Gyfted - hire for Merit MEI

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Gyfted - hire for Merit MEI

Gyfted - hire for Merit MEI

@GyftedMe

Hire for Merit (MEI) using Gyfted's AI assessment platform that support tech, startup and remote companies. https://t.co/5COsv4ZYCo

Mountain View, CA Katılım Nisan 2021
298 Takip Edilen73 Takipçiler
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Gyfted - hire for Merit MEI
Thank you @GoogleCloudTech for featuring us @GyftedMe ! We're proud to be helping out candidates, hiring managers and recruiters in this new era Check out the @googlecloud post FYI @AdamSzefer @michalkosinski @kowalskr @KyleDumovic @GabrysPiotrek @aga_szefer @StartX
Google Cloud@googlecloud

The power of #AI can match tech workers with their ideal roles. Learn how @GyftedMe deploys Google Cloud solutions to accelerate the development of an automated recruitment application that quickly matches technology professionals with employers ↓ cloud.google.com/blog/topics/st…

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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
The man who changed construction forever.
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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
In case you still find hard to tell them apart.
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The Market Mind
The Market Mind@Market_Mind_·
Busiest Global Shipping Lanes ​🇬🇧/🇫🇷 English Channel — Links North Sea and Atlantic 🇮🇩/🇲🇾 Malacca Strait — Vital artery for Indo-Pacific trade 🇮🇷/🇴🇲 Hormuz Strait — Critical passageway for global oil 🇪🇬 Suez Canal — Links Mediterranean and Red Seas 🇵🇦 Panama Canal — Connects Atlantic and Pacific Oceans 🇹🇷 Bosphorus Strait — World's narrowest international strait ​These six maritime chokepoints facilitate the vast majority of global trade
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Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡@shanaka86·
Everyone talks about Iranian oil in barrels. Nobody talks about what is inside them. That difference is why Western refineries have been running shadow networks through Dubai for twenty years to get it despite the sanctions. Crude oil is not a uniform commodity. It is a spectrum of hydrocarbons with different molecular weights, and the composition of a given crude determines how easily it converts into the products refineries actually want to sell: gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, heating oil. The measurement that captures this is API gravity. Higher API gravity means lighter crude with shorter carbon chains, which means lower energy cost to crack, lower processing cost to refine, and higher yield of the light distillates that carry premium pricing. Lower API gravity means heavier crude requiring more energy, more processing steps, more capital equipment, and producing a higher share of lower-value residuals. Iranian Light crude runs at 33 to 36 degrees API gravity with sulfur content between 1.36 and 1.5 percent. That is the refinery sweet spot. It is light enough to yield high fractions of gasoline and middle distillates without excessive processing costs, but heavy enough to produce the full range of products that complex refineries are designed to process. It is what petroleum engineers call an optimal blend crude. Now compare the alternatives. Venezuelan Merey heavy crude runs at approximately 16 degrees API gravity with sulfur between 3 and 5 percent. Refining it profitably requires a coking unit, a hydrocracker, and an extensive desulfurization train. The equipment exists. The economics work for refineries purpose-built around Venezuelan feedstock. It is not a substitute for Iranian crude. It is a different product requiring different industrial infrastructure. US West Texas Intermediate runs at 39 to 40 degrees API with sulfur below 0.25 percent. In theory, the cleanest and easiest crude to process. In practice, it is so light that it does not yield the heavier middle distillates a complex refinery needs to run at full capacity. European and Asian refineries built around medium crudes cannot switch to WTI without blending it with heavier crudes to achieve the molecular weight distribution their process units require. WTI is not a drop-in replacement for Iranian medium. Iranian oil fits where both US shale and Venezuelan heavy do not. It is the liquid that flows through the middle of the global refining system without requiring either the coking infrastructure for heavy crudes or the blending operations for ultra-light shale. That molecular fit is why it commands a persistent premium above comparable grades. It is why Indian refineries maintained Iranian crude purchases through every round of sanctions and negotiated the logistics to keep that flow moving. It is why the Dubai shadow banking and trading network that the UAE is now considering dismantling existed in the first place. The Strait of Hormuz does not just carry oil. It carries the specific category of oil that the global refining system was built to process most efficiently. Closing it does not just reduce supply. It removes the grade of crude that the system runs best on and forces every refinery in the world to run less efficiently on whatever it can find as a substitute. That is the premium embedded in the $82 oil price. Not just volume. Molecular weight. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…
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Tanvi Ratna
Tanvi Ratna@tanvi_ratna·
The negotiations and concessions begin. I believe the next few weeks will be near frantic with lines being drawn and redrawn very quickly. In two months, we could be looking at an entirely different geopolitical order.
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Tanvi Ratna@tanvi_ratna

Expect a lot of bilateral deals in the coming months. Tariffs will be lowered for countries that offer strategic concessions—on trade, security, or industrial policy. Those that resist? They'll pay higher costs until they decide to come to the table.

