Daniel Porras

197 posts

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Daniel Porras

Daniel Porras

@dforwardfeed

@Flybridge - investing in a better future 🚀 - Host AI Without Borders. Creator of AI Index

New York, USA Katılım Temmuz 2011
1.8K Takip Edilen421 Takipçiler
Rohit Agarwal
Rohit Agarwal@jumbld·
Huge news: our team at Portkey has raised $15M in Series A funding led by @ElevCap w/ @lightspeedvp 🎉 As agentic workflows become a reality and businesses recognize AI as mission-critical infrastructure, we’re here to ensure it never breaks. (1/5)
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Hassan W. Bhatti
Hassan W. Bhatti@hwbhatti·
Think it. Say it. Done. The average person spends 3 hours typing + switches 1,000 tabs per day. That ends today. Meet Lemon: The first voice-to-action AI agent that turns your voice commands into finished tasks. RT + Comment "Lemon" to get free access for 30 days. (must be following so I can DM you)
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Daniel Porras
Daniel Porras@dforwardfeed·
The biggest mistake people make with AI agents? Over-constraining them. In my conversation with @rauchg, we talked about what he described as the bitter lesson for agents: teams over-constrain agents to have a feeling of control, boxing them in with hand-written rules and narrow permissions. But that just leaves capability on the table. The real progress comes from giving agents proper tools and enough context, then letting them operate inside sandboxes where they have full freedom within a secure boundary. We also spoke about a world where building software has become dramatically easier. The value shifts away from the software itself and toward the judgment and taste embedded in the prompt. Vercel is already experimenting with this: rather than paying subscriptions for software, you purchase prompt templates, share the recipe with your agent, and spin up your own personalized version.
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Daniel Porras
Daniel Porras@dforwardfeed·
The tools you thought were right a few weeks ago might no longer be the right ones. This was @rauchg reaction to @karpathy, and it perfectly captures how fast the AI space moves. If you are not evolving and testing new tools frequently, you are already behind. I recorded one of the best episodes to date, subscribe to the AI Without Border's Podcast to get it when it drops on Thursday. In the episode we also discuss the Bitter Lesson for agents, how to focus in a world where everything is possible, and more.
Andrej Karpathy@karpathy

I've never felt this much behind as a programmer. The profession is being dramatically refactored as the bits contributed by the programmer are increasingly sparse and between. I have a sense that I could be 10X more powerful if I just properly string together what has become available over the last ~year and a failure to claim the boost feels decidedly like skill issue. There's a new programmable layer of abstraction to master (in addition to the usual layers below) involving agents, subagents, their prompts, contexts, memory, modes, permissions, tools, plugins, skills, hooks, MCP, LSP, slash commands, workflows, IDE integrations, and a need to build an all-encompassing mental model for strengths and pitfalls of fundamentally stochastic, fallible, unintelligible and changing entities suddenly intermingled with what used to be good old fashioned engineering. Clearly some powerful alien tool was handed around except it comes with no manual and everyone has to figure out how to hold it and operate it, while the resulting magnitude 9 earthquake is rocking the profession. Roll up your sleeves to not fall behind.

