Kuldeep Singh

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Kuldeep Singh

Kuldeep Singh

@Kuldeep007

I like visualizing problems | QA | Photography

Canada Katılım Mayıs 2009
150 Takip Edilen123 Takipçiler
Logan Gott
Logan Gott@LoganTGott·
Claude DESTROYS ChatGPT for marketing on LinkedIn. I put together the Claude LinkedIn Marketing Funnel (below) Claude is by FAR the best at building building marketing funnels. I use my info combined with my prompts to build out marketing strategies, assets, and funnels. My prompts are INSANE and replace entire marketing teams. I compiled ALL my Claude prompts into one doc: • Lead Magnet Generator Prompt • Lead Magnet Asset Prompt • Lead Magnet Funnel Build Out Prompt • Claude Landing Page Prompt • Personal Content Database Prompt • The Premium LinkedIn Profile Prompt • Competitor Analysis Prompt • ICP Analysis Prompt • Tech Stack Want access to the doc? → COMMENT "Claude" → FOLLOW me and I'll DM the doc!
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BrowserStack
BrowserStack@browserstack·
We’re thrilled to welcome Julio de Lima (QA Engineering Manager, Capco) to the #BreakPoint2026 speaker lineup! In his session, "Leveraging AI Code Assistants to Build, Test and Automate Tests for APIs," Julio is skipping the high-level theory and opening his IDE. He’ll break down why foundational #QA and #API architecture knowledge is the absolute prerequisite for effective #AI test automation. Grab your ticket to watch a live, start-to-finish walkthrough as Julio uses #GenAI to build an API from scratch, accelerate test design, and deploy straight into a CI/CD pipeline. Lock in your dates: 🗓️ Global: May 12-14 | ⏰ 7:30 AM PT 🗓️ APAC Exclusive: May 13-15 | ⏰ 10:00 AM IST Keep an eye out for more speaker drops as we gear up for the ultimate virtual testing event of the year! 👀 👉 Claim your spot today: browserstack.com/events/breakpo…
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Akshay 🚀
Akshay 🚀@akshay_pachaar·
How to setup your Claude code project? TL;DR Most developers skip the setup and just start prompting. That's the mistake. A proper Claude Code project lives inside a .𝗰𝗹𝗮𝘂𝗱𝗲/ folder. Start with 𝗖𝗟𝗔𝗨𝗗𝗘.𝗺𝗱 as Claude's instruction manual. Split it into a 𝗿𝘂𝗹𝗲𝘀/ folder as it grows. Add 𝗰𝗼𝗺𝗺𝗮𝗻𝗱𝘀/ for repeatable workflows, 𝘀𝗸𝗶𝗹𝗹𝘀/ for context-triggered automation, and 𝗮𝗴𝗲𝗻𝘁𝘀/ for isolated subagents. Lock down permissions in 𝘀𝗲𝘁𝘁𝗶𝗻𝗴𝘀.𝗷𝘀𝗼𝗻. There are two .𝗰𝗹𝗮𝘂𝗱𝗲/ folders: one committed with your repo, one global at ~/.𝗰𝗹𝗮𝘂𝗱𝗲/ for personal preferences and auto-memory across projects. The .𝗰𝗹𝗮𝘂𝗱𝗲/ folder is infrastructure. Treat it like one. The article below is a complete guide to 𝗖𝗟𝗔𝗨𝗗𝗘.𝗺𝗱, custom commands, skills, agents, and permissions, and how to set them up properly.
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Akshay 🚀@akshay_pachaar

