Qise

407 posts

Qise

Qise

@AxmedQise

just a guy trying to keep up with ai

Katılım Ocak 2019
292 Takip Edilen90 Takipçiler
Shelbz w/ a Z
Shelbz w/ a Z@Rudebynature·
@raphousetv2 The genetics went CRAZY 😭🔥 Ice Cube & Chris Tucker really said “copy + paste, but make it Gen Z” This not even a commercial, it’s a legacy rollout 💯
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Raphousetv (RHTV)
Raphousetv (RHTV)@raphousetv2·
Ice Cube's Son & Chris Tucker's Son Really Remade Iconic Friday Scenes for the LA Rams 30+ Years Later🔥🍿🎬
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Travis Akers 🇺🇸
Travis Akers 🇺🇸@travisakers·
A Swiss photographer named Tobias Messereli captured this amazing picture of the sun setting perfectly behind a tree. It’s absolutely spectacular! 📸: TMPhoto
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Jason Clarke 🇨🇦 🇺🇦
Jason Clarke 🇨🇦 🇺🇦@TheOnlyJQuon·
@AxmedQise @travisakers I see the community note now. I disagree with its reasoning though - the tree isn't perfectly symmetrical and shots like this are possible but take a lot of work. Not saying it's not AI generated, just dislike the CN reasoning.
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Alastair Campbell
Alastair Campbell@Al_inDK·
@SimonBrundish It's not just this—it's that Here's the uncomfortable truth That's the detail that matters So tired of reading stuff like this. Either everyone is using ChatGPT or we've become so overwhelmed by it that we've started to write like it
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DMarker
DMarker@DMarker12·
@travisakers Looks like the tree captured the sun. Gorgeous shot.
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G@giancarloqui1·
@travisakers @neal_katyal Amazing! Did he know the best day to be there or did he just get lucky?
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Matthew Skolnikoff
Matthew Skolnikoff@mattsko·
@travisakers Why are there leaves on the branches outside the circle of the sun but not where the sun is?
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Jason Clarke 🇨🇦 🇺🇦
Jason Clarke 🇨🇦 🇺🇦@TheOnlyJQuon·
@travisakers I wonder what kind of rig he used for this? Very cool. Could probably use my telescope to do something in the same spirit. Takes a lot of planning and experience to pull shots like this off. You've gotta plan the shot, then actually take the photo in the small time window.
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John Byron Hanby, IV
John Byron Hanby, IV@johnbyronhanby·
Farza, Blockify will save compute and tokens. It will supercharge and fix the redundancy and processing issues on large datasets. Will provide developer license for you to build on top of at no cost. DM me. Here's our version you can modify and build on top of. x.com/johnbyronhanby…
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Farza 🇵🇰🇺🇸
Farza 🇵🇰🇺🇸@FarzaTV·
A lot of interest on this. Gonna turn it into a product this week where individuals or teams can have their own LLM knowledge base. Looking for ~25 customers to build it alongside. You're charged when I ship. If it's ass, money back. Stripe link below. farza.com/buy
Farza 🇵🇰🇺🇸@FarzaTV

This is Farzapedia. I had an LLM take 2,500 entries from my diary, Apple Notes, and some iMessage convos to create a personal Wikipedia for me. It made 400 detailed articles for my friends, my startups, research areas, and even my favorite animes and their impact on me complete with backlinks. But, this Wiki was not built for me! I built it for my agent! The structure of the wiki files and how it's all backlinked is very easily crawlable by any agent + makes it a truly useful knowledge base. I can spin up Claude Code on the wiki and starting at index.md (a catalog of all my articles) the agent does a really good job at drilling into the specific pages on my wiki it needs context on when I have a query. For example, when trying to cook up a new landing page I may ask: "I'm trying to design this landing page for a new idea I have. Please look into the images and films that inspired me recently and give me ideas for new copy and aesthetics". In my diary I kept track of everything from: learnings, people, inspo, interesting links, images. So the agent reads my wiki and pulls up my "Philosophy" articles from notes on a Studio Ghibli documentary, "Competitor" articles with YC companies whose landing pages I screenshotted, and pics of 1970s Beatles merch I saved years ago. And it delivers a great answer. I built a similar system to this a year ago with RAG but it was ass. A knowledge base that lets an agent find what it needs via a file system it actually understands just works better. The most magical thing now is as I add new things to my wiki (articles, images of inspo, meeting notes) the system will likely update 2-3 different articles where it feels that context belongs, or, just creates a new article. It's like this super genius librarian for your brain that's always filing stuff for your perfectly and also let's you easily query the knowledge for tasks useful to you (ex. design, product, writing, etc) and it never gets tired. I might spend next week productizing this, if that's of interest to you DM me + tell me your usecase!

