Aman Gupta

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Aman Gupta

Aman Gupta

@AmanGxpta

@Chainlink Convergence Winner | 4x Bounty Winner @EthGlobal | Winner at @Apple SSC'24| Building in the space of iOS, web3 and AI

Let's create your MVP👉🏻 Katılım Aralık 2020
466 Takip Edilen456 Takipçiler
Aman Gupta retweetledi
Aman Gupta
Aman Gupta@AmanGxpta·
Idk how many of you noticed. but I'm liking the changes google did to their @gmail logo... the vibe seems joyful
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Vivek
Vivek@itsreallyvivek·
> be me > realize the syllabus won’t build the life i want > start exploring, experimenting, and breaking things online > bug hunt my way into a starbucks cybersecurity internship > make a few thousand in bounties > get selected for summer of bitcoin, then leave it > get selected for yc startup school sf > get selected for the anthropic ai safety fellowship in london > help detect stomach cancer 7% earlier at mayo clinic > realize curiosity compounds harder than credentials
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Aman Gupta
Aman Gupta@AmanGxpta·
@benln looks like coachella lineup except its tech :)
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Ben Lang
Ben Lang@benln·
Hands down, the best AI series right now CS 153 at Stanford, published on YouTube Speakers include Sam Altman, Jensen Huang, Satya Nadella, Andrej Karpathy, Ben Horowitz
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Aman Gupta
Aman Gupta@AmanGxpta·
Using this is legit one of the best tricks for building a production grade codebase. I used it across multiple projects and it made them 100x better in terms of security and scalability by tightening out my api routes and removing all the dead code inside. In my opinion, Claude code would build the functionality of the POC and you would see the end result working just fine, for demo purposes. but that code is far from being deployed for mass usage. and there this plugin comes and saves the day try it! if you haven't
eric zakariasson@ericzakariasson

the most used skill internally at cursor right now /thermo-nuclear-code-quality-review - deletes complexity instead of moving it - blocks files over 1k lines - flags thin wrappers and leaked logic - rejects PRs that work but make code messier

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Isha
Isha@slowdownisha·
read this blog on Cursor's office. it was suggested to me by someone. it makes you miss the place you have never been to. the best part is that everybody there exudes competence (not performatively, just naturally). just high agency and trust if you are having a bad day, i would suggest this read :) colossus.com/article/inside…
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Aman Gupta
Aman Gupta@AmanGxpta·
@Devsthetix Imean that’s what literally US ppl think everyday for their 20 dollar plan
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D🪿
D🪿@Devsthetix·
Bro claude is so cheap 😭
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Aman Gupta
Aman Gupta@AmanGxpta·
@evisdrenova what a ragebait! Every good Dev ik of right now uses cursor almost everyday
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Evis Drenova
Evis Drenova@evisdrenova·
The cursor fall-off is going to be studied for decades. I don't know any engineer who uses them anymore. Not to say that others don't, but it's obvious that they're no longer on the tech frontier. Still, a $60b outcome in 4 years is nothing to sneeze at...
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Ben Lang
Ben Lang@benln·
Cursor hackathons in the next few weeks: • Seoul - 5/19 • Calgary - 5/23 • Melbourne - 5/24 • Accra - 5/30 • Madrid - 6/2 • Miami - 6/4 • San Francisco - 6/11 • Toronto - 6/18
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Aman Gupta
Aman Gupta@AmanGxpta·
@swyx That would be so awesome 🤩
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Mo
Mo@atmoio·
The Unethical Guide to Surviving AI Layoffs
Brian Armstrong@brian_armstrong

