Gabriel

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Gabriel

Gabriel

@gabriel_sstech

Complexity in Simplicity. Solo founder & builder. https://t.co/ilzY3LQyb2

#buildinpublic Katılım Haziran 2025
409 Takip Edilen331 Takipçiler
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Gabriel
Gabriel@gabriel_sstech·
"Done" isn't a verifiable state. If you're spending 40% of your day reviewing broken diffs from AI agents, you're paying the "Verification Tax." I just deployed the waitlist for StrictAgent: a lightweight gate that forces AI to actually prove its code works before marking the task as complete. Built the whole landing page in Cursor and shipped it to Cloudflare to validate the demand. If you're tired of babysitting your AI, get in line ⬇️ 🔗 strictagent.dev
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Gabriel
Gabriel@gabriel_sstech·
@ThePeterMick Good idea Better in the cellar or in the attic 🤔
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Peter Mick
Peter Mick@ThePeterMick·
what should i do with this space
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Jaydeep
Jaydeep@_jaydeepkarale·
Things worth every penny: • Codex / Claude Code • Gym membership • Second monitor • Standing desk • YouTube Premium • Noise-cancelling headphones • Ergonomic chair What would you add?
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Sam Altman
Sam Altman@sama·
2.5x increase in usage of our agentic products (codex and chatgpt work) in the last week! welcome.
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Physics In History
Physics In History@PhysInHistory·
The Feynman point is the name given to the position in the decimal expansion of π where a sequence of six consecutive nines first appears. It is named after the physicist Richard Feynman, who allegedly joked that he would like to memorize the digits of pi up to that point and then say “and so on” as if π. were rational. The Feynman point occurs at the 762nd digit after the decimal point, which is much earlier than expected by chance.
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Gabriel
Gabriel@gabriel_sstech·
"Hello world" Hit 'Like' if you see this.
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freeCodeCamp.org
freeCodeCamp.org@freeCodeCamp·
Discrete Mathematics plays a key role in machine learning and algorithms. And in this Python course, you'll learn some of its key concepts like combinatorics, number theory, and the Pigeonhole Principle. The course also covers permutations, the Rule of Sum, prime and rational numbers, congruences, and lots more. freecodecamp.org/news/learn-dis…
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Marko Denic
Marko Denic@denicmarko·
CSS tip: Use the `scroll-margin-top` property to prevent a sticky header from covering up content after clicking on an anchor.
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Shining Science
Shining Science@ShiningScience·
A Nobel Prize-winning chemist has developed a machine that can harvest up to 270 gallons of clean drinking water daily directly from dry, desert air. The innovative system, developed by 2025 Nobel laureate in chemistry Professor Omar Yaghi and his company Atoco, utilizes molecularly engineered, porous materials that act like 'molecular sponges' to trap water vapor from the atmosphere. Unlike traditional desalination methods—which require massive amounts of energy and produce environmentally harmful salty brine—Yaghi’s machine utilizes ultra-low-grade heat to release the trapped molecules as pure liquid water. Contained in a unit the size of a 20-foot shipping container, the system can function completely off-grid, ensuring a reliable water source even when natural disasters or severe droughts knock out centralized electricity and municipal water supplies. For Yaghi, a chemistry professor at UC Berkeley, this scientific breakthrough is deeply personal. Having grown up in a Jordan refugee community with no running water or electricity, he spent his childhood rushing to fill containers during scarce, bi-weekly water deliveries. Driven by these early struggles, Yaghi designed this technology to foster water independence for the 2.2 billion people worldwide who lack safely managed drinking water. Because atmospheric water harvesting operates wherever there is moisture in the air, the technology offers a highly resilient and sustainable alternative for isolated island nations, remote desert communities, and areas devastated by hurricanes. source: Duncan, N. (2026). 'Reimagining matter': Nobel laureate invents machine that harvests water from dry air. The Guardian.
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Night Sky Today
Night Sky Today@NightSkyToday·
🚨: Earth Has Been Sending Water to the Moon for Billions of Years, Scientists Reveal. A new study suggests Earth’s atmosphere has been slowly leaking water into space for billions of years. Not as oceans pouring upward, but as hydrogen and oxygen drifting beyond our sky.
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Gabriel
Gabriel@gabriel_sstech·
@alexwestco Let the flow flow 😄 Curious how it will sound. let me know when it's ready 🎧
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Alex West 🚀
Alex West 🚀@alexwestco·
