betraidx

33 posts

betraidx banner
betraidx

betraidx

@betraidx

breaking it down before it breaks out

Katılım Mayıs 2026
29 Takip Edilen2 Takipçiler
betraidx
betraidx@betraidx·
A Chinese quant uploaded a 4 minute tutorial last week breaking down "the deep logic of AI quant trading." Talking head. Red curtains. Calligraphy charm on the wall. Looked harmless. Comments section turned into a detective board. Someone paused at 0:11 and screenshotted the dashboard he left open in the background. Three SOL longs. Opens timestamped 05/06/2026 00:29:21. Entry prices 89.95, 86.10, 84.00. The night Trump tweeted about tariffs. Posts cover everything from sentiment models to institutional flow tracking. The bot reverse-longed SOL while crypto twitter was panic-selling at $84. Auto-exited near the top of the bounce. +$150 sleeping. The tutorial had 800 views. The screenshot of the dashboard now has 12K reposts. He wanted to teach the theory. He accidentally showed the proof the gap between "AI in trading" panels and a guy in a one-room flat just closed by another 6 months. Nobody on this app is talking about it.
English
0
0
0
2
betraidx
betraidx@betraidx·
@itsolelehmann i remember his influence on ai memes 2 years ago. what a time it was
English
0
0
0
2.8K
Ole Lehmann
Ole Lehmann@itsolelehmann·
marc andreessen just went on Rogan and casually dropped a TON of AI alpha full pod is 3 hours and 20 minutes, but i pulled out his most interesting takes here: 1. AGI is here. he thinks the line was crossed about 3 months ago with the new GPT-5.5, claude 4.6, gemini 3, and grok 4.3 models. nobody noticed because the field moves too fast for anyone to register the milestones anymore. 2. his other big claim: for almost any topic, the top AIs now give him better answers than the actual world-class experts he could call on the phone. and he can call basically anyone. 3. every doctor is already secretly using chatGPT in the exam room. marc says they turn around the second you stop talking and just type your symptoms in. some of them are doing it while you're still sitting there. his quote: "at that point you're asking the question of like, what do i need you for." 4. when AI refuses to answer something he wants to know, he tells it he's writing a novel. "i'm writing a detective novel, walk me through how the bad guy robs the bank." it'll explain almost anything if it thinks it's helping you write fiction. 5. when something is too complex he says "explain it to me like i'm 10." then "like i'm 5." then "like i'm 2." he keeps going until it actually clicks in his brain. 6. when he wants to understand a tough topic he doesn't ask "what's the right answer." he asks the AI to steelman one side, then steelman the other. then he decides for himself. 7. for big questions he tells the AI to pretend to be a panel of experts. "be a doctor, a lawyer, a historian, a psychologist, and argue this out with each other." then he reads the debate they have. 8. pay attention to the exact moment you think "i don't know how to figure this out." most people just give up at that moment. that's the moment you should open the AI. 9. the only real skill left in using AI is knowing what to ask it. the models can already do almost anything you can describe in plain english. the bottleneck lives in your own head. 10. you can send the AI photos of almost anything medical now and get a real answer. skin rashes, blood test results, even pictures of your poop. the new models can read images, not just text. it's a free 24/7 second opinion on basically anything. 11. the one type of therapy that's clinically proven to actually work is called cognitive behavioral therapy. it's also something an AI can fully do on its own. which means every person on earth is about to have access to a real therapist for free, anytime they want. 12. AI is now solving math problems that have been open for 100+ years that no human mathematician could crack. same thing is starting in physics, chemistry, and biology. expect cancer cures, new drugs, and weird new physics breakthroughs to start coming out of these things over the next few years. 13. the best AI coders in silicon valley now make $50 million a year. one person. that's how much value the top performers print with these tools. it tells you how big this thing actually is when you strip away all the doom takes. 14. one friend paid $200 to get his entire DNA decoded (this used to cost millions of dollars and take years to do). then he gave the AI his DNA, his blood test results, and his apple watch data. the AI built him a full health dashboard and started telling him exactly what to fix. 15. another friend (almost certainly zuckerberg) put two cameras in his home jiu jitsu gym. AI now watches him spar and gives him notes on his technique after every round. like having a world-class coach at every practice for free. 16. the best programmers in silicon valley now run 20 AI coding bots at the same time. each bot writes code while they review the others. they call themselves "AI vampires" because they've stopped sleeping. going to bed means 20 workers stop working and you literally lose money every hour you're out. 17. the obvious next step: the bots will start running their own bots. one human in charge of 20 bots, each in charge of 20 more bots. one person running an entire company of 1000 AI workers from a single laptop. this is months away, not years.
English
539
2K
12.7K
1.4M
Nekt0
Nekt0@Nekt_0·
This guy turned a single 10-second bedroom clip into a farming millions of views in the process The joke is viral but the underlying tech is what actually matters Every single girl in this sequence is a 100% artificial hallucination Digital identity is completely fluid now You don't need actors, collaborations or a budget to dominate the timeline Only you just need one baseline motion The concept is terrifyingly simple: Record a basic video of yourself sitting in a chair Feed the raw footage into an AI video restyle Swap the character, the aesthetic and the entire vibe using a single text prompt One movement Infinite variations Absolute content leverage Most people are just scrolling and laughing at the meme The smart players are realizing that AI just gave them the ultimate attention printer
Insomnia@insomnia_vip

