Chilly

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Chilly

Chilly

@chillypnl

market analyst.

Katılım Nisan 2022
444 Takip Edilen32.9K Takipçiler
gake
gake@Ga__ke·
Lindy
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shah
shah@shahh·
Bitcoin is in serious trouble. The world population is 8 billion. Half aren’t employed. That leaves 4 billion potential dip buyers. 2.2 billion are still in school. Now we’re down to 1.8 billion. Half of those are too young even to open a bank account. 900 million left. 86% are living paycheck to paycheck after bills. That leaves 120 million. 92% still think crypto is a scam. Now we’re at 9.6 million. Coincidentally, exactly 9,599,998 people are sitting in prisons worldwide. Which leaves only 2 people left to buy the dip. You and me.
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Chilly
Chilly@chillypnl·
Computation + Cryptography = the future of everything. @primisprotocol merges both perfectly: a decentralized pricing layer for AI compute on Solana. Reserve, track, and pay for GPU power with crypto rails transparent, efficient, unstoppable. The infrastructure the AI boom actually needs is being built right now.
toly 🇺🇸@toly

@chainyoda If the gold were to disappear from the bank, then the gold token would just be compute and cryptography

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Khouba
Khouba@khouuba·
agreed, we’re tackling the compute problem many teams will face as they scale. the core idea is simple: as ai scale, compute becomes more important, but the market for accessing it is still fragmented, opaque, and volatile. Builders shouldn’t have to email multiple providers, compare inconsistent pricing, and absorb all the uncertainty themselves. @primisprotocol is being built to abstract that complexity by routing workloads, improving pricing access, and eventually separating compute consumption from price volatility.
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tetsuo
tetsuo@tetsuoai·
Grok Build has three commands for managing memory across sessions: /memory, /flush, and /dream. They're experimental but worth looking at if you've ever been frustrated with how agents forget everything between conversations. /memory opens a window into what Grok has saved. There are three layers: global memory, workspace-specific memory, and per-session summaries. You can read what's there, edit it, or delete things you don't want kept. /flush is for when you've had a useful session and want it saved before context compaction kicks in. It writes a summary of the current conversation into the memory store, capturing decisions, debugging paths, project conventions, and anything else worth keeping. /dream runs in the background over your old session logs and memory fragments. It deduplicates overlapping notes, merges related fragments, and consolidates everything into cleaner topics, so the store doesn't grow into a pile of half redundant snippets over time. Most agent memory I've looked at just shoves the chat history into RAG. That works for about a week before the store gets noisy and starts hurting sessions. Grok Build treats capture and consolidation as separate commands, with the user able to inspect what's saved. The editable part is important. If your agent saves something wrong, or if your conventions change, you need to be able to go find that memory and remove it. Otherwise the agent keeps applying outdated context with full confidence and you spend cycles undoing its mistakes. Managing context for long-running agents is going to need real memory primitives. Write, search, prune, and consolidate, all as first class operations. Grok shipping these three commands is the first time I've seen a consumer product treat memory as its own layer.
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miles
miles@wedtm·
lol
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Primis Protocol
Primis Protocol@primisprotocol·
Compute pricing is fragmented by default. Different dashboards. Different regions. Different rates. Different availability. Different invoices. Primis turns that into one predictable rate, builders can rely on before workloads run. Save hours and thousands. We’re building the pricing layer for compute.
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Chilly
Chilly@chillypnl·
@mert You will be a fan of @primisprotocol to once you look at it, compute layer being built on solana.
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mert
mert@mert·
im a big fan of HL, jeff, & shoku they are excellent I have noticed though a certain class of .HLs, who are obviously new here, disrespect toly in increasingly cheap ways toly is a monumental mind in the trajectory of crypto ppl dont remember now but there was a long and aggressive period of time where we had to fight every single day, for years, to show that actually you CAN scale crypto to planetary scale and that the ethereum way is not the only option this took an immense amount of work in spite of tremendous setbacks and many near death moments but now the engineering bar in crypto is meaningfully different than before toly. solana has created hundreds of new startups and businesses the dude is rich beyond belief, has nothing left to prove, and instead of checking out like 99% of people here, shows up every single day and has fun doing it you can and should criticize many things about solana, but personal attacks against one of the very rare instances of a missionary founder is unserious and will do nothing but give solana founders free and limitless energy
Havoc.hl 𝕏@Havochl_

This is the perfect example of your founder vs my founder: One is in Washington discussing the future of onchain finance and regulation. The other one is farming engagement in comment sections. @chameleon_jeff and @toly built different.

