
Alexy 🤍💙🤍
33.6K posts

Alexy 🤍💙🤍
@ChiefScientist
AI Community Architect @Neo4j. Chair, OSSci @NumFOCUS. Cofounder, AI Alliance, GenAI Commons. Run @scalebythebay: https://t.co/VG37Z4xowL. Join https://t.co/1CPrpnF1KU!


Every company needs a CTO A chief tokens officer

We replaced urllib3 inside boto3 with a Zig HTTP client. One import line. Same API. Upto 115x faster with TurboAPI. import faster_boto3 as boto3 Here's what happened..


What is preventing you from moving to France?


Chuck Norris knows Victoria’s secret

In 1951, a 66 year old Swedish farmer named Gustaf Håkansson decided he wanted to compete in Sweden’s toughest cycling race, the Sverigeloppet, a grueling 1,764 kilometer event that stretched across the country. Race organizers refused to let him join. They believed he was simply too old to handle the physical demands of such an exhausting competition. But Håkansson had no intention of turning back. Instead of giving up, he lined up anyway and rode the entire route unofficially. While the official racers stopped to rest and sleep along the way, Håkansson kept pedaling. He rode through the night with a small headlamp on his bicycle, often cycling for days with barely any sleep. His determination quickly turned him into a sensation among spectators, who began calling him “Stålfarfar,” meaning “Steel Grandpa.” By the time the race ended, something remarkable had happened. The man who had been rejected for being too old had reached the finish line ahead of every single official competitor. Though his ride did not count in the official standings, his achievement captured national attention and turned him into a folk hero in Sweden. What began as a refusal ended as one of the most memorable endurance stories in cycling history. #drthehistories

.@Reddit spent ~2 years in IPO purgatory updating their S-1 every quarter.. By the time they went public in 2024, they were already operating like a public company "The business itself was really starting to click. We’ve had revenue growth over 60% for 5 quarters in a row, & we were able to get to GAAP profitability in our first year out, a little bit ahead of schedule. In our space, we’ve seen companies go public at our scale but then not be profitable for a while or have other business gotchas. We learned from that. Getting to profitability was really important to us." They priced low at $34 (vs $61 private peak) — & despite volatility (trading between ~$100–$200+/share), they've made early shareholders quite happy with a little extra IPO preparation

It’s going to get worse before it gets worse.

“You will be home before the leaves have fallen from the trees.” Kaiser Wilhelm August 1914