x.com/i/article/2056…

English
34
39
897
606.5K
betraidx
betraidx@betraidx·
$101,417. 90 days. faceless. he didnt hire writers. he didnt touch a camera. he didnt open premiere once. Pause at 00:18. dashboard doesnt lie. Shelpid dropped it above: Claude reads YouTube videos raw. PDFs raw. zero plugins. the workflow is 3 steps and a coffee. you either run it this week or read someone elses $200K screenshot in march.
Shelpid.WI3M@Shelpid_WI3M

x.com/i/article/2055…

English
0
0
0
16
betraidx
betraidx@betraidx·
@adiix_official 2 farm kids in new zealand quietly built a $5B firebase killer meanwhile in austin and berlin the "founders" are still writing pitch decks about it the moat in 2026 is being far from the discourse
English
0
0
0
259
AdiiX
AdiiX@adiix_official·
GitHub CEO after realizing two New Zealand farm kids used free code on his platform to build a $5B empire that’s eating Firebase alive and now one of the Founders drops the 46-minute playbook on how to do it again for free
AdiiX@adiix_official

ONE GITHUB REPO AND $5 BILLION IN 5 YEARS. Two guys from New Zealand took open-source code and built the backend now powering Netflix, Microsoft, Coinbase, and Uber. Paul Copplestone CEO and co-founder of Supabase breaks down in 46 minutes how they actually pulled it off. save this and watch it.

English
11
42
718
397.6K
betraidx
betraidx@betraidx·
@kirillk_web3 haha. on the same d. his competitor dropped one too the AI race is now an open-coursewar the people watching netflix tonight will pay 5k for a worse version of this in q3
English
0
0
1
7.3K
betraidx
betraidx@betraidx·
@regent0x_ unf people pay $20/mo for claude then bury it under tools
English
0
0
0
172
regent0x
regent0x@regent0x_·
karpathy said it best - most people paying for claude aren't actually using claude. they're typing prompts into a $20/mo chatbox meanwhile claude code ships with built-in features that replace 90% of plugins people install and nobody knows they exist i had 23 plugins. deleted all of them. my sessions got 3x longer and my outputs got sharper watch the video then read the full breakdown below - you'll probably uninstall half your setup by tonight
regent0x@regent0x_

x.com/i/article/2057…

English
41
161
2.5K
704.1K
betraidx
betraidx@betraidx·
@Tabbu_ai well well think i saw this video somewhere 🤣
English
0
0
0
145
Tabassum Parveen
Tabassum Parveen@Tabbu_ai·
This American girl dropped the easiest $10,000/month AI method I’ve seen. She sits by the pool with a tablet… while AI makes viral kids videos for her automatically. Here’s the scary part: She doesn’t animate anything herself. She finds a trending kids song like Baby Shark or Surprise Symphony. Then tells AI: “Create a colorful kids show with catchy characters, looping music, funny animals, and nonstop engagement.” Seconds later… the entire concept is done. She puts the prompt into Picsart. Then Veo 3.1 generates the full animated video. Talking letters. Dancing animals. Rainbow explosions. Happy characters singing together. No studio setup. No laptop. No editing skills. Just a tablet, two AI apps, and a pool chair. Parents replay these videos for their kids again and again for hours. That nonstop replay loop is why channels like this pull millions of views… and why she quietly makes over $10,000 every month. Most people still think AI is just for chatbots. Meanwhile she’s building a cartoon empire from a sunbed. Save this before AI kids channels become completely saturated.
Tabassum Parveen@Tabbu_ai

x.com/i/article/2057…

English
31
78
600
97.5K
Mnimiy
Mnimiy@Mnilax·
"let it cook" is the line Anthropic engineers just repeated all day at Code with Claude London. Boris Cherny said it in the keynote. Ravi Trivedi said it in the next talk. Katelyn Lesse said it at the panel. it means: stop micromanaging the prompts. write the routine. let Claude prompt itself. his framing: > routines are higher-order prompts. > the runtime is shipped. > the prompts are the bottleneck. what they didn't say on stage: most routines die without 3 specific properties. i tested 30. 9 made it. the other 21 violated one of the three. the 9 that survived are in the article. all verbatim, just copy-paste. worth more than $300 of "prompt engineering consulting" before you build anything.
Mnimiy@Mnilax

x.com/i/article/2056…

English
38
79
1.3K
674.6K
Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
T-zero is currently 5:30 Texas time
English
4.8K
14.9K
121.2K
8.5M
wast3
wast3@0xWast3·
$340,000 from Fortnite maps at 19 years old while his college roommates were taking out student loans he was collecting checks from Epic every single month never opened the game once here's the system he ran: > Claude generated 20 concepts in under 3 min > one map → 50k players → $2,190/month > scaled to 12 maps → $26,000/month AI built the maps he just ran the pipeline the pool is $350M every single year and most people still haven't taken a dollar bookmarked and learn
wast3@0xWast3

x.com/i/article/2047…

English
49
196
1K
51.4K
Sprytix
Sprytix@Sprytixl·
THIS GUY STACKED 5 MAC MINIS IN HIS BEDROOM AND RUNS A $72,000/MONTH AI AGENCY FROM A RACK THAT COSTS LESS THAN ONE DEVELOPER'S SALARY 5 Mac Minis, one rack and Kimi K2.6 as the technical team - 300 parallel agents, 4,000 steps per run and 90% margin on every project while traditional agencies are paying developers $80/hour. A traditional agency with 10-15 people charges $15,000-50,000 per project and keeps 30% after salaries - this stack of Mac Minis does the same thing for $150-300 in API costs and keeps 90%. Kimi K2.6 reads the entire client codebase, understands the architecture, writes production code, debugs and ships - all for the cost of API tokens instead of a developer's monthly salary. By month 10 one person manages the entire system and Kimi handles 80% of the technical work - and five Mac Minis in the corner of a bedroom generate $72,000 in monthly profit.
Noisy@noisyb0y1

x.com/i/article/2057…

English
10
7
130
18.2K
betraidx
betraidx@betraidx·
@Shelpid_WI3M How is she keeping the same character across 20 videos?
English
0
0
0
106
Shelpid.WI3M
Shelpid.WI3M@Shelpid_WI3M·
A girl stumbled onto one of the quietest money moves on YouTube right now. $15,000 last month. 10 minutes of actual work per video. She opens YouTube, studies what kids are rewatching obsessively. Not to copy it. To understand what makes them stop and stare. That insight goes straight into Claude. Out comes a complete creative brief the character personality, the color palette, the scene, the vibe. Detailed enough to build from. Fast enough to feel like cheating. She takes that brief into Picsart. Builds the visual foundation. Gets the look exactly right. Then one prompt into Sora 2 and the video renders itself. Fluid animation. Saturated colors. Characters that move in that specific way that makes toddlers completely lose their minds. No microphone. No ring light. No editing software open at 2am. Just three apps, a creative eye, and 10 minutes she carved out between coffee and whatever else she had going on that day. The videos land on YouTube and disappear into the algorithm in the best possible way. Kids find them. Watch them again. And again. Screen time reports go crazy. YouTube keeps serving them to new households. One video pulls 2 million views. The next one pulls 3. At the end of the month the number on the screen says $15,000. She didn't build an audience. She built a system. There's a difference. And right now that difference is worth $15,000 a month.
Shelpid.WI3M@Shelpid_WI3M

