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@DotSlashTX

a bit of coding/poetry/infosec/public speaking and #crypto 🇮🇳 military OPSEC/GEOINT enthusiast.

figment of kernel space Katılım Aralık 2017
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TX
TX@DotSlashTX·
A SCAM pulled off by one of the Top 3 contestants in this hackathon, won whopping 75 Lakhs of funding just by rebranding @brave Browser! This is bigger than one can think! Tagging @AshwiniVaishnaw and @GoI_MeitY @cdacindia.
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Indian Tech & Infra@IndianTechGuide

🚨 India to develop own browser to take on Chrome, Firefox in new Atmanirbhar bid. MeiTY has launched the Indian Web Browser Development Challenge and plans on launching its own internet browser.

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TX@DotSlashTX·
@alysha_lobo about to go berserk ig. meanwhile any venture that's up for funding, I'll give good reviews promise 😋
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AML
AML@alysha_lobo·
🚨: STARTUP INDIA - you asked and here's your answer I give you the YELP/GLASSDOOR for Indian VCs Anonymous. Real. 30 seconds. Check out hottakes.vc This is NOT an April Fool's Prank. More deets here: x.com/pavithran_pc/s… THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION TO THIS MATTER.
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AML@alysha_lobo

🚨💣STARTUP INDIA, buckle up for Saturday truth bombs. I’m going to say a few things that Indian founders usually won’t say out loud. Over the last 2 odd years I’ve been on the ground in India, working very closely with founders from idea stage all the way to Series A/B, and also spending a fair bit of time with funds across the spectrum. I sit in a slightly unusual position in this ecosystem — I’m not a full-time VC, I’m not a founder either. I’ve spent most of my time as an operator, globally, and as someone who enables networks across founders, funds, and companies. Which basically means I get to see both sides of the table more than most people do. And more importantly, a lot of founders tell me a lot of things they will never say publicly, because they are scared of VCs, they are worried about access to capital, or they don’t want to burn bridges. I usually try to pass that feedback back to funds in a constructive way, protecting founders where needed. But I think some of this needs to be said openly, especially for early founders who are just entering the system. So here goes: “We invest at paper napkin stage” is one of the most overused lines in this ecosystem. It sounds great, and I’m sure there are a few genuine cases, but in reality most decisions are still supported by proxies — early signals, pedigree, prior affiliations, how you present, and yes, a surprising amount of Excel-based thinking even at stages where that shouldn’t be the primary lens. You’ll be told it’s about conviction, but you’ll still be pushed into projections, assumptions, and frameworks that try to reduce uncertainty as quickly as possible. I want founders to know that most VCs are structurally designed to say no, that’s NOT the issue. The issue is how that “no” is often delivered — a lot of founders walk away without any real understanding of what didn’t work, because the answer is usually something superfluous like “not enough signal” or “doesn’t fit our thesis”, which in many cases is just uncertainty dressed up as a decision. Very few people will actually tell you where they think your business could break. Risk aversion in India is very real, it’s just not called that. It shows up in more polite forms — like where you studied, where you’ve worked, how you speak, how you present yourself in a room. Founders from non-traditional paths or Tier 2/3 India feel this immediately, even if nobody explicitly says it. There is also a lot more FOMO in early-stage investing than people would like to admit. You’ll see funds move quickly when others are already in, you’ll see pressure to get onto cap tables, and sometimes the urgency has less to do with your company and more to do with how the fund wants to position itself or deploy capital. And this is important — a lot of Indian VCs are not forming independent conviction as often as you would hope. They are watching what’s happening in the US and then mapping that back here. You can literally see waves move — SaaS, edtech, now AI, now “deep tech”, now defense, now robotics — and the same funds will move across these categories over time. There are exceptions, for example imho fintech investing in India did carve out its own path, and quick commerce to some extent as well, but a lot of the rest follows a pattern of observing what’s working elsewhere and then adapting it locally. The operator gap is something founders need to pay a lot more attention to. If someone is investing in enterprise SaaS, it’s worth asking whether they’ve ever actually sold enterprise software themselves?? If they’re investing in AI, have they built anything meaningful or are they just experimenting at a surface level?? If they’re investing in hardware or robotics, have they seen a deployment go wrong in the real world?? A lot of the time, founders end up spending a significant portion of the conversation explaining their space to the very people evaluating them. There’s also a very real gap internally within funds that founders don’t see — what partners say at a high level and what analysts evaluate on are not always aligned, which means you can walk out of one conversation feeling strong alignment and then find yourself re-explaining everything in the next. It creates confusion, and most founders just absorb that friction silently. And please, don’t get overly swayed by the “we’ll take you to Silicon Valley” narrative. This one needs to be said clearly. You don’t need to be necessarily be in San Francisco, you need to be where your customer is. Period. I’ve seen too many founders get excited about Bay Area trips, demo days, and immersion programs, and come back with no real customer insight, no distribution, and no meaningful progress. You are not building a company by attending events and walking around SF. If your customers are in India, stay here and go deeper. If they’re in Southeast Asia, go there. If they’re in the US, figure out where exactly, not just Silicon Valley, it could be the MidWest or Miami. Get the VC to take you there. Geography should follow customers, not self serving VC narratives. On capital, especially for early-stage founders, it’s worth rethinking how much you actually need. In software, the cost of getting something off the ground has dropped significantly — as @mcuban pointed out recently on @tbpn , it’s never been easier to build software: ship, test, and start charging. Your first validation can come from customers, not investors. Dilution is not something you need to rush into if you don’t have to. Hardware is a different game, of course, capital matters there, but even in hardware I’m seeing founders find alternative paths — working with China, using labs, building in smaller batches, and being more capital efficient than before. One thing I’ll tell early founders very clearly — don’t get overly impressed by funds that say they’ve done 100+ investments. In many cases, more smaller yet intentional portfolios lead to better attention and support. If a fund is spread too thin, you need to ask yourself how much time they realistically have for you once the cheque is written. And please, do diligence on your VCs the same way they do on you: Talk to founders they’ve backed, not just the ones they showcase. Ask what actually happened AFTER the investment — did they help you get customers? did they show up when things got difficult? or was it mostly intros, programs, and surface-level engagement. At the end of the day, VCs are one input. Your customer is the only real signal that matters. There are good investors in India, I’ve worked with some and continue to do so. But founders need to go in with their eyes open and separate X/LinkedIn narrative from reality. If you’ve been through this, you already know exactly what I’m talking about.