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Daniel Porras
Daniel Porras@dforwardfeed·
@maxmarchione Big fan. As you consider the roadmap, some good additions as a user include: - Ability to use a higher power model for complex queries. - Expanded offering such as MRI and Dexa scans. - More useful integration with wearables. I connected my Fitbit and have not seen any value.
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Max Marchione
Max Marchione@maxmarchione·
Superpower's 2026 is going to be incredible: - Publicly launch mobile app - Ship AI that is better than chatGPT, has full context, and can take action - Launch our first pharma 2.0 products - Have most members using us monthly - Replace many legacy health solutions - Unicorn and >100m rev - Impact the lives of over 100,000 people And much more. What do you want to see?
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Daniel Porras
Daniel Porras@dforwardfeed·
What will differentiate the next generation of business software? Context. In this episode of AI Without Borders, @franco_pinto_ CTO of @mobilefirstco , explains how they discovered something powerful: you can understand a business remarkably well just by knowing which tools they use. That insight fuels their approach to contextual and proactive intelligence: - Connect a CRM or scheduling tool and the system instantly understands workflows - Surface the right information the moment a call starts - Suggest follow ups automatically when a conversation ends -It is context doing the heavy lifting instead of the user. Franco also shares why their entire product strategy resembles a consumer company. Self-serve onboarding, plug-and-play integrations, and interfaces that feel simple even when the workflows are complex. YouTube: youtu.be/ecAcj7vUAok?si…
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Daniel Porras
Daniel Porras@dforwardfeed·
Founders building consumer apps must be intensely aware that users will increasingly ask this build vs. buy question before committing to a subscription, especially as platforms like Replit (@amasad ) make app design easier. Unlike in the enterprise setting, this threat is higher because many consumer apps are simpler and require less maintenance or updating . Consumer should make apps that are so robust and undeniably excellent that even an AI powered DIY alternative feels like a waste of time (even as cost to build apps keep going down).
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Daniel Porras
Daniel Porras@dforwardfeed·
This past week, I saw a new productivity app called Halo by @benspringwater. I had previously built a basic habit tracker, but it wasn't great. When I saw Halo, I tested it and purchased the $69 per year subscription. It was well designed with several modules. I could have replicated some features in my app, but it would have cost at least $100 to build and delivered only about 60-70 percent of Halo, so it was not worth it. However, for another productivity app with focus music and work timers, I decided to build it myself. The subscription was $100 to $120, and my DIY version cost only $30 to $40, and it was a simple app.
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Daniel Porras
Daniel Porras@dforwardfeed·
AI is reshaping consumer subscription purchase decisions. The way consumers decide to purchase a subscription is changing. Before, the main question was: is this valuable enough? Now, with AI coding making it easier to build apps, an additional factor emerges: "Can I just build this myself with AI?"
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Tomer Omri
Tomer Omri@tomeromrix·
I work at @base44 , so I see many prompts every day. Most of them are okay. Some are good. But about 1% are genius. I spent the last week analyzing that top 1%. The results were honestly shocking. 🤯 Most users prompt like they are talking to a human: "Make a cool, modern website for a tech company." (Results: Generic, boring, hallucinations). If you want to learn how to prompt and vibe code like a pro Drop a comment below, and I'll send the guide to your inbox. 📥
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Daniel Porras
Daniel Porras@dforwardfeed·
Why Most Startups Get the FDE Role Completely Wrong Forward Deployed Engineers have become one of the hottest hires in the AI era, and also one of the most misunderstood. Founders imagine FDEs as silver bullets. But after hosting an internal learning session at Flybridge with Brian Keohane, a experienced Palantir FDE, one truth was clear: For the vast majority of startups, hiring an FDE is the wrong strategy, and often a very expensive one. Most companies bring on FDEs for the wrong reasons: • to compensate for weak product market fit • to patch a fragile or immature platform • to support low ACV customers with limited upside
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Daniel Porras retweetledi
yenkel
yenkel@yenkel·
many founders and leaders sometimes ask me what good developer experience is and how to approach it have 23 seconds? 😉
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Daniel Porras
Daniel Porras@dforwardfeed·
Every great startup story starts with one thing: a connection. Startups are all about amazing people coming together around a unified vision. Sometimes, all it takes is making the right match. Over the years, I’ve met so many incredible people: founders, engineers, researchers, and operators. One of my favorite parts of this job is helping them find each other. So I decided to run a small experiment. I built a simple site where: 🤝 Founders can find co-Founders or early hires 🚀 Engineers, Researchers, or Operators can find exciting early-stage AI startups to join If there’s a match, I’ll make a private, confidential intro. Nothing will be shared publicly. You can fill out the form: dforwardfeed.com
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Jonathan Frankle
Jonathan Frankle@jefrankle·
Hi Startup AI Twitter - I'm putting together a list of all the AI investors based in NYC. Would love suggestions!
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Vadym Barda
Vadym Barda@vadymbarda·
Memory is a key building block for effective AI agents, and it's hard to get it right! @dforwardfeed and I wrote an article about challenges of building memory for agents, the main players in the ecosystem and where we think it is headed. Check it out in the link below!
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