Kshitij

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Kshitij

@HowAboutThatt_

We're winning the league next year

Katılım Aralık 2022
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Kshitij
Kshitij@HowAboutThatt_·
To finding many such friends and mentors
Naval@naval

On Scott Adams. A man finds, to his astonishment, that he exists. After the elation of childhood wears off, he asks, who am I, why am I here, how does this work? These are hard questions, so after a brief struggle, he selects a readymade answer and goes about the motions of life. Scott Adams was not such a man. He was a live player, ever curious, intent on figuring out this simulation that he found himself in. From first principles, Scott unraveled, understood, and ultimately controlled his own reality. He hacked himself with affirmations, others with persuasion, the world with simultaneous sips. He explained people as moist robots, two movies happening on one screen, his world as Gods’ debris. He carved a personal mission to “be useful,” and made us all better writers, public speakers, and persuaders. He preached the footwear theory of motivation, the Adams Law of slow-moving disasters, the skill stack, systems over goals, and of course, the Dilbert Principle. Besides cartooning, philosophizing, and teaching, Scott rose to the occasion and displayed, “the one virtue that cannot be faked” - courage. Scott had the courage to speak honestly as he saw it - about Trump, about his nation, and about his time, even though it cost him friends, audience, money, and his ticket to polite society. Scott had true courage, the kind that makes you unpopular, the kind that is always and everywhere in short supply, At the end, as any hacker of reality, Scott covered all of his bases - he left as a Buddhist, a Christian, and a player in the Simulation. Scott, we didn’t get enough time with you, but you were a mentor and a marvel. You were useful and you were courageous. You were incompressible and indivisible. One of a kind, and generous with your drawing, writing, and speaking. Unlike your squealing critics in the chattering class, you will be read generations from now. On this earth there are many long-lived hells but no lasting heaven. Each heaven must be created and nurtured, ex-nihilo, from mind and from mud. Scott, you created a small heaven for us all, and to a larger heaven you go. A man finds, to his astonishment, that he no longer exists. He asks why, what it was for, and how will the new reality work? When the rest of us get there, we’ll find Scott, ever useful, ready to explain, having figured it all out. Notes: • First line paraphrasing Schopenhauer. • Courage quote via Taleb.

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Antifragile Thinking
Antifragile Thinking@unseenvalue·
Do something where failure is likely, but the lesson is valuable enough to change how you see the world. Structure your experiments so that even if you fail, you survive. Avoid bets that can ruin you. Keep taking small, thoughtful risks. Most will not work, and that is part of the process. But every now and then, something will. When it does, recognise it and scale it with conviction. Progress often works this way: many small failures, one meaningful success, and the wisdom to tell the difference. Every blockbuster drug is built on thousands of failed attempts. First, survive. Then scale. This is a mindset worth passing on to younger people.
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vyom
vyom@vy0mbhatia·
india ke paas paise ki kummi nahi hai. awareness ki hai. BioCompute, @y_unstoppably 's company, has raised over 5 crores over the last 2 years from: WTF fund, Grad Capital, 1517 Fund and more. If I wrote about all the awards that she has won in the last two years, I would miss the point. The point is: she is leaving. For two reasons: 1. Capital 2. Talent In one of the many conversations i have had with her, this one stuck with me: "There are Indians in the US who I know I will be hiring. They don't want to raise their kids there. They want to come home." So this isn't about talent either. It's about money. If there's capital for people like Anagha, starting with Anagha, the dam will break. Bring our men and women home. Spread the word. If you're a VC interested in being part of BioCompute's Seed round, email me: bhatiavyom27@gmail.com or check the link in bio. And by the way, this isn't a last ditch effort to help Anagha raise her Seed round. She has commitments in SF. that's quite literally why she is moving there. This is a small attempt to keep bleeding edge DNA storage technology within Indian borders. I believe in Anagha. Music: Bloom by Radiohead End slate music: Jaago by Lifafa
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Balaji
Balaji@balajis·
That is *the* question. Short answer The Internet is not a place, but there will be Internet places. We can print out the internet, using million-person online social networks to crowdfund offline territory, building first voluntary startup societies and eventually network states. Long answer China is a place, so it’s obvious. But it’s closed to everyone but the Han Chinese. The Internet is the only thing with economic scale comparable to China, and it’s open to everyone everywhere. If China is Apple, vertically integrated and closed, the Internet is Android, messier and more open. But the Internet isn’t a place, right? True, but Christianity is not a place. Yet there are Christian places: churches, cathedrals, entire countries with the cross on the flag. The “software” of Christianity was able to convert enough people to materialize upon the “hardware” of the land. Ok, so generalize that. The Internet is not a place, but there are already many Internet places: startup offices, datacenters, tech conferences, entire countries with Bitcoin as the national currency. The software of the Internet could convert enough people to materialize upon the hardware of the land. Extending the analogy, just as there are many Christian denominations, there are many Internet social subnetworks. Whatever subcommunity you belong to can organize and print itself out in the physical world. And where would that be specifically? Like Bitcoin, everywhere and nowhere. The key insight is the idea of the fractal frontier. List all the special economic zones, ghost cities, tech parks, deindustrialized towns, and abandoned villages around the world. There’s a lot of surprisingly developed empty space out there, thanks in part to the global fertility crash. And thanks to robotics, solar, and modulars, we may be able to develop yet more completely empty space. Anyway, that’s the idea. We can reopen the frontier through the Internet. In the same way we have hundreds of tech companies and cryptocurrencies distributed globally, we can use the Internet to found new startup societies and network states. Yes, it’ll take a while to get the new startup societies to million person scale, but it won’t take forever. And everyone doesn’t need to move there to change legacy societies for the better. After all, only 4% of the world moved to the US, and that changed the world. Basically, all the billion person digital networks were only founded in the last 25 years or so. We can scale quickly once the formula works. And it will likely work all over the world, because the Internet does.
Balaji tweet media
Dr. Clayton Forrester@DrClaytonForre1

