Stable Genius

577 posts

Stable Genius

Stable Genius

@StableGenius

burner acc | takes on stocks, saas, travel, latam, fitness, etc

Katılım Aralık 2022
181 Takip Edilen60 Takipçiler
Stable Genius retweetledi
Department of State
Department of State@StateDept·
For nearly 7 years there have been no direct commercial flights between the U.S. and Venezuela. Under President Trump we're changing that today. Flights between Miami and Caracas restored.
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Stable Genius
Stable Genius@StableGenius·
@halflawless @factorydoge69 Zyzz is actually Jesus. All of this - looksmaxxing, self improvement, redpill, wgmi, body building forums, all leads back to the man who died for us
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factorydoge
factorydoge@factorydoge69·
zoomers have looksmaxxing and characters like clavicular who idolize the pursuit of aesthetics millenials had rippetoe, starting strength, and gomad (gallon of milk a day) which gave u a really good back squat and moobs (man boobs)
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asparagoid@asparagoid

2026 is the year I undo all the damage “Powerlifting” and Mark Rippetoe did to me No man has harmed more young men than Mark. He turned a whole generation of men into fat unaesthetic >30% bodyfat human pears with huge asses and wide birthing hips He is going to hell

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Stable Genius
Stable Genius@StableGenius·
@FidelCacheFlow None of these companies hire sales ppl without prior mil/govt/dod experience, unfortunately. Maybe if you’re an experienced SLED or DoD rep prior. Would be so sick tho
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FIDEL CACHE FLOW
FIDEL CACHE FLOW@FidelCacheFlow·
Back in my HCM days my bread and butter was selling to Defense Manufacturing companies supplying Raytheon and Lockheed and I’ve gotta say walking the plant with pre built Anti missile defense systems was pretty badass and the executive are Chads. Weaseling my way into eventually selling to the DoW would be some next lvl sh*t
FIDEL CACHE FLOW@FidelCacheFlow

Not recommendation - but if went back to AE would pivot to hard tech / defense 1.ShieldAI 2. Deepgram 3. Slingshot Aerospace 4. Second Front Systems 5. Epirus

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Stable Genius
Stable Genius@StableGenius·
@PhantomStays Brother once she's registered in the spanish tax system it's over. "There's always a way as you know" what are you trying to shill here the way is to not live in Spain anymore
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Phantom Stays
Phantom Stays@PhantomStays·
a US LLC fixes this 🇺🇸🦅🗽 God bless the US of A - a land built by entrepreneurs for entrepreneurs from all over the world. Yes you can use this epic system EVEN IF YOU DONT LIVE THERE
Capitán Bitcoin@CapitanBitcoin

Mexicana llora porque se hizo autónoma en España. Factura poco… y le meten 1.500-1.700 € extra cada trimestre solo de IVA + contribuciones. Entre eso y la cuota de autónomos, le sale más barato cerrar: “España no es para emprendedores”, dice.

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Stable Genius
Stable Genius@StableGenius·
@2suns2moons It's not the future. It never will be. It's great to visit, explore, and has an amazing history. It's a good place to live for a few kinds of people. But not for 99% of the benefits the residency shillers talk about. Living here honestly has a ton of headaches
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Morel
Morel@2suns2moons·
Is Latam really the future or is X just overrun by third world AI slop doomers trying to sell newsletters and relocation services?
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Jack’s World 🌎
Jack’s World 🌎@itsjacksworld·
This island in Brazil is 10x better for vacation AND living than the entire state of Florida. 42 beaches on one island. Crystal clear water. Mountains in background. Actual surf culture. Extremely safe with excellent infrastructure. Miami: Crowded, flat, loud, overpriced, overhyped. California: Cold water, sharks, & beyond expensive. Most Americans have never heard of Florianópolis. Their loss. Literally my favorite beach destination in the world. Go.
Jack’s World 🌎 tweet mediaJack’s World 🌎 tweet media
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Stable Genius retweetledi
foks
foks@ExaltedFoks·
I was in a sauna where this man and his friend were discussing what sort of adventure they wanted to go on for his 30th birthday. Something "extreme, unexpected, never before seen" were the approximate requirements. Cambodian river hunting, Afghani mountain climbing, Patagonian glacier trekking was floated. Yacht rentals with billionaire friends were mentioned. Bharatpur, Ulaanbaatar, Nairobi. Ice, volcano, jungle. The entire world traversed in a single conversation. And I pondered, the ridiculousness of a man constructing adventure, rather than suffering it as it arrives. True adventure is not purchased on your phone, it is inflicted. It is illness, it is heartbreak, it is grief. The man scheduling an adventure is fleeing the one waiting for him at home. Attendre et espérer.
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Stable Genius
Stable Genius@StableGenius·
@Indian_Bronson Agree with the sentiment but would argue that Bukele is just the other side of the coin and a US employee, upper middle management. Difference is the outcomes he’s able to drive for his people
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Stable Genius
Stable Genius@StableGenius·
it's actually nearly impossible/very difficult to get these tax benefits as an American, especially if you're paid in dollars or capitalize gains on investments made while you were in America. And then is it worth the 300k investment + actually having to live in Panama? Probably not
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spor
spor@sporadica·
i fondly remember the days of living in Spain where my rent was $300/month. i thought making six-figures would make me insanely rich. now i live in SF and pay 10x that on rent and then so much more. 100k seems like poverty wages. it’s just the truth. a reminder that everything is subjective. and what truly matters is not a $$ amount, but how much happiness and fulfillment and purpose you can cultivate and maintain. this, and only this, is key to being “rich.” it’s not a dollar amount, but a way of life. and you can find this way of life at any salary if you try hard enough.
Hugo@striedinger

At what net worth would you feel rich?

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Stable Genius
Stable Genius@StableGenius·
Seems like we work in the same space :) perhaps I spoke to soon on openclaw, if you know of a governance layer that can enforce global tool permissions on openclaw like an mcp gateway etc I’d like to hear about it. I don’t think it exists atm. Your 2. Is changing already, imo. We are building agents where their identity and permissions are not tied to users and need to be managed as if they were employees. It’s an exciting space but hard to get to for regulated companies esp bigger ones
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John Thilén
John Thilén@JohnThilen·
1. I am mainly concerned with integrity. All relevant systems require multiple people, and sometimes also agents or scripts, to approve changes. This operates at a higher level of abstraction. Most systems also enforce some level of egress filtering, which does not depend on whether the actor is an agent. 2. Agents that represent users inherit their permissions, more or less. Agents with their own credentials cannot be modified without a batch of approvals and checks, similar to how developers handle code changes. 3. Injections cannot be fully prevented, so staff are informed about the lethal trifecta. In practice, this means not using these systems to read email, CVs, or other external data without proper filtering. This is an area for improvement to enable broader use cases.
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Aaron Levie
Aaron Levie@levie·
Another week on the road meeting with a couple dozen IT and AI leaders from large enterprises across banking, media, retail, healthcare, consulting, tech, and sports, to discuss agents in the enterprise. Some quick takeaways: * Clear that we’re moving from chat era of AI to agents that use tools, process data, and start to execute real work in the enterprise. Complementing this, enterprises are often evolving from “let a thousand flowers bloom” approach to adoption to targeted automation efforts applied to specific areas of work and workflow. * Change management still will remain one of the biggest topics for enterprises. Most workflows aren’t setup to just drop agents directly in, and enterprises will need a ton of help to drive these efforts (both internally and from partners). One company has a head of AI in every business unit that roles up to a central team, just to keep all the functions coordinated. * Tokenmaxxing! Most companies operate with very strict OpEx budgets get locked in for the year ahead, so they’re going through very real trade-off discussions right now on how to budget for tokens. One company recently had an idea for a “shark tank” style way of pitching for compute budget. Others are trying to figure out how to ration compute to the best use-cases internally through some hierarchy of needs (my words not theirs). * Fixing fragmented and legacy systems remain a huge priority right now. Most enterprises are dealing with decades of either on-prem systems or systems they moved to the cloud but that still haven’t been modernized in any meaningful way. This means agents can’t easily tap into these data sources in a unified way yet, so companies are focused on how they modernize these. * Most companies are *not* talking about replacing jobs due to agents. The major use-cases for agents are things that the company wasn’t able to do before or couldn’t prioritize. Software upgrades, automating back office processes that were constraining other workflows, processing large amounts of documents to get new business or client insights, and so on. More emphasis on ways to make money vs. cut costs. * Headless software dominated my conversations. Enterprises need to be able to ensure all of their software works across any set of agents they choose. They will kick out vendors that don’t make this technically or economically easy. * Clear sense that it can be hard to standardize on anything right now given how fast things are moving. Blessing and a curse of the innovation curve right now - no one wants to get stuck in a paradigm that locks them into the wrong architecture. One other result of this is that companies realize they’re in a multi-agent world, which means that interoperability becomes paramount across systems. * Unanimous sense that everyone is working more than ever before. AI is not causing anyone to do less work right now, and similar to Silicon Valley people feel their teams are the busiest they’ve ever been. One final meta observation not called out explicitly. It seems that despite Silicon Valley’s sense that AI has made hard things easy, the most powerful ways to use agents is more “technical” than prior eras of software. Skills, MCP, CLIs, etc. may be simple concepts for tech, but in the real world these are all esoteric concepts that will require technical people to help bring to life in the enterprise. This both means diffusion will take real work and time, but also everyone’s estimation of engineering jobs is totally off. Engineers may not be “writing” software, but they will certainly be the ones to setup and operate the systems that actually automate most work in the enterprise.
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Stable Genius
Stable Genius@StableGenius·
Questions CISOs have in my day to day convos: 1. Yes we need agents, but how do we have full audit trail of every action/who called it/etc 2. Enforcement of global agent tool permissions at security level and not letting users/devs decide 3. How to prevent prompt injection/pii leak/kill switch based on certain prompts/enforce sensitive info masking Openclaw isn’t built for this imo. You just can’t trust individual users to set up governance correctly. But yes agree that companies want to and can build quality agents easily.
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John Thilén
John Thilén@JohnThilen·
@StableGenius @ejc3 @levie I work at a serious regulated company, and we are slowly getting to the point where openclaw (or Hermes, since times are changing) is possible. We already have a high quality level on everything we do, so ensuring quality in what an agent does is not that big of a stretch.
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Stable Genius
Stable Genius@StableGenius·
@ejc3 @levie Because there are a lot of issues with governance, security and enablement to achieve this. The majority of corporate America is not ready. Also no serious regulated company can use openclaw.
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EJ Campbell
EJ Campbell@ejc3·
Surprised not more talk about *claws, where the person is in charge but their agent is doing as much as possible in the background through cron’s and parallel sessions. Which would then argue that every employee in the world should have at least one or few computers doing work 24x7.
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Stable Genius
Stable Genius@StableGenius·
You keep trying to attract leads, but you’d do much more service to your business if you were upfront about the well known, real risks with Brazil. Anyone can ask Claude to verify what you’re saying and learn that it’s false. The winners in Brazil have inside knowledge and you’re revealing that you do not.
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Drew Crawford
Drew Crawford@drewcrawford_·
Brazil feeds a billion people. It holds 12% of the world’s freshwater. It produces 87% of its electricity from renewables at half the cost of American power. It holds 94% of global niobium, the second-largest reserves of rare earths, and the second-largest reserves of graphite. Its stock market trades at 9.25x forward earnings. The S&P 500 trades at 21x. An American investor pays more than twice as much per dollar of expected earnings for exposure to the US economy than for the country that holds the minerals, the water, the food, and the energy that the 21st century runs on. Someone explain to me how that math works. Read why I’m bullish on Brazil below 👇
Drew Crawford@drewcrawford_

x.com/i/article/2037…

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Stable Genius retweetledi
HIGH PLANES Drifter
HIGH PLANES Drifter@the_engi_nerd·
Bro how is he boobmogging her
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Stable Genius
Stable Genius@StableGenius·
@hinesjalex @NickAbraham12 This is the correct response. You can build anything in-house very quickly. Your spend will be on tokens and agents not SaaS seats. I think there will be lots of products, but you’ll need fewer reps. If you’re a sales rep you need to learn and act accordingly
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Alex Hines
Alex Hines@hinesjalex·
@NickAbraham12 I disagree. The enterprise software moat used to be complexity. Companies are already building in-house with nimble teams/agents. Over time fewer products to sell = fewer reps. Software is a race to the bottom.
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Nick Abraham
Nick Abraham@NickAbraham12·
Enterprise Sales jobs are the safest on the market right now. No matter how good models get, nobody is buying a 12-month, $500k/year deal from an AI agent.
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Deva Hazarika
Deva Hazarika@devahaz·
This is the same dumbass thing as claims of Jews getting “interest free” loans. These loans are just workarounds to get around religious prohibitions against interest by charging other fees to make the money other lenders make from interest.
Deva Hazarika tweet media
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