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Chilly
Chilly@chillypnl·
@metaversejoji Buy back primis bro, good entry rn, future of compute being built on solana, billions soon.
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joji
joji@metaversejoji·
shill me some shit to top blast into oblivion
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Branche°
Branche°@Branche_SC·
I respect Toly for posting through it That’s the kind of autism that moves things believe it or not
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Havoc.hl 𝕏
Havoc.hl 𝕏@Havochl_·
This is the perfect example of your founder vs my founder: One is in Washington discussing the future of onchain finance and regulation. The other one is farming engagement in comment sections. @chameleon_jeff and @toly built different.
Havoc.hl 𝕏 tweet media
jeff.hl@chameleon_jeff

I spent the past few days in Washington with @hyperliquidpc meeting with policymakers during the historic advancement of the Clarity Act. We discussed Hyperliquid, the benefits that it offers to American consumers, and the regulatory path to bring onchain derivatives markets into the United States. Some conversations were technical with an impressive baseline understanding of Hyperliquid. Discussions included how onchain trading is a financial innovation that has clear global user demand. Other conversations focused more on a first principles introduction to defi and the promise of onchain markets. It was encouraging to see bipartisan support for thoughtful regulation of crypto. I look forward to continuing discussions in DC and working hard to make American access to Hyperliquid a reality.

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@jason
@jason@Jason·
Uber is going to be bought by Google/Waymo, Amazon or Tesla/SpaceX in the next year. For a “buy it now” price of $250b, one of those three companies gets a $12b a year free cash flow machine with $70b in revenue — and hundreds of millions of global customers This is the most obvious M&A deal since Instagram, Android and YouTube transformed Meta and Google Discuss
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The White Whale
The White Whale@WhiteWhaleLabs·
@chillypnl From an investment point of view? It's already been mostly priced in. I'm pissed I can't buy the new Mac Studio I want because of hardware shortages, tho.
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The White Whale
The White Whale@WhiteWhaleLabs·
In aviation, most unstable approaches do not look dangerous. That is exactly what makes them dangerous. You may notice you are a little too high. A little too low. A little fast. A little late turning base to final. And then the most dangerous sentence in aviation shows up quietly in your mind: “I can save this landing.” Good pilots recognize that moment early. They do not let ego fly the airplane. They do not force the runway to accept a bad setup. They go around. A go-around is not failure. It is discipline. It is judgment. No mature, experienced pilot mocks someone for abandoning a landing that did not feel right. If anything, they respect it. Because the goal was never to prove you could land from a bad approach configuration. The goal was to bring yourself home. Trading is the same. Most bad trades do not feel catastrophic at the beginning. They feel slightly off. The entry is a little early or a little late. The structure is not quite clean. Whatever signals you require to be present in confluence are not quite lining up. The setup is almost there, but not fully there. And then your ego starts talking. “I can make this work.” “I’ll just size down.” “I don’t want to miss it.” That is how unstable approaches turn into wrecks. A professional trader does not need every setup. A professional trader does not force bad structure just because they are impatient, bored, or emotionally attached to an idea. Sometimes the best trade is the go-around. Cancel the entry. Reset. Let the market come back into alignment. Wait for the next clean approach. There is no shame in passing on a trade that does not feel right. The shame is knowing it was wrong, forcing it anyway, and pretending the market did something to you after it fails. The runway will still be there. Your capital might not be. 🫡 From the depths — The White Whale 🐋
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