Capital and talent always flow to where it is treated best. Where will it go if the U.S. melts down? Maybe China, except China isn't pro-immigration.

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Tony Jacob | FindaClip.com
Chamath says his father chose welfare and drinking over working "My father couldn't get a job. So, we were on welfare and welfare was probably 17, 18, $19,000 a year at the time in Canada. And it's a family of five." ...my dad just spent this cycle between drinking and not working, drinking and not working......But could he have gotten a job making eight or 10 bucks an hour at a store? He could have. He chose not to. "
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Shobhit Shrivastava
Shobhit Shrivastava@shri_shobhit·
@deedydas Sounds exactly like what Peter Thiel calls “Indefinite Pessimism”. No one knows whether their work matters to anyone or even if it affects their future!
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🕷️ CISF 🇮🇩
🕷️ CISF 🇮🇩@GolesDoSantaFe·
Me dijo "desnudate" y yo le mostré este video del cucho Hernández peleando por el balón en el momento más tenso del partido. Me puse a llorar y ella se burló. Quería ver la desnudez de mi cuerpo; yo, tonto, le mostré la desnudez de mi alma.
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Paras Chopra
Paras Chopra@paraschopra·
Midjourney launching an ultrasound scanner is such a clear example of freedom enjoyed by bootstrapped companies that VC-backed companies would never have. Only time will tell if it’s the right bet. But such bold bets require ownership and a kind of devil-may-care attitude.
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Sidu Ponnappa
Sidu Ponnappa@ponnappa·
our small deals now each exceed our entire revenue of 2025 (low 5 figures) startups be unsettling
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Parimal Ade
Parimal Ade@AdeParimal·
Big reform for Indian markets. India has opened its listed stocks to foreign individual investors. Earlier, direct access through this route was mainly available to NRIs and OCIs. Now, it has been expanded to persons resident outside India. Why it matters: More foreign participation. Better liquidity. Deeper equity markets. Stronger global integration. This is a clear signal: India wants its equity market to become more global and more accessible. Potential beneficiaries include large caps, liquid midcaps, stock exchanges, brokers and depositories. But inflows may not be instant. Actual participation will depend on taxation, KYC, currency risk, valuations and global risk appetite. Long-term positive reform. Near-term impact: watch foreign inflow data.
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Paul Graham
Paul Graham@paulg·
@snowmaker I talk about this in "How to Do Great Work."
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Arjun Khemani
Arjun Khemani@arjunkhemani·
When I was 14, social media was my escape hatch from mediocrity. I did not relate to anyone at school. Online, I found people on the other side of the world who thought the way I did. That changed my life. It is how I ended up working with one of Silicon Valley’s most respected investors and some of the smartest engineers in the world. It is how I started a podcast and got into rooms school would never have opened for me. The UK wants to close that door for every weird, ambitious, hyper online 14-year-old. They say it is “for safety”. But there is a much greater danger in being trapped inside schools, consuming state-mandated narratives, and waiting for permission from people whose entire worldview is obedience. The internet lets kids escape the factory before the factory stamps them into shape. It lets them find mentors, employers, collaborators, friends, customers, and ideas no school would ever give them. It lets them discover that the classroom is not the world, and the adults around them are not the ceiling. A social media ban for under-16s protects the enforcement regime, not the child. Age verification is KYC with a child-safety sticker on it. First they ask if you are old enough. Then they ask who you are. Then the anonymous internet is gone. The excuse is children. The prize is obedience. Fight back, Britain.
Keir Starmer@Keir_Starmer

We are banning social media access for under 16s. These days kids must find their feet in a world where technology intrudes into every area of their life. I just can’t let that go on anymore. So we’re giving children their childhoods back.