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SuperSisi
SuperSisi@SuperSisi·
stop showing me things I can’t have
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TX@DotSlashTX·
earth review: - signing up takes 9 months - can't choose username or server - 2 years to unlock voice chat - tutorial and side quests for 18 years - pay to win - good graphics, dynamic storyline - can't respawn, permadeath
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Capt Venkat 🇮🇳
Capt Venkat 🇮🇳@CaptVenk·
Some tastes align. He liked this, and so did I. For now though, cars made with RPis, Minis, and ESPs come first. 😀
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Brian Roemmele
Brian Roemmele@BrianRoemmele·
The Nokia nano hard drive. A collectors item.
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TX@DotSlashTX·
why the heck best ideas pop up post 2 AM?
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Bitcoin Teddy
Bitcoin Teddy@Bitcoin_Teddy·
Edward Snowden in 2019: "The problem with applications like WhatsApp is, it was actually designed to have very strong encryption, just the same as the gold standard today which would be the signal messenger or the wire messenger, but then it was bought by Facebook because it was so good, and now Facebook is quite aggressively reducing the security of WhatsApp about once a quarter, and they’re trying to do it as quietly as possible, so a messenger that the people are comfortable using now is actually a danger to you."
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TheGameVerse
TheGameVerse@TheGameVerse·
Back when graphics didn't matter, but feelings did 😍
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Yousr
Yousr@rsuyoy·
No, an 8GB of ram laptop is not “only for web browsing” you can code with it you can do graphic design you can do video editing you can run photoshop you can multitask Tech bros are subject to a massive bias where not a single one of them has tried an 8 GB of RAM computer in the last 5 to 10 years because they all default to thinking they’re unusable when they’re actually perfectly fine. it’s fine. mostly.
Kent C. Dodds ⚡@kentcdodds

An 8GB MacBook is not for you. It's for people who just use the computer as a browser device