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Collin Rugg
Collin Rugg@CollinRugg·
Female fencer takes a knee to protest against her biologically male opponent during a fencing match. The opponent, Redmond Sullivan, switched from the men's fencing team to the women's fencing team at Wagner College last year. Sullivan shockingly started dominating the female competition after the switch was made. During the Connecticut Division Junior Olympic Qualifiers last year, for example, Sullivan competed with the female athletes and won. The video below reportedly took place over the weekend. "Sullivan's female opponent was expelled from the USA Fencing event at the Univ. of Maryland over the weekend," reported ICONS. Video: @icons_women
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Tanvi Ratna
Tanvi Ratna@tanvi_ratna·
Start with the debt: $9.2T must be refinanced in 2025. If rolled into 10-yr bonds, every 1 basis point drop in rates saves approx $1B/year; so a 0.5% drop would save $500B over a decade. Lower yields free up fiscal room—without them, core spending gets crowded out.
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WarTranslated
WarTranslated@wartranslated·
"What should I do? Not be Russian?" – In Georgia, a crowd booed a Russian woman during an anti-government protest. She decided to speak out about Russia - and got a response.
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Pavel Slunkin
Pavel Slunkin@PavelSlunkin·
Former U.S. Ambassador to China @RNicholasBurns on how to win the global competition: ‘Be nice to your allies.’ 1/2 ⤵️
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The Economist
The Economist@TheEconomist·
Donald Trump has committed the most profound, harmful and unnecessary economic error in the modern era. Almost everything he said—on history, economics and the technicalities of trade—was utterly deluded econ.st/4j8e0DG
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𝗠𝗶𝗰𝗵𝗮𝗲𝗹 𝗞𝗼𝘃𝗲
The biggest LIE that "vibe coding" community sold to beginners is that ANYONE can build a production ready app for mass consumption. It is simply not true (for multiple logical reasons). Prototype - sure. MVP for "invite only testers" - definitely. An app you can show to investors to secure funding - absolutely. But if you ship that shit to prod without understanding what the code does.... What do you think is going to happen? Don't believe the hype. LEARN TO CODE, then you can use AI to help you do it faster, anon.
𝗠𝗶𝗰𝗵𝗮𝗲𝗹 𝗞𝗼𝘃𝗲 tweet media
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Paul Graham
Paul Graham@paulg·
It's an encouraging sign how muted the response to this has been. In 2017 it would have stirred up the mother of all mobs. Further evidence that wokeness peaked several years ago and is still declining.
Alexandr Wang@alexandr_wang

Today we’ve formalized an important hiring policy at Scale. We hire for MEI: merit, excellence, and intelligence. This is the email I’ve shared with our @scale_AI team. ——————————————————— MERITOCRACY AT SCALE In the wake of our fundraise, I’ve been getting a lot of questions about talent. All of our external success—powering breakthroughs in L4 autonomy, partnering with OpenAI on RLHF going back to GPT-2, supporting the DoD and every major AI lab, and the recent $1bn financing transaction—all of it is downstream from us hiring the best people for the job. Talent is our #1 input metric. Because of this, I spend a lot of my time on recruiting. I either personally interview every hire or sign off on every candidate packet. It’s the thing I spend the plurality of my time on, easily. But everyone can and should contribute to this effort. There are almost a thousand of us now, and it takes a lot to hire quickly while maintaining, and continuing to raise, our bar for quality. That’s why this is the time to codify a hiring principle that I consider crucial to our success: Scale is a meritocracy, and we must always remain one. Hiring on merit will be a permanent policy at Scale. It’s a big deal whenever we invite someone to join our mission, and those decisions have never been swayed by orthodoxy or virtue signaling or whatever the current thing is. I think of our guiding principle as MEI: merit, excellence, and intelligence. That means we hire only the best person for the job, we seek out and demand excellence, and we unapologetically prefer people who are very smart. We treat everyone as an individual. We do not unfairly stereotype, tokenize, or otherwise treat anyone as a member of a demographic group rather than as an individual. We believe that people should be judged by the content of their character — and, as colleagues, be additionally judged by their talent, skills, and work ethic. There is a mistaken belief that meritocracy somehow conflicts with diversity. I strongly disagree. No group has a monopoly on excellence. A hiring process based on merit will naturally yield a variety of backgrounds, perspectives, and ideas. Achieving this requires casting a wide net for talent and then objectively selecting the best, without bias in any direction. We will not pick winners and losers based on someone being the “right” or “wrong” race, gender, and so on. It should be needless to say, and yet it needs saying: doing so would be racist and sexist, not to mention illegal. Upholding meritocracy is good for business and is the right thing to do. This approach not only results in the strongest possible team, but also ensures we’re treating our colleagues with fairness and respect. As a result, everyone who joins Scale can be confident that they were chosen for their outstanding talent, not any other reasons. MEI has gotten us to where we are today. And it’s the same thing that’ll get us where we’re going, as we embark on our next chapter focusing on data abundance, frontier data, and reliable measurement to accelerate the development and adoption of AI models. Alex

