Dheeman | ধীমান retweetledi
Dheeman | ধীমান
3.8K posts

Dheeman | ধীমান
@dheemanb24
An ardent admirer of Babasaheb Ambedkar. Educate, Agitate, Organize. Tweets personal. RT ≠ Endorsement.
India Katılım Nisan 2014
574 Takip Edilen136 Takipçiler

Bir işaret istedin… ve geldi.
48 saat içinde hayatında büyük bir “şükür” sebebi olacak. Bir ödeme, bir mesaj ya da bir karşılaşma… Her şeyi değiştirecek bir gelişme seni buluyor. Evren duyduğun her dileği aldı ve seni hiç beklemediğin bir şekilde şaşırtmaya hazırlanıyor.
Kabul ettim. Beğen ve “777” yaz.
Türkçe

@ValueWithPrem Okay for him if he enjoys it. I have a radically different set of preferences for leisure activities. Reading and discussing classical literature, listening to great music, traveling to see the wonderful world are few among them. Does that make me “middle-class”? I don’t care.
English

My Uber driver asked what I do for work.
"Software."
"Cool. Can you look at something?"
He handed me his phone at a red light. Terminal. Claude chat. Green P&L.
+$6,200.
He drives Uber 4 days a week. Makes $1,100. Has a 2-year-old daughter.
"Where did you find this?"
"Your article. The 14,000 wallets one."
He read it three months ago. Didn't understand half of it. Asked Claude to explain it like he's five.
214 messages. All during breaks between rides. Parked at gas stations. Waiting for pings.
First thing Claude told him: 87% of wallets lose money. Don't be the 87%.
He installed poly_data. Fed it to Claude. Found 47 wallets with Sharpe above 2.0. Filtered crypto only. Quarter Kelly. $200 starting bankroll. From his tips.
93 messages later Claude helped him build the 20-line brain from the article. Bayesian updates. EV filter at 5%. Fully automated.
Last 45 days:
→ 480 trades
→ 91.3% win rate
→ +$6,200
Best trade: whale convergence on Fed rate cut. 4 wallets entered in 2 minutes. Entry $0.12. Resolved $1.00. +$1,760. While dropping off a passenger at JFK.
The passenger tipped him $5. The bot made $1,760.
His wife found the Telegram alerts on his phone. Thought he was texting another woman.
He showed her the P&L curve.
"Can you make me one?"
"How long until you quit driving?"
He looked at me through the rearview mirror.
"I'm not stopping. Uber is my cover story."
I wrote the article. He actually opened terminal.
You only need Claude + laptop + 1 hour/day.
Giving This Free for 24 hours. To get it:
1. Comment the word 'AutoPilot'
2. Like and Retweet this post
3. Follow me @marryevan999
English

You missed Blogging in 2010
You missed YouTube in 2015
You missed TikTok in 2020
Now don’t miss AI Publishing in 2026.
If you start today, you can make at least $10,000 per month.
Like + comment 'Money' and I’ll send you my step-by-step guide for FREE.
Must follow me to get DM.
FREE for 48 hrs only.


English

Busy professionals are quietly adding $4,000–$10,000/month...
working just 1 hour after office.
How? AI Publishing.
I normally charge $197 for this guide, but today it's 100% FREE.
Like + Comment 'Send' and I'll send you 6+hour of tutorial for FREE.
Must follow me to get guide in DM.
FREE for next 48 hours only!

English

Busy professionals are quietly adding $10,000+/month using Claude.
Without quitting their jobs.
I’ve compiled all my Claude prompts and systems into a 53-page guide.
Like + comment 'Doc' and I’ll DM you my step-by-step guide for FREE.
You must be following me to receive the DM.
Taking this down in 24 hours.

English
Dheeman | ধীমান retweetledi

Every salary you accepted, every price you agreed to, every negotiation you walked out of thinking you did okay
The person across the table wasn't guessing. They were calculating.
You were improvising. They were running a system.
That system has a name: Game Theory.
And one Yale professor named Ben Polak taught an entire course on it. The same frameworks that get drilled into students paying $150k for an MBA — laid out clean, in one hour, completely free.
After watching it you'll never sit across from someone in a negotiation the same way again. You'll start seeing the hidden logic behind why people make the moves they make — in business, in hiring, in pricing, in everyday decisions most people treat as instinct.
This is the kind of thinking that separates people who react from people who position themselves three moves ahead.
Yale put it online for anyone willing to spend 60 minutes on it.
That's the most asymmetric trade you'll make all week.
English
Dheeman | ধীমান retweetledi

Every time you accepted a salary, chose a price, or walked into a negotiation, the other person was running GAME THEORY in their head.
You were guessing.
This 1-hour Yale lecture by Professor Ben Polak will permanently change how you read people and make decisions.
Most MBAs pay $150k to learn this. Yale posted it for free:
Evan Luthra@EvanLuthra
INSTEAD OF WATCHING NETFLIX TONIGHT, WATCH THIS 1 HOUR FULL CLAUDE COURSE. THANK ME LATER!!!
English
Dheeman | ধীমান retweetledi

🎸 Tuareg Blues, often referred to as Desert Blues, is a hypnotic and deeply evocative genre of music that originates from the Imazighen people of the Sahara Desert, spanning Mali, Niger, Algeria, Libya, Burkina Faso and many other countries.
Rooted in centuries-old Imazighen traditions, it merges the haunting melodies of North African Imazighen music with the raw energy of American blues and rock.
The Imazighen, have long used music as a means of storytelling, resistance, and cultural preservation. Traditional Imazighen music was played on instruments like the teherdent (a type of lute) and the imzad (a one-stringed violin, traditionally played by women). However, in the late 20th century, as Imazighen communities faced displacement, political struggles, and exile, many young musicians turned to the electric guitar, inspired by the revolutionary sounds of Western blues, rock, and reggae.
This fusion created a distinct style-characterized by pentatonic scales, hypnotic rhythms,
call-and-response vocals, and the steady, trance-like repetition reminiscent of both Saharan folk chants and Mississippi Delta blues. The influence of artists like Ali Farka Touré, whose Malian blues style bridged African and American blues traditions, also helped shape the genre.
The music features driving guitar rhythms, often with reverb-heavy electric guitars that produce a shimmering, almost psychedelic effect. Call-and-response vocals reflect lmazighen oral traditions and communal storytelling. The lyrics are poetic and political, speaking of exile, freedom, rebellion, and the vast beauty of the desert. The hypnotic, repetitive structure of the music creates a trance-like atmosphere, deeply connected to the rhythms of nomadic life and the endless expanse of the Sahara.
by Houssaine Ousbouh
English
Dheeman | ধীমান retweetledi
Dheeman | ধীমান retweetledi

There’s a forest fire in Turahalli forest near kanakapura rod @CPBlr @KarnatakaSNDMC
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