Abhirup Ghosh

385 posts

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Abhirup Ghosh

Abhirup Ghosh

@abhirip

innovating @sainapseai, backed by @accel | podcast host @thesilicondiet | @georgiatech

San Francisco, CA Katılım Ekim 2014
553 Takip Edilen120 Takipçiler
Abhirup Ghosh
Abhirup Ghosh@abhirip·
something about california air just inspires you. blessed to be living in the tech capital of the world.
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Abhirup Ghosh
Abhirup Ghosh@abhirip·
company brains are arguably going to be the most important factor for 2026
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neha
neha@neharedy·
more 📸 from @headout’s museum of the world 📍blr
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Abhirup Ghosh
Abhirup Ghosh@abhirip·
one less lonely product > sainapse solves customer operations: the “platform” > neura builds sainapse- our internal product agent handles building the platform. a platform that builds platforms > leo is a sainapse employee’s pa. has full context of meetings, notes, email, etc
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Abhirup Ghosh
Abhirup Ghosh@abhirip·
couldn’t agree more - working with a cracked designer changes perspectives on a lot of things and raises the bar.
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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Abhirup Ghosh retweetledi
David Cramer
David Cramer@zeeg·
Core engineering principle that I think is more important than ever: Anything that can be automated, should be automated Its not quite the same as the historical approach with determinism, but you can apply the same philosophy to a lot of the LLM-specific technologies. The first and most obvious place this matters to me: dont hand write prompts (and skills). Build a process that gives you repeatability, even if its non determnistic, because as the technology advances so will your implementations.
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Abhirup Ghosh
Abhirup Ghosh@abhirip·
indeed a huge announcement - we made this bet last year and have been using underlying crms/ticketing tools as a data store. sainapse is building the intelligence layer that connects to all your systems to solve customer operations. dm for more!
Marc Benioff@Benioff

Welcome Salesforce Headless 360: No Browser Required! Our API is the UI. Entire Salesforce & Agentforce & Slack platforms are now exposed as APIs, MCP, & CLI. All AI agents can access data, workflows, and tasks directly in Slack, Voice, or anywhere else with Salesforce Headless 360. Faster builds, agentic everything. 🚀 #Salesforce #Agentforce #AI venturebeat.com/ai/salesforce-…

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Abhirup Ghosh
Abhirup Ghosh@abhirip·
the more time I spend building ai the more convinced I am that it might be time to move to a farm and grow my own food
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Abhirup Ghosh
Abhirup Ghosh@abhirip·
the importance of design is finally getting properly rated with all the slop flying around.
Ryo Lu@ryolu_

when software had a soul there was a moment around 2005 when using a Mac felt like touching something alive. the dock bounced. the genie effect swooped. exposé scattered your windows like cards on a table. none of it was strictly necessary. all of it felt like someone cared – not about metrics, but about the feeling of using a machine. software back then had texture. it had a philosophy. you could feel the person behind it. someone made a decision to make that icon beautiful, to animate that transition just so, to write that error message with a little warmth. apps had personalities. some were weird. some were over-designed in ways that would make a modern PM flinch. but they were alive. the web was the same. personal sites were genuinely personal. blogs felt like letters. forums had regulars. you knew who made what. the internet had neighborhoods, and each one felt different. nothing was optimized for scale. things were made by people who loved what they were making. somewhere along the way, we traded all of that for growth. A/B tests flattened the edges. design systems standardized the personality out. everything got faster, smoother, more consistent – and somehow less interesting. the quirks were removed because they didn't test well. the warmth got cut because it wasn't measurable. we optimized our way into a world of things that work perfectly and feel like nothing. now every app looks the same. every interface follows the same patterns. every product speaks in the same calm, frictionless voice, siloed in their own little islands. the humanity got rounded off. and then came AI agents. and the speed got inhuman. now you can generate an entire product in an afternoon. ship a feature before lunch. spin up ten variations before anyone's had their coffee. the gap from idea to code is basically zero. which sounds incredible. and it is. but there's a catch. when making things are too easy, the slop comes for free too. mediocre things don't look obviously bad – they look fine. they work. they ship. they pass review. and now there are infinite of them. the internet is filling up with software that functions but means nothing. interfaces that are correct but feel dead. products made by agents, reviewed by no one, shipped into the void. this is the thing that keeps me up at night. not that AI will replace people who care. but that it will drown them out. here's what I still believe: the best things are made by people who couldn't help themselves. someone who lost sleep over an icon. who rewrote the same line of copy twelve times. who added an animation nobody asked for because it made the thing feel right. that obsession – that's not inefficiency. that's the whole point. AI doesn't make that irrelevant. it actually makes it rarer and more valuable. taste is not a markdown skill. caring is not a parameter. the weird, specific, "soul" thing you put into something – that can't be programmed into existence. the path forward isn't to make more slop faster. it's to finally give people with real vision the tools to make the thing they always imagined but couldn't build alone. the designer who had the idea but couldn't code. the kid who saw something nobody else saw. the person who cared too much about something most people wouldn't notice. if we get this right, we don't get a faster factory. we get a renaissance. more strange, personal, opinionated software made by teams of people who care and mean it. that's still possible. but only if the people who care get the space and tools to actually express themselves – and don't just hand the wheel to the agent and walk away.

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Abhirup Ghosh
Abhirup Ghosh@abhirip·
you gotta timebox your perfectionist designer sometimes. make edits till your hands give out and then the asset gets sent out automatically.
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Abhirup Ghosh
Abhirup Ghosh@abhirip·
> work with insanely talented people > walk to the park 5 mins away and get this view > everyone is in love with claude just a few reasons to love sf❤️
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Abhirup Ghosh
Abhirup Ghosh@abhirip·
humans are tools for agents now
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arjav jain
arjav jain@arjav17·
Thrilled to announce that I’ve joined @SainapseAI as a founding designer San Francisco is now officially my home
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Abhirup Ghosh
Abhirup Ghosh@abhirip·
the future is so exciting
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Abhirup Ghosh
Abhirup Ghosh@abhirip·
@cursor_ai seems to be the only background agent which allows you to prompt it with apis seamlessly - very neat for custom workflows.
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