x.com/i/article/2034…

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Rohan Paul
Rohan Paul@rohanpaul_ai·
New Andrej Karpathy interview: "To get the most out of the tools that have become available now, you have to remove yourself as the bottleneck. You cannot be there to prompt the next thing. You need to take yourself outside the loop. You have to arrange things such that they are completely autonomous. The more you can maximize your token throughput and not be in the loop, the better. This is the goal. So, I kind of mentioned that the name of the game now is to increase your leverage. I put in very few tokens just once in a while, and a huge amount of stuff happens on my behalf." --- From @NoPriorsPod YT channel (link in comment)
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trish
trish@_trish_xD·
Programming language you learned once but never touched again?
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Mastery Mindset
Mastery Mindset@_masterymindset·
Jensen Huang literally explains what a smart person really looks like in this age
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Dustin
Dustin@r0ck3t23·
Jensen Huang just reverse-engineered why Elon Musk operates at a speed no one on the planet can match. Three traits. The first is deletion. Huang: “He has the ability to question everything to the point where everything’s down to its minimal amount.” Most engineers solve problems by adding. Musk solves them by subtracting. Every part. Every process. Every assumption that survived because no one had the nerve to kill it. He picks it up. Asks if it’s load-bearing. If the answer is anything less than absolutely, it is gone. Not simplified. Not optimized. Removed. What survives is the skeleton. The bare physics of the problem. Nothing between intent and execution. Huang said it plainly. As minimalist as you could possibly imagine. And he does it at system scale. Not at a product level. Not at a department level. Across entire companies. Entire industries. Entire supply chains. He strips a rocket the same way he strips a meeting. Down to the load-bearing walls and nothing else. The second is presence. Huang: “He is present at the point of action. If there’s a problem, he’ll just go there and show me the problem.” Not a Slack message. Not a report filtered through four layers of people who weren’t there when it broke. He walks to the failure. Stands over it. Puts his hands on it. Most executives have never seen the actual problem their company is trying to solve. They have seen slides about it. Read summaries of it. Formed opinions about it in rooms that are nowhere near it. Musk stands over the broken hardware and does not leave until it works. That collapses the distance that buries most organizations. The gap between something breaking and the person with authority to fix it actually understanding what broke. In most companies, that gap is weeks. For Musk, it is hours. The third is the one that bends everyone around him. Huang: “When you act personally with so much urgency, it causes everybody else to act with urgency.” Every supplier has a hundred customers. Every vendor has a dozen priorities. Every manufacturer has a backlog stretching months into the future. Musk makes himself the top of every single one of those lists. Not by demanding it. By demonstrating it. When the CEO shows up at your facility at midnight. When he is moving faster than your own internal team. When his timeline makes yours look like a suggestion. You do not put him in the queue. You rearrange the queue around him. Huang watched this up close. Huang: “He does that by demonstrating.” Not by asking. Not by negotiating. Not by leveraging a contract clause. By moving so fast that everyone else’s normal pace feels like standing still. Three traits. Strip everything down. Show up at the failure. Move so fast the world rearranges around you. That is not a management philosophy. That is why one man runs six companies while entire boards cannot keep one moving.
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Kuldeep Singh
Kuldeep Singh@Kuldeep007·
Deloitte now holds video recording interviews.
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Angie Jones
Angie Jones@techgirl1908·
Excited to share that I've stepped into a new role as VP of the Agentic AI Foundation (AAIF) 🎉 As AI reshapes our industry, it's critical that this technology evolves in ways that are open and collaborative. Hosted by the Linux Foundation, @AgenticAIFdn is a neutral organization focused on advancing adoption of key open source efforts like MCP, AGENTS.md, and Goose. Our members include Anthropic, OpenAI, Google, AWS, Microsoft, and 100+ others. This work is bigger than any single company or product. I'm ecstatic to help drive AI adoption and interoperability at an industry-wide level.
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Priyanka Vergadia
Priyanka Vergadia@pvergadia·
JUST DROPPED: Anthropic's research proves AI coding tools are secretly making developers worse. "AI use impairs conceptual understanding, code reading, and debugging without delivering significant efficiency gains." -- That's the paper's actual conclusion. 17% score drop learning new libraries with AI. Sub-40% scores when AI wrote everything. 0 measurable speed improvement. → Prompting replaces thinking, not just typing → Comprehension gaps compound — you ship code you can't debug → The productivity illusion hides until something breaks in prod Here's why this changes everything: Speed metrics look fine on a dashboard. Understanding gaps don't show up until a critical failur and when they do the whole team is lost. Forcing AI adoption for "10x output" is a slow-burning technical debt nobody is measuring. Full paper: arxiv.org/abs/2601.20245
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Kuldeep Singh
Kuldeep Singh@Kuldeep007·
If non-automated testing is called ‘manual testing’, then will non-vibe coding be called ‘manual coding’? 🤔
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Josh Pigford
Josh Pigford@Shpigford·
i don't know if it's possible for an article to have *too much* good information in it, but i'd like to present this one as a candidate.
Thariq@trq212

x.com/i/article/2033…

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Reethu
Reethu@ritu_twts·
as a dev, what was your first code editor?
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Andrew Brown
Andrew Brown@andrewbrown·
Just finished recording my Claude Code Essentials Course (12 hours long) Packaging it tomorrow for @freeCodeCamp I am immediately following this course with Claude Certified Architect study course for the end of the week. Then we are setting a date for this Claude Code bootcamp.
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Bidhan
Bidhan@bidhanxcode·
Google uses Go. Meta uses Go. Microsoft uses Go. Amazon uses Go. Uber uses Go. Dropbox uses Go. Cloudflare uses Go. Twitch uses Go. Docker uses Go. Kubernetes uses Go. PayPal uses Go. Shopify uses Go. What’s stopping you from learning Go?
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Baris Akis
Baris Akis@barisakis·
@EastlondonDev Unfortunately our interview process used to be more academic than applied. One of the reasons we lost the opportunity to work with some great builders who were interested. We made a good amount of changes to simulate the actual day to day work as much as possible.
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Kuldeep Singh
Kuldeep Singh@Kuldeep007·
@AJEnglish How do you actually know US used Anthropic when targeting Iran?
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Al Jazeera English
Al Jazeera English@AJEnglish·
A day before the US attacked Iran, it had blacklisted AI company Anthropic. It then reportedly used Anthropic’s technology in its military operation in Iran. Al Jazeera’s Linh Nguyen explains the dispute between the Pentagon and Anthropic over how AI should be used in warfare.
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