damn. i was in a good mood yesterday, so i grabbed a mic and freestyled the audiobook for book one. it's 2 hours and 42 minutes long, while i was expecting it to be one hour max. might have to re-record.
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The Universe
The Universe@cbsingh_oo3·
🚨 NASA releases new image of planet Jupiter captured by James Webb Space Telescope, the most powerful telescope ever built.
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The Scientific Lens
The Scientific Lens@LensScientific·
“The brain weighs only three pounds, yet it is the most complex object in the solar system.” ― Michio Kaku
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Shining Science
Shining Science@ShiningScience·
New research shows the human brain is experiencing an evolutionary overload from a world it wasn't built to process. If you feel constantly overwhelmed by a relentless barrage of bad news, social media, and workplace stress, the problem might not be your personal resilience—it may be your biology. A new review published in the journal Behavioral Sciences suggests that the human brain is suffering from an "evolutionary mismatch". While our minds evolved to function within small, tight-knit communities of familiar faces, we now reside in sprawling, hyper-connected cities and navigate digital environments that expose us to the problems of billions of strangers. Our brains are effectively running on ancient software designed for a small village, leaving us poorly equipped to digest the endless stream of data pouring from our screens. This biological mismatch is further strained by what researchers call a "polycrisis"—the compounding stress of overlapping global issues like pandemics, economic inequality, and climate change. Because our ancestors only had to worry about immediate, local threats, our brains treat all incoming crisis data as an urgent, personal emergency, even when the situations are far out of our control. Compounding this is the psychological toll of social media, which triggers a relentless, unnatural state of comparison and competition. Rather than helping us adapt, this constant exposure to others' extreme successes and failures acts as a form of mental punishment, highlighting how modern mental health challenges are deeply tied to an environment our brains simply never evolved to handle. source: Yong, J. C., Lim, A. J., Tan, E., & Chan, S. H. M. (2026). Evolutionary Mismatch, Stress, and Competition: Making Sense of Psychosocial Problems in the Polycrisis Era. Behavioral Sciences, 16(5), 650.
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Night Sky Now
Night Sky Now@NightSkyNow·
🌀 What If All Versions of You Exist Right Now? Have you ever felt like the past isn’t fully gone… or the future is somehow already written? Quantum physics has a wild idea that takes this feeling to a whole new level. Some theories suggest that time may not be a straight line like we imagine. Instead, the past, present, and future could all be happening at the same time, side by side — like pages in a book that already exist, even if you haven’t read them yet. Think about it: every memory you have, every decision you will make, every moment waiting for you… might already be there, existing in a strange invisible layer of reality. Your mind is simply moving through these moments one by one, giving you the illusion of a “timeline.” Scientists studying quantum mechanics have found particles that can be in multiple states at once and even seem to “know” things before they happen. If the universe works on the same rules, then time might not flow… it might just be. So here’s the real mystery: If your future already exists, then who are you becoming right now? And what if your future self is already trying to reach you? 🧠
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Kekius Maximus
Kekius Maximus@Kekius_Sage·
What happens to a brain after 17 days in space? Many people worry that zero gravity damages the nervous system. However, a new study led by Professor Giuseppe Iaria shows that brain functions remain stable. Researchers used a portable EEG device to track the astronauts. The data confirmed zero degradation within the auditory cortex, prefrontal cortex, and hippocampus. These networks govern sensory processing, focus, and memory pathways. Yet, something else might be waking up in the dark.
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Peter Mick
Peter Mick@ThePeterMick·
to cheer you up on Mondays, I want to help you grow your audience introduce yourself and tell us: ✅ your first name (or nickname), and ✅ a fun fact about yourself, and ✅ why we should follow you seen by thousands last week 👀
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The Startup Ideas Podcast (SIP) 🧃
Grok 4.5 made me realize something about AI agents nobody talks about: Speed unlocks different way of working. Slow models train you to fire off a task and walk away. Come back in 10 minutes. Hope it's done. Fast models put you in the loop. Back and forth, back and forth, back and forth Until you're not managing the AI, you're in flow with it. I run 200 agents across every model out there. The fast ones don't just save time. They change how hard you can think.
The Startup Ideas Podcast (SIP) 🧃@startupideaspod

x.com/i/article/2075…

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