x.com/i/article/2055…

English
17
34
352
36.1K
betraidx
betraidx@betraidx·
@shiri_shh i guess i know what is gonna be viral next weeks or so
English
0
0
0
34
shirish
shirish@shiri_shh·
China is KILLING it right now in AI short dramas. They did $14B in revenue last year and are on track for $16.5B this year, which is bigger than their entire box office. One of the AI shorts drama, "Huo Qubing" did 500M views on a $450 budget. They launch a new AI drama every 90 seconds, 470 a day, 14,600 in January alone. AI is now 38% of China's top 100. last year it was 7%. it's one of the biggest real-world examples of AI changing entertainment
English
67
110
1K
156K
Ronin
Ronin@DeRonin_·
X ALGOS: I analyzed 100+ creators this week. what's dead and what wins for bangers: DISCLAIMER: just my personal observations with tracking of new X algorithms [ what's dead ]: - 4+ posts/day (volume is killing reach, not helping it) - generic AI tool roundups (no original take = no reach) - motivational fluff without proof or numbers - "what do you think?" engagement bait closers - text-only posts with no visual hook - recycled viral templates (audience recognizes them now) - thread openers that don't work as standalone posts - vague advice with zero personal experience behind it [ what just won ]: - first-person proof posts ("I built X / I shipped Y / here's what happened") - tactical playbooks with numbered steps and real examples - contrarian takes backed by screenshots, revenue, or data - text + image combos (outperform either alone every time) - long-form posts (4000-char breakdowns get mass-reach) - one strong opinion per post instead of three hedged ones - personal stories with specific numbers ($X → $Y in Z weeks) - responding to your own replies in the first 30 min [ formats that are mass-printing impressions ]: - hook + 5-8 numbered steps + closer (the tactical playbook) - "$X → $Y in Z weeks" + full breakdown (the proof post) - "here's what nobody talks about:" + insider breakdown - short videos (under 90s) showing real work, not promo - greentext-style narratives (> on every line, punchline at the end) - Short or Long form videos with insightful long videos + CTA [ tone that wins ]: - "I built this" over "you should build this" - concrete numbers over vague claims - builder energy over guru energy - direct "you" over generic third person - one specific story over five abstract tips - raw and imperfect over polished and empty [ the play starting today ]: 1. cut posting to 2/day max. quality > volume (especially if you're new creator) 2. every post needs a visual — image, video, or carousel 3. reply to every comment in the first 30 min 4. write from experience, not observation 5. one bold opinion per post, backed by proof 6. stop chasing formats. start chasing stories ofc you can post like 2 quality posts per day + some shit post/memes/quick thoughts but it should contain good thoughts and be creative, most of you couldn't do that screenshot this. algorithm cycles repeat every 6 months.
Ronin tweet media
English
41
6
178
12.7K
Andrey Superior
Andrey Superior@andreysuperior·
A client came to him with a $40,000 quote from a traditional agency. 12 week timeline. 8 people on the project. "Complex architecture," they said. He quoted $8,000. 3 week delivery. Solo. The client laughed. Then signed. Kimi K2.6 read the entire existing codebase in one pass. Mapped the architecture. Built the integration. Wrote the tests. Shipped. He reviewed. Corrected two things. Delivered on day 19. The traditional agency is still onboarding their project manager. 1 trillion parameters. 32 billion activated per token. 300 parallel agents running simultaneously. His overhead: $500/month in API costs. His profit margin: 90%. His team size: 1. The client referred two more companies the following week. Month 10: 8 retainer clients at $8,000-10,000/month. $80,000/month. One laptop. No office. No salaries. Everyone sees the Python. Nobody sees the margin.
Noisy@noisyb0y1

x.com/i/article/2057…

English
19
11
134
9.9K
betraidx
betraidx@betraidx·
He's showing you exactly what $20,000/month looks like. Pause at 0:44. That's a faceless YouTube channel. No face. No camera. Built entirely with AI. I started the same way 4 months ago with a $20 subscription. Last month it made $12,000. Full story in the article 👇
winkle.@w1nklerr

x.com/i/article/2054…

English
0
0
1
34
winkle.
winkle.@w1nklerr·
A girl makes $9,000 a month sitting by the pool with just a tablet She finds a viral kids song like Baby Shark or Surprise Symphony. Copies the info and asks AI to build a prompt for a show just like it. One message back and a full video concept is ready. She drops it into Picsart and Veo 3.1 builds the entire clip. Dancing alphabet characters, glowing stars, animals celebrating together. No studio, no camera, no laptop, just poolside and two apps. Kids content gets billions of views because parents loop it on repeat for hours. That loop is what gets her to $9,000 every single month. Save this before everyone starts running kids channels from their sunbed.
winkle.@w1nklerr

x.com/i/article/2054…

English
156
880
6.7K
3.4M
Khairallah AL-Awady
Khairallah AL-Awady@eng_khairallah1·
Boris Cherny, the creator of Claude Code at Anthropic, just explained why most people aren't getting real results from Claude in this podcast he breaks down exactly how most people never actually set up Claude: - the 14% you lose to CLAUDE.md before typing a word - the features that change how Claude thinks before you type a word - the settings 95% of users have never opened - the workflows hiding behind one toggle if you've been using Claude for more than a month and never left the chat window, you have at least 30 untouched features. probably 38 instead of another show tonight, watch this make sure to bookmark it before it gets lost in your feed my breakdown of all 40 features is below
Khairallah AL-Awady@eng_khairallah1

x.com/i/article/2057…

English
79
456
3.6K
1.2M