15 years ago (allegedly) @RealRossU
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Alex Klarfeld
Alex Klarfeld@AlexKlarfeld·
Browser automation as an agent tool sucks at high volume or high value tasks. We know this, and our customers know this. First batch of hoodies is for existing customers, but DM if you want in on the second batch.
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Alex Klarfeld
Alex Klarfeld@AlexKlarfeld·
Legacy software was built for humans, not agents. We're fixing that. supergood.ai
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Andy McCune
Andy McCune@9th·
Today, Cosmos is reborn. Your space to dream. (feat. Odessa A’zion)
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Alex Klarfeld
Alex Klarfeld@AlexKlarfeld·
Deploying our new site and @vercel hit me with a Clippy jump scare. Genuinely thought Claude Code somehow accidentally injected Clippy. You got me.
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Laurynas Keturakis
Laurynas Keturakis@_laurynas·
@mattzcarey every email can be a new thread conversation branching built-in email can render html = custom ui built-in if your agent swarm harness doesn't make you feel like a multinational corp ceo what's the point even
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Matt Carey
Matt Carey@mattzcarey·
where does everyone put their clankers? I’m doing discord but I wanna render code MCP UI style Slack has some UI but I don’t want to pay for it personally ChatGPT and Claude don’t really work cause the clanker lives on my raspberry pi
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Alex Klarfeld retweetledi
Patrick OShaughnessy
Patrick OShaughnessy@patrick_oshag·
.@williamhockey is one of the least visible founders in tech relative to what he has created. He co-founded Plaid and is now building Column, a software company that owns a bank, and powers Ramp, Wise, Bilt, Mercury, and others. He funded it himself by borrowing against nearly everything he had in Plaid shares, and has never raised any outside capital. His story matters because so much of the value in our industry gets created through exactly this kind of extreme personal risk. He is maniacal about being the best in the world at his thing, and has spent his entire career betting on himself and doing whatever it takes to win. He also spends a lot of time outside the US (in places like Kinshasa) which has given him a rare perch on the power of the US dollar. We discuss: - Why emerging markets are often the most financially innovative - What owning 100% of his company allows him to do that VC-backed founders cannot - Getting margin called and nearly going bankrupt - Why the best founders are specialists - What it takes to be the best in the world at your thing - How Silicon Valley's consensus culture produces consensus founders - How the US dollar functions as an instrument of national security Enjoy! Timestamps: 0:00 Intro 9:19 Emerging Markets 14:03 Silicon Valley's Elite Consensus Problem 16:03 Rejecting the VC Hamster Wheel 21:45 Equity and Liquidity 26:03 Funding a Bank 29:45 The Necessity of Extreme Founder Risk 37:18 Finding Leverage 45:20 Longevity and Profitability in Banking 48:46 Matching Your Capital Structure to Your Business 51:44 The Unseen Power of the US Dollar 1:02:30 How AI Will Transform Legacy Banks 1:09:23 The Kindest Thing
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Rustam X. Lalkaka
Rustam X. Lalkaka@lalkaka·
thought about talking about my recent chiamaxxing/fibermaxxing kick but don’t want to make my shitposting too regular
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Matt Slotnick
Matt Slotnick@matt_slotnick·
does anyone have a cafe with outdoor seating they like working from in sf
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