This is an email I sent earlier today to all employees at Coinbase: Team, Today I’ve made the difficult decision to reduce the size of Coinbase by ~14%. I want to walk you through why we're doing this now, what it means for those affected, and how this positions us for the future. Why now Two forces are converging at the same time. We need to be front footed to respond to both. First, the market. Coinbase is well-capitalized, has diversified revenue streams, and is well-positioned to weather any storm. Crypto is also on the verge of the next wave of adoption, with stablecoins, prediction markets, tokenization, and more taking off. However, our business is still volatile from quarter to quarter. While we've managed through that cyclicality many times before and come out stronger on the other side, we’re currently in a down market and need to adjust our cost structure now so that we emerge from this period leaner, faster, and more efficient for our next phase of growth. Second, AI is changing how we work. Over the past year, I’ve watched engineers use AI to ship in days what used to take a team weeks. Non-technical teams are now shipping production code and many of our workflows are being automated. The pace of what's possible with a small, focused team has changed dramatically, and it's accelerating every day. All of this has led us to an inflection point, not just for Coinbase, but for every company. The biggest risk now is not taking action. We are adjusting early and deliberately to rebuild Coinbase to be lean, fast, and AI-native. We need to return to the speed and focus of our startup founding, with AI at our core. What this means To get there, we are not just reducing headcount and cutting costs, we’re fundamentally changing how we operate: rebuilding Coinbase as an intelligence, with humans around the edge aligning it. What does this mean in practice? - Fewer layers, faster decisions: We are flattening our org structure to 5 layers max below CEO/COO. Layers slow things down and create coordination tax. The future is small, high context teams that can move quickly. Leaders will own much more, with as many as 15+ direct reports. Fewer layers also means a leaner cost structure that is built to perform through all market cycles. - No pure managers: Every leader at Coinbase must also be a strong and active individual contributor. Managers should be like player-coaches, getting their hands dirty alongside their teams. - AI-native pods: We’ll be concentrating around AI-native talent who can manage fleets of agents to drive outsized impact. We’ll also be experimenting with reduced pod sizes, including “one person teams” with engineers, designers, and product managers all in one role. In short: AI is bringing a profound shift in how companies operate, and we’re reshaping Coinbase to lead in this new era. This is a new way of working, and we need to leverage AI across every facet of our jobs. To those who are affected I know there are real people behind these decisions — talented colleagues who have poured themselves into this company and our mission. To those of you who will be leaving: thank you. You’ve helped build Coinbase into what it is today, and I am sincerely grateful for everything you've done. All impacted team members will receive an email to their personal account in the next hour with more information, and an invitation to meet with an HRBP and a senior leader in your organization. Coinbase system access has been removed today. I know this feels sudden and harsh, but it is the only responsible choice given our duty to protect customer information. To those affected, we will be providing a comprehensive package to support you through this transition. US employees will receive a minimum of 16 weeks base pay (plus 2 weeks per year worked), their next equity vest, and 6 months of COBRA. Employees on a work visa will get extra transition support. Those outside of the US will receive similar support, based on local factors and subject to any consultation requirements. Coinbase prides itself on talent density. Our employees are among the most talented people in the world, and I have no doubt that your skills and experience will be highly sought after as you pursue your next chapters. How we move forward To the team that is staying, I know this is a difficult day. We’re saying goodbye to colleagues and friends you've been in the trenches with. But here’s what I want you to know as we move forward together: Over the past 13 years, we have weathered four crypto winters, gone public, and built the most trusted platform in our industry. We’ve made it this far by making hard decisions and by always staying focused on our mission. This time will be no different – nothing has changed about the long term outlook of our company or industry. And most importantly, our mission has never been more important for the world. Increasing economic freedom requires a new financial system, and we’re building it. The Coinbase that emerges from this will be more capable than ever to achieve our mission. Brian

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Aman Gupta
Aman Gupta@AmanGxpta·
It was fun catching up with the @cursor_ai team and all the awesome engineering talent in Mumbai!
Yogesh Singh@_yogeshsingh

POV: You skipped the @cursor_ai Mumbai Meetup & now you're seeing these photos 😬 What even IS a tech meetup? Forget the textbook answer. It's a full day of vibing with friends - old & new - talking everything from the latest & greatest in AI to politics to life itself. Mumbai's tech community is BLOOMING & I'm here for every second of it 🚀 If you're building in Mumbai and not showing up to these, you're missing out! 😎 @nish_desai @WHYkalwani @prashantrdalai @viveky259259 @naa_rang @i_m_Pania @AmanGxpta @IndranilChandra @zaidmukaddam @Chaitya62