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TX@DotSlashTX·
@zturner2002 gents can have their preferences too lmao
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TX@DotSlashTX·
@CaptVenk @Raspberry_Pi Which software are you using to flash your OS image? Also, connect it too an output and check the panic.
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Capt Venkat 🇮🇳
Capt Venkat 🇮🇳@CaptVenk·
@Raspberry_Pi friends on my timeline. Rpi 5 not booting up. Changed the sd card, did x to y… but no results. Any suggestions please?
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Nalini Unagar
Nalini Unagar@NalinisKitchen·
Name: IPS Prabhakar Chaudhary Position: UP Cadre - 2010 Batch In his 8 years of his career, he was transferred 18 times. - He cleared the UPSC exam on his first attempt - He believes in strict action against crime - Once he had a verbal fight with a local political leader and got transferred - In 2016, his transfer sparked a large public protest, with people burning effigies until he was brought back - He once went on a 2 day leave and examined the city secretly - He is simple too. Once he received a transfer letter, he took a tempo and went to his residence because he thought a government vehicle is only for duty If you are honest, strict and do not bend down, then you will have to pay the price of being honest.
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MG
MG@_MG_·
This is likely snake oil, but tons of people are boosting it. Ultrasonic mic jammers are real & a fraction of the price. What they claim is new: using AI to detect mics. There are ways to find hidden mics. The TSCM space (bug sweepers) has tons of tricks that seem like pure magic. Have you ever listened to transistors turn on & off inside of an electronic device? Seen what a non-wireless camera sensor sees from across the room because every copper trace on a PCB is still an antenna? …I have 😎. Hell, the first time I heard the “heat beat” of one of my naughty little OMG Cables, it was kinda reminiscent of hearing the heartbeat of my literal unborn kids! 😂 … anyway, you also have thermals, magnetics, etc. But most of these tricks require that you either sweep a detection device within a few cm of the bug, or you have a bulky antenna pointed directly at the bug. This “Deveillance” device is a small stationary puck that you place in the center of the space you want to protect. So what can you do with a small stationary object to detect mics? Well, anyone who’s used an ultrasonic jammer knows that most of the space is going to be filled with ultrasonic emitters, especially if you want the claimed 2 meter range. So that leaves a pretty small space for the detection electronics. You could do wireless protocol discovery. WiFi, BLE, etc. This would be easy. But it’ll only find a fraction of hidden mics. You could do wideband RF sweeps to detect any active radio emissions. Here, AI could actually help identify based on raw signal. But this already feels like a stretch for this product. Lots of legit wireless mics are going to slip through the cracks with the minimal hardware that fits in a small puck. But let’s say we make it this far. What about every mic that is not actively transmitting? Saving to local storage for later retrieval, etc. Well, you could use your ultrasonic emitters to create saturated pulses into the mics, which in turn will create electrical impulses down the copper lines between the mic & whatever catches the signal. Every bit of copper, no matter the length, is also an antenna. So you catch those emissions and look for signals that match your own ultrasonic emissions. Packing equipment sensitive enough to do this inside a little puck though…. Ehhhh And after all that, you are still blind to passive MEMS microphones. And more so: there are already ways to defeat ultrasonic jammers too. However, this device doesn’t claim to protect you against bugs and other hidden mics. It’s very tightly constrained to: “prevents smart devices and AI recorders from picking up your voice” That’s an incredibly narrow scope. Existing ultrasonic jammers cover that scope pretty easily.
Aida Baradari@aidaxbaradari

Today, we're introducing Spectre I, the first smart device to stop unwanted audio recordings. We live in a world of always-on listening devices. Smart devices and AI dominate our world in business and private conversations. With Deveillance, you will @be_inaudible.

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TX@DotSlashTX·
PSA: LEARN CYBERSECURITY in 2026! LEARN CYBERSECURITY in 2026! LEARN CYBERSECURITY in 2026! LEARN CYBERSECURITY in 2026! LEARN CYBERSECURITY in 2026! LEARN CYBERSECURITY in 2026! LEARN CYBERSECURITY in 2026!
GIF
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TX@DotSlashTX·
#USIranConflict went to get my vehicle refueled just to see that people have started fuel hoarding anticipating war crisis. crazy times.
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Aida Baradari
Aida Baradari@aidaxbaradari·
Today, we're introducing Spectre I, the first smart device to stop unwanted audio recordings. We live in a world of always-on listening devices. Smart devices and AI dominate our world in business and private conversations. With Deveillance, you will @be_inaudible.
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