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Howard Cleaver
Howard Cleaver@hcleaver·
@shanaka86 Doesn't even know history. "war in which the next decision could put American soldiers on Iranian soil for the first time in history." In 1943 there were 30k US soldiers in Iran. Look it up. grok.com/share/c2hhcmQt…
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Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡@shanaka86·
JUST IN: You do not fire your Army Chief of Staff in the middle of a war for no reason. You fire him because of what comes next. Pete Hegseth called General Randy George on April 2 and told him to retire immediately. The Pentagon confirmed it within hours. No reason was given. Not publicly. Not privately. A senior Army official told Fox News that Hegseth offered George nothing: no misconduct, no operational failure, no policy disagreement on the record. Just a phone call and a career ending in the middle of the most significant American combat operation in two decades. George is the 24th general or admiral Hegseth has removed. But he is not the 24th. He is the one that matters. The Army Chief of Staff. The man whose signature sits between a president’s intent and the order that sends soldiers across a beach or into a tunnel complex. The 82nd Airborne is deploying right now. Marines from the 31st MEU are staged on the USS Tripoli. JSOC operators are at forward bases in Israel, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE. Kharg Island, 90 percent of Iranian oil exports, sits 16 kilometres off a coast that someone will have to decide whether to approach. And the four-star general whose job it was to advise whether that approach should happen was removed 48 hours after Trump told the nation the war would continue for two to three more weeks. The replacement is Vice Chief General Christopher LaNeve. He was Hegseth’s senior military aide before this appointment. The man who carried the Secretary’s briefcase now commands the Army the Secretary is reshaping. The chain of command did not break. It shortened. The distance between a television studio and a combat order just collapsed to zero intermediaries who were not personally selected by the man giving the order. No reason was given. That is the tell. When someone is removed without explanation during a crisis, the explanation is the crisis itself. George either objected to something or was about to. The ground option. The power plant strikes. The Kharg raid. The escalation that turned a highway bridge in Karaj into rubble on the same day he was told to leave. Something in the next two weeks requires a chief who will not push back, and the Pentagon solved that problem by installing one trained as Hegseth’s aide. A former Fox News weekend host just fired a four-star general with combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, replaced him with his own former assistant, and did it during a live war in which the next decision could put American soldiers on Iranian soil for the first time in history. No hearing was held. No misconduct cited. The Army woke up on April 3 with a new chief it did not choose, in a war it did not start, preparing for a phase the previous chief apparently could not be trusted to execute. The question is not why George was fired. Every general in the building knows why. The question is what order is coming in the next fourteen days that required removing the one man in the chain of command who might have said no. The war has no perimeter. The chain of command has no objectors. And the next phase has no one left to stop it. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…
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Qise
Qise@AxmedQise·
@thesubmitter_ Is the ai singing your name in the background?
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Tariq | Goldsand
Tariq | Goldsand@thesubmitter_·
This Ramadan, we focused on trying to solve one problem: How do we fix Islamic finance? I think we've found the solution.
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Qise
Qise@AxmedQise·
@paulg This guy just dragged us into world war 3 and you’re about class
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Paul Graham
Paul Graham@paulg·
Whether the next president is a Republican or a Democrat, can we have someone with at least a little class next time? Because this is embarrassing.
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