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Nic Barker
Nic Barker@nicbarkeragain·
To be a little less vague, I suspect that we're likely (not certain, but likely) to be entering into a period of unprecedented software degradation, and we're going to be seeing an increasing frequency of outages like this across many high profile products. But IMO the cause is actually not just the-one-thing-that-everyone-is-always-talking-about, it's a number of things that have all been bubbling away at just below critical levels for a long time. Some of the things off the top of my head: - Poorly designed / optimised software has been getting a free ride on hardware improvements pretty much since the invention of the computer. That chapter is now coming to an end, and will only be worsened by the enormous industry-wide pivot to producing & innovating on AI specific hardware, rather than general purpose CPUs etc. - The ZIRP era created a temporary suspension of reality in our industry, and now that it's ended we need to deal with the hangover. Companies that spent years making no profit, paying extravagant compensation to employees / shareholders and giving away server time for free are now pivoting into extraction mode, which is putting further pressure on their low quality software. QA is being laid off, hardware budgets are being reduced, timelines for shipping features are becoming more aggressive, etc. - The enormous amount of free money incentivised too many new people to join the industry too quickly. This has led to an abundance of poor quality education programs (bootcamps, uncertified colleges etc) and an influx of people into the industry who frankly aren't interested in programming. If you compared the average person in the industry now to 20 years ago, I suspect the difference in motivations would be stark. I'm not saying it's these people's fault necessarily, it's simply an inevitable result of the absurd compensation / performance expectations ratio that our industry has enjoyed for the last 15+ years. Working for a tech company has also become socially prestigious, which further adds to the problem. - Because computer programming was once an incredibly niche area of interest, many of our fundamental systems are built on trust. We're now starting to see that if systems like open source, public supply chain, discussion spaces, education etc become flooded with bad actors, we have no real mechanisms to deal with them. - Our hiring / recruitment pipeline has totally misaligned incentives. Even before the AI resume / AI HR-filtering arms race disaster that we're experiencing now, the widespread adoption of the leetcode style interviews IMO selected for a very narrow personality type, and filtered candidates that would have made great contributions to the industry long term. - The pivot from purchasing long term stable releases of software, to paying a subscription for constantly updating software has done huge damage to software quality as a whole. Companies have lost their incentive to get their software "right" because they can just "fix it later", and for the consumer - you can't just go back to the version of github that still works because the new one has problems. This was all happening well before AI entered the picture. I won't belabor the point because there has been endless discussion about it. But to me personally, there are two additional and deeply worrying problems with AI code generation. - It's undeniable at this point that it negatively affects the people who use it. It stops juniors from getting better, and it burns seniors out and makes them hate their jobs. Like it or not, humans are still the core of this industry, and I don't see this ending well. - It's completely unfit for purpose in the most important, high-stakes situations. One of the reasons that we excuse all the small errors it makes, is because it's low effort to type "do it again and fix this bug". That kind of thing doesn't fly when you only get one attempt because a mistake results in data loss or an outage. The damage is done. All the above has led to a silent exodus of many of our most experienced and impactful people. There are so many amazing programmers who made enough through stock options / compensation that they didn't need to work anymore, and were only doing it because they enjoyed it. Many of these people have just quit the industry and switched to doing hobby projects in the last 5 years. These are the types of people who have the experience and foresight to prevent the types of outages that we're seeing at github today. It's very easy to assume that the proverbial straw that broke the camel's back is entirely to blame here. But I think it's a reckoning that has been on the horizon for a very long time.
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Canton Network
Canton Network@CantonNetwork·
Regulated entities need programmability and privacy without surrendering compliance. As bank and asset manager adoption accelerates, institutional networks like Canton are becoming the infrastructure global finance depends on. A useful read from @a16zcrypto below.
a16z crypto@a16zcrypto

x.com/i/article/2048…

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Paulius 🏴‍☠️
Paulius 🏴‍☠️@0xPaulius·
Day 4 of killing Lovable: Build iPhone Swift apps locally on @getkomand - not possible on lovable coming for Rork too (u can stop paying $200/mo) use ur existing GPT/Claude plans
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Luis
Luis@TrenchWeb3·
This video is a whole vibe. Top 10 projects on @CantonNetwork part 2. Repost, like, comment, follow. Time to get TRIBAL. @CantonFdn $cc
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Aman Gupta
Aman Gupta@AmanGxpta·
@haumicharts You can checkout apps factory dot cc , they’ve been very actively building tools and sdks for canton dev ecosystem
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Louis Sykes
Louis Sykes@haumicharts·
Been covering Canton for a while, but it's time to participate instead of just writing about it. Working through the economics now that liveness rewards are gone. Tips from anyone building on Canton are welcome! 🫡
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