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ujjawal
ujjawal@ujjawalasthana·
The case being made for Indian IT is that the business by its nature is to be conservative - cheap labour, margins, and a market which could punish R&D by eroding 30% value in one day. As true as it could be. IT has built our forex, the middle class, the ground the startup ecosystem stands on. Pretty much all IT company founders back startups with their own capital now - personal risk capital. The startup ecosystem must acknowledge this instead of blatant callouts. However there's a slippery slope in the argument - "They were built this way" is quickly becoming "so it's fine that they stay this way." Even a services business needs product-market fit. And PMF is not permanent - it erodes, and finding the next one takes innovation. The fiduciary logic being used to justify the conservatism is the same logic that now defies it - protecting shareholder value. The traditional headcount-arbitrage model is not the same anymore - it needs innovation. The shareholder value they optimise for is exactly what erodes if they don't innovate now.
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Sridhar Vembu
Sridhar Vembu@svembu·
We think the Economics Nobel Prize confers some kind of real economic insight about how a poor country becomes rich. It does not. If you want real insight about how a developing nation gets rich, study Lee Kuan Yew of Singapore, study Japan, study South Korea, study Taiwan, study post-Mao China. They have all lifted people up from poverty, produced widely shared prosperity but they do not produce Nobel Laureates in Economics. The book "How Asia Works" by Joe Studwell is a great read. Tldr; ignore Nobel Laureates in Economics. That is not the path to wealth.
ANI@ANI

#WATCH | On the Nobel laureate Abhijit Banerjee's statement that he does not have faith in Indian GDP numbers, India's Chief Economic Advisor (CEA), Dr V. Anantha Nageswaran, says, "... If I want the Indian economy to be bad and the statistics confirm it, then I am quiet. If the statistics don't confirm my belief or wish that the Indian economy is actually in a bad state, then the statistics are unreliable. I find this inconsistency difficult to accept." Watch the full podcast at: youtu.be/3g0VCR3KSlk?si

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Vinod Khosla
Vinod Khosla@vkhosla·
The stupidity of these @Stanford students to take the greatest opportunity for equality in humanity ever and to really free humanity and go walk out on @google and @sundarpichai that's pioneered that. Biased, idiotic, short-sighted and very selfish. Selfish because they ignored the bottom 3 billion people on this planet that could benefit from AI and they are worried about their misinformed selfish self-interest. youtube.com/watch?v=wf74VX…
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Matt Brown@maattttbrown

Stanford grads walk out as Google CEO Sundar Pichai takes the stage as commencement speaker. No mention of AI, unlike other uni speakers getting booed down this year. Story for @sfgate shortly

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Chinmay A. Singh
Chinmay A. Singh@chinmay·
Indians are blaming Infy/Murthy/Nandan for a lack of home-grown LLM. But that blame is misplaced. Infy/Murthy/Nandan could never start an AI company. They had money and they could have fund something. But that again, is their money and why should they risk it? The real culprit here is Amitabh Kant and other IAS like him. These are the people, why I left India and started two companies in the US. These are the people, why much of Indian talent left to work for US based companies. And these folks did well. Let's say the government gives me $10B and ask me to set up an AI lab in India. Am I qualified to do it? YES. Will I do it? HELL NO And you would ask why? Some would say that I have a cozy life in the US. Some would say, I have deep connection in the US, including family. All of that is correct but does not pin point the reason why I wont start a company in India. The real reason is Babu. Unlike, many In India who think competing for 1000 seats using some bullshit essay writing contest makes Babu some wizard, I have not come across one, I will hire as an analyst. Under no circumstance, I am gonna report to a babu (Happy report to Dharmendra Pradhan or Smriti Irani though). Also, under no circumstances, I will accept a position where I am unable to fire and put an IAS in jail if they reported to me and indulged in some corruption. Till this babu problem is fixed, no NRI would come to India. If I were the CIA or CCP, trying to ensure that India does not gain AI independence, I would make every effort to protect Babu fiefdom.
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Rishik Suri
Rishik Suri@RishikSuri·
Delhi is a fifteen minute city if your errands are eating slop pasta at a front for money laundering, buying a slop sherwani at a front for money laundering and witnessing the crumbling of our social fabric at a front for money laundering
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Vishal Sikka
Vishal Sikka@vsikka·
I learnt a long time ago that there is a big difference between making a living and making a life. In the times to come, AI will get increasingly better at the skills that we've used to make a living. Our imperative will be to instead make lives. Not artificial lives. Or artificial lives. But our own lives and of those we love. As machines get better at answering, and solving what they are asked, our work is to get better at asking, at making, creating, and deciding which questions are worth a life, and refusing to outsource that.
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Kshitij
Kshitij@HowAboutThatt_·
So only reason Toney is in the squad is to take pens then?
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shirish
shirish@shiri_shh·
bro immigrated from Mexico and took a $28/hr contract welding job in 2015. didn't even know what SpaceX was. they gave him $10,000 in stock and let him buy more through payroll deductions. that stake is now worth $880,000. and he's one of 4,400 employees who became millionaires on Friday. welders. technicians. cafeteria staff.
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