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Rob Kowalski - ₿
Rob Kowalski - ₿@kowalskr·
At @GyftedMe we not only help companies hire for merit (ability, personality).. We help hire for cultural fit too (objectively, not the DEI mumbo jumbo bs) All using open access, empiricaly backed assessments like this one: (link below)
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Nikita Bier
Nikita Bier@nikitabier·
After advising 50+ consumer companies over the last year, the one thing that separates those who can execute and those who can't: Having a full-time designer in the room at all times I've met with countless companies that have raised millions—and even one that has raised billions—that do not even have a designer on payroll. This makes product development broken: 1/ You simply cannot have constructive conversations about ideas without visualizing them in real-time 2/ Your experiments will frequently have inconclusive results because users cannot discover features or they misunderstand how they work 3/ There is no one who can galvanize the team with a vision of what the product could look and feel like And to be abundantly clear: I'm not referring to visual UI or graphics. I'm talking about someone who can think through the fundamental building blocks of product comprehension—like navigation, interaction and copywriting—and is technically savvy enough to visualize those components in high resolution. There can certainly be exceptions to not having a designer, like where the CEO is an exceptional visual thinker, but that does not scale beyond a small team. At the end of day, products live and die in the pixels: it's what the users see and tap. And without someone shepherding that process, you are effectively wandering the desert blind.
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Mysterybuzu
Mysterybuzu@Mysterybuzu·
Gdy zamiast zawracać sobie głowę EjAj czy mikroprocesorami masz gospodarkę opartą o lanie betonu, eksport jabłek i poszycia siedzeń samochodowych.
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Robert F. Kennedy Jr
Robert F. Kennedy Jr@RobertKennedyJr·
JFK warned that “The very word ‘secrecy’ is repugnant in a free and open society; and we are as a people inherently and historically opposed to secrecy … We decided long ago that the dangers of excessive and unwarranted concealment of pertinent facts far outweighed the dangers which are cited to justify it.” The 60-year strategy of lies and secrecy, disinformation, censorship, and defamation employed by Intel officials to obscure and suppress troubling facts about JFK’s assassination has provided the playbook for a series of subsequent crises — the MLK and RFK assassinations, Vietnam, 9/11, the Iraq war and COVID — that have each accelerated the subversion of our exemplary democracy by the Military/Medical Industrial Complex and pushed us further down the road toward totalitarianism. “A nation that does not trust its people is a nation that is afraid of its people.” A government that withholds information is inherently fearful of its citizens’ ability to make informed decisions and participate actively in democracy. Thank you, President Trump for trusting American citizens and for taking the first step down the road towards reversing this disastrous trajectory.
Margo Martin@MargoMartin47

President @realDonaldTrump signs an Executive Order to declassify the JFK, RFK, and MLK Jr. files!

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Pierre Poilievre
Pierre Poilievre@PierrePoilievre·
Dr. Peterson has paid an enormous price to go up against the woke censorship apparatus. Thousands of common sense Canadians must self-censor for fear of losing their livelihoods with no way to feed their families. Sign to help me end woke authoritarian censorship so Canadians can take back control of their lives and make common sense common: conservative.ca/cpc/bring-it-h…
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