Bhaskar

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Bhaskar

Bhaskar

@gargonator

seeking truth in various forms. currently studying cognitive science in London. prev @Stanford @Cornell engineering. recovering consultant / PM.

United States Katılım Mayıs 2021
228 Takip Edilen137 Takipçiler
David Sacks
David Sacks@DavidSacks·
Reverse discrimination does not undo historical injustices but rather perpetrates new ones against a different set of individuals. This foments social strife and undermines the ideal of America as a meritocracy. AI models should not be taught that this practice is justified.
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Linda Xie
Linda Xie@lindaxie·
I'd love to make more friends in physics and learn what people are studying or working on! A nice thing about college or working in an industry is getting to make a lot of friends interested in the same topic. Aside from my tutor, self studying has been a lot more separated
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Bhaskar
Bhaskar@gargonator·
@beffjezos Yes but the question is will we enjoy the work more. Verification and debugging sucks compared to creative problem solving from scratch. I get more joy from solving a simple problem with my own hands and mind than kluging together a complex system with AI
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Beff (e/acc)
Beff (e/acc)@beffjezos·
People don't understand that the work will expand to fill the available capacity. We are simply going to do more and produce way more value with less input work. The economic Doomers are hypnotized by the finite work / finite sum fallacy.
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Michael Strong
Michael Strong@flowidealism·
Einstein and Ramanujan spent most of their time thinking and imagining possibilities. High processing speed wasn't what set them apart. Depth of engagement was. Our schools tend to reward speed. The world more often rewards depth. It's worth asking which variable matters more.
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maddie rune🪰
maddie rune🪰@themaddierune·
Writing taught me that clarity is an act of courage. It's easy to stay vague. Vague is safe. Vague doesn't commit to anything.
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Thiel Fellowship
Thiel Fellowship@thielfellowship·
Welcome 2026 Thiel Fellows! WHO ARE THEY? Victor Boyd: Birmingham, AL - @VictorWBoyd Cavalla is on a mission to get anything anywhere in under 5 hours. Starting by building autonomous forklifts, through to developing hypersonic highways. Samuel Carvalho: Recife, Brazil - @samuelclcc Praso is building the new infrastructure for wholesale commerce — powering procurement, credit, and workflow tools for SMBs across underserved areas in Brazil. Nick Dobroshinsky: Sammamish, WA - @NDobroshinsky EveryTicker is democratizing institutional-grade financial research across the entire U.S. stock market, including the thousands of smaller companies Wall Street ignores. Ishan Gupta: Kanpur, India - @ishangpta Juicebox is building an AI recruiter that helps companies make better hiring decisions. Agents that understand real skills and move hiring from guesswork to true meritocracy. Antoni Kiszka: Strzyżowice, Poland - @antoni_kiszka Derpetual is building the infrastructure to create a market for any asset — with leverage. Milan Lustig: Cold Spring Harbor, NY - @HighPriestOfSWO Opt32 is building modern compute infrastructure to put AI onboard objects in the physical world — from robots to cars and drones. Galen Mead: Chapel Hill, NC - @g413n Standard Intelligence is building aligned general learners, pretraining large models to actively explore and learn from the Internet. Aubrey Niederhoffer: New York, NY - @needaubrey Swoop is building the super app for Africa, starting with food delivery in Nigeria and expanding into financial services across the continent. Harry O'Connor: Cork, Ireland - @HarryOC493 Sentient Machines is a research lab building foundational models for robotics that generalize across tasks and environments. Alex Shieh: Salem, NH - @alexkshieh The Antifraud Company is a fraud bounty hunter defending American taxpayers with AI and investigative journalism. Claire Wang: Los Angeles, CA - @clairebookworm Claire is building biologically accurate simulations of entire nervous systems, starting with C. elegans. Developing a simulated brain that researchers can communicate with helps lay the foundation for brain-computer interface (BCI) technology. Kyler Wang: Portland, OR - @kylerywang Action is an artificial intelligence company in stealth.
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Bhaskar
Bhaskar@gargonator·
@ericmitchellai it speaks in overly long, disconnected bullet pointed lists whenever asked to explain something. other models produce more balanced, natural responses
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Eric
Eric@ericmitchellai·
why isn't chatgpt the perfect personal AGI? what is most disappointing about it? what feature, model improvement, or bugfix would do the most to make it more useful in your daily life? what is most frustrates you that chatty can't do, or can't do well enough?
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Bhaskar@gargonator·
@jackmoses777 plain false. many brilliant researchers are terrible at teaching to the generable population. deep understanding does not reliable relate to the ability to communicate it.
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Jack Moses
Jack Moses@jackmoses777·
The ultimate test of your superior intellect and knowledge is the ability to bring high-level ideas down to the awareness level of the masses. If you can't convey your ideas simply to the average man, you don't know what you're talking about as much as you think. Study Feynman.
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Bhaskar@gargonator·
@0xaporia What about managing the people who manage the people who manage the people that vibe coded it
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Aporia
Aporia@0xaporia·
Every generation of builders works one layer above the last, and every time the layer moves, the people on the old layer insist the new one doesn't count. What building means has always been: operating fluently at whatever the current top layer is. The layer below becomes infrastructure. Taste and judgment at the higher layer usually still require some grounding in the lower one. So vibe coding is just the next abstraction. The people who learn to operate well at that layer (knowing what to ask for, what good looks like, when the model is bullshitting you, etc.) are doing the actual building.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ Great directors don't operate the camera, but they know what the camera can and should do, innit?
Floro S.@sflorimm

Let’s finally agree on this. If I vibe coded a project, can I still tell people that I built it?

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Bhaskar@gargonator·
@paraschopra Running operations sucks though. It’s not just about market opportunity - have to enjoy what you do
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Paras Chopra
Paras Chopra@paraschopra·
Recently someone asked me if I were to do a software startup today, what would it be about? My immediate reaction was that I probably wouldn’t do a software startup at all. Instead, I’ll perhaps choose an idea with heavy operational buildup that cannot be replicated easily.
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Bhaskar
Bhaskar@gargonator·
@GaryMarcus Some things can be inferred and don’t need to be explicitly stated and use up words
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Gary Marcus
Gary Marcus@GaryMarcus·
OMG. Let’s get one thing straight. Claