Vineet Devaiah ⚡️

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Vineet Devaiah ⚡️

Vineet Devaiah ⚡️

@VineetDevaiah

CEO @Teliportme; 🎙@ballisbaepod 🏀. Exited 2 companies and invest in Early stage Climate tech companies. Alum @500GlobalVC @Cornell @ucberkely @idealab

Luxembourg Katılım Nisan 2010
1.6K Takip Edilen2.2K Takipçiler
Richie
Richie@richiemcilroy·
congrats to the @Cap user who just imported 3000 Loom videos directly into Cap. me and my AWS bill thank you for your service.
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Adam Pietrasiak
Adam Pietrasiak@pie6k·
About yesterday's cancellation email Yesterday, some of you (24k people…) received an email saying your Screen Studio subscription had been canceled. We've seen the concern in your replies. Here's what actually happened and what we've done about it. What happened The cancellation was a human error on our payment provider's side. It wasn't an attack, and it wasn't connected to your account or activity. What we've done Our payment provider is restoring all affected subscriptions automatically, so you don't need to take any action. PayPal subscriptions will take longer to restore, but we'll make sure your access to Screen Studio won't be interrupted. Your access to the app was not interrupted at any point. All your work, recordings, and settings remained available the entire time. Your data is safe There was no breach. No account was accessed without authorization. No customer information was lost, exposed, or compromised. If your subscription still shows as canceled, or anything seems wrong with your billing or app access, email us at team@screen.studio. We'll fix it directly. I'm genuinely sorry for the confusion and stress this caused.
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Vineet Devaiah ⚡️
Vineet Devaiah ⚡️@VineetDevaiah·
@mwseibel @avysotsky I am not sure this 80-20 split is true anymore. Are there any official sources for this.? I would say if you look at all the top earners they are mostly *organized* Not hating on Airbnb but that’s the reality - good for customers overall
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Michael Seibel
Michael Seibel@mwseibel·
@avysotsky If you knew that Airbnb was 80%+ individual and tiny operators and less than 2% of housing inventory in any vacation market - would that change your view? Is it possible that other more powerful forces are creating the outcomes you don’t like?
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Vineet Devaiah ⚡️
Vineet Devaiah ⚡️@VineetDevaiah·
@devaiahPB I have been working on something similar. It’s been super useful :) not very useful because I know I will gain that weight back but this is just the start. I think the best version of this is yet to be seen .
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Devaiah Bopanna
Devaiah Bopanna@devaiahPB·
Over the past 40 days, Gemini has helped me lose 12 kilos. Forty days ago, my reports were concerning. Had zero motivation to figure this. So I put it all on Gemini and literally asked it to help me improve the numbers. I told it, “I live in xyz area, you tell me what to order and from where.” I stopped thinking about it myself. I would ask Gemini, and it would tell me what to order. Slowly, it started learning more about me. It started asking me to walk a bit, and I listened. If I went out for dinner, I would just upload a bad picture of the place, and within seconds it would figure out where I was and tell me exactly what to order. Every meal - just a normal picture uploaded with no overwhelming feeling of having to manually break down what I was eating - and it would quite accurately estimate the macros and keep a record of them. Then slowly, I started uploading my tickets and hotel bookings to this bookmarked health chat. It would literally remember when I was checking out, where I was, and help me order accordingly. I stopped thinking about food and what to do. Then good habits compound, so I started putting in some effort myself too. I’m much healthier and lighter than when I started 40 days ago. It’s the fastest I’ve ever lost weight and gotten healthy. And to think I don’t even have to screenshot my Fitbit data every now and then to give it more details and that they have built it around solving the problem I was already using it for - just take my fkn money, I say. I think AI coaches can bring about genuinely positive changes because they’re more well-read than the most well-read trainer on the planet, and you have real-time access 24/7. And when you start giving it more context around your life it compounds in its abilities. Of course, it comes with some hallucinations and inaccuracies, but if you’re not smart enough to navigate that, you’d probably be worse off even without using it. PS: have I turned my life over fully? definitely not. I know I’ll be back to the weight I started, just don’t know by when. 😂
Google Health@googlehealth

Gives new meaning to “light as a feather.” Pre-order your lightweight, smart, screenless Google #FitbitAir starting at $99.99¹: goo.gle/4cZ8JNv Available May 26. ¹Price varies depending on territory.

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Daniel Vassallo
Daniel Vassallo@dvassallo·
@VineetDevaiah @SommerChase Yep, my 11yr old started it and built most of the functionality via cursor / opus. I'm mostly polishing, fixing bugs, monetizing :)
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Farza 🇵🇰🇺🇸
Farza 🇵🇰🇺🇸@FarzaTV·
Here's the new Clicky. It's the simplest interface in the world to talk to AI + spawn agents. It builds Mac apps. It does research to help you find IG micro-influencers. It interacts with native Apple Notes, Calendar, Reminders. Built for consumers, 0 setup. Try today, free.
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Vineet Devaiah ⚡️ retweetledi
Shams Charania
Shams Charania@ShamsCharania·
San Antonio Spurs' Keldon Johnson has won the 2025-26 NBA Sixth Man of the Year award.
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webadderall
webadderall@webadderall·
Day 39 School's starting up tomorrow and I have 20+ missing assignments so didn't have time to make a video update today. Super grateful for all of you for joining the journey. Recordly started out as a small side project that has now hit 10K+ stars and many thousands of users! I still remember tweeting into the void on Day 1 with a new project I had made. Will continue giving this project my all. Screen recorders should not be locked behind a $299 paywall.
webadderall tweet media
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Aron Fromm
Aron Fromm@aronfromm·
A little short I made about Norm.
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Daniel Vassallo
Daniel Vassallo@dvassallo·
I've been in the process of building a custom home for 5 years. Bought the land in 2021. Got the building permit this year. Haven't started construction yet. During those 5 years, I accumulated thousands of emails with dozens of architects, engineers, surveyors, contractors, government agencies, title companies, and others. Hundreds of PDFs I opened once and never found again. My project management system was email search and my own memory. I could always find individual emails when I needed them. What I couldn't do was see the project. How much money have we actually spent, and on what? Who are all the contractors we talked to, and how did we find each one? What happened with the easement, not one email about it, but the full arc across three years? Why did we stop using the original surveyor? The answers were all in my inbox. But they were spread across hundreds of threads. No single email contained the story. The story only existed in the connections between them. So I tried something. I pointed OpenClaw at my full email inbox and said: read all my emails in chronological order and figure out what happened with this project over the last 5 years. Build me a timeline. Find all the documents. Track the money. Map the people. That's it. I didn't sort anything. I didn't classify anything. I didn't tell it which threads mattered. I just pointed at the inbox and let it work. And it worked way better than I expected. It found 1,850 emails across 450 threads involving 58 people at 35 organizations. From that, it produced 511 timeline events describing what actually happened over 5 years. Not "Daniel emailed the architect" but "Easement delay threatens grading permit" or "architect warns the entire permit depends on securing the neighbor's access agreement." Real project history in PM language. It identified 690 documents and classified each one: invoice, permit, survey map, legal agreement, environmental report, estimate, and so on, and it linked them to the timeline events that referenced them. It extracted 170 finance records from email bodies and PDF attachments. Invoices, payments, estimates, and receipts with amounts, dates, and payees pulled from messy documents. It mapped out 58 contacts with their roles, their organizations, and how they related to the project over time. All interlinked. Click a timeline event, see the emails that produced it and the documents attached. Click a payment, trace it back to the invoice and the email thread. Click a person, see every event they were involved in. It built a dashboard on top of it and for the first time in 5 years, I could actually see the whole project. The full arc. Every dollar. Every person. Every decision. Stitched together from raw correspondence into something I can sit down and browse. The key insight for me was realizing this is basically an ETL process: Extract, Transform, and Load. The emails are the source data. The agent does the extraction from emails and loading into a database. But the really powerful part is the Transform: the LLM reads the raw correspondence with enough context to do intelligent enrichment across hundreds of threads spanning months and years. And by enrichment I don't mean summarization. I mean it actually reconstructed the narrative of the project. It traced how we almost hired the wrong well driller. We originally hired one company, paid a deposit, and were ready to go. Then the architect heard from someone in his network that they weren't reliable. We pivoted to a different driller who came recommended through a chain of referrals the agent traced back to its origin. The new company came out, drilled 140 feet, hit an artesian well with water pressure above ground level, and finished in two weeks. The original deposit got refunded. The agent reconstructed that entire sequence from first contact to final invoice, across dozens of emails and multiple contractors, and presented it as one coherent story. It reconstructed the full permit saga. Four separate permits with the county, each with its own cycle of applications, reviews, correction letters, resubmissions, and approvals. Years of back and forth. The agent built the complete timeline for each permit and linked every document and payment to the right stage. It tracked the money flow end to end. Not just "we paid the architect X." It found every invoice, matched them to the work described in the email threads, categorized the spending, and produced a financial history of the entire project broken down by architect, engineer, surveyor, contractor, county fees, and everything else. It mapped out relationships between people that I had half-forgotten. Which engineer referred which surveyor. Which contractor's crew member later became a separate vendor. Which county reviewer handled which permit. All of it was in the email, I just never had the time to stitch it together myself. One of the most fun things it did was writing honest personality profiles for each contact based purely on their communication style. How responsive they are. How they handle pushback. Whether they tend to over-promise. Whether they're the kind of person who answers at 11pm or takes five days to reply. Reading an AI's unfiltered take on the people you've been doing business with for years, based on nothing but their emails, is surprisingly entertaining and uncomfortably accurate. The thing that surprised me most is how much structure was already hiding in the email. I didn't add information. The agent found what was already there. The timeline, the document graph, the money flows, the cast of characters. It was all latent in the correspondence. Five years of decisions and negotiations and payments, all recorded in email, just never connected. I think a lot of people are sitting on projects like this without realizing it. Your renovation emails are a project database waiting to be assembled. Your legal correspondence is a case file. Your immigration threads are an application history. The raw material has been accumulating for months or years. It's rich, timestamped, and complete. It's just in a format designed for messaging, not for understanding. Point an agent at it. Let it read everything. Let it do the transform. The whole story was in my inbox the entire time. I just needed something that could read all of it at once.
Daniel Vassallo tweet mediaDaniel Vassallo tweet media
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Jarne
Jarne@Jarneoffgrid·
@VineetDevaiah @dvassallo People prefer it to Austin and Houston because the heat is dry here and not humid. That being said, we'll probably visit family in the hot months.
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Jarne
Jarne@Jarneoffgrid·
@dvassallo Meanwhile I'm spending $60k on my 10acres in Texas. Oh and that includes the cabin I'm building with all off grid infrastructure.
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Daniel Vassallo
Daniel Vassallo@dvassallo·
Over time, excluding land purchases:
Daniel Vassallo tweet media
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Vineet Devaiah ⚡️
Vineet Devaiah ⚡️@VineetDevaiah·
@Charles_SEO Is the problem the number of pages ? I would imagine generating 200+ pages with high quality content but of similar topic should be ok ?
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Vikas Reddy
Vikas Reddy@vikasreddy·
Used a brand new LightTwist sports studio to record some Elite Eight highlights. Recorded in a single take from my home office with just an iPhone, a browser, and LightTwist.com ! Everything runs in realtime, can record or stream live. Comment or DM to try it free!
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Shaan Puri
Shaan Puri@ShaanVP·
I'm secretly launching a 2nd youtube channel reply "send it" and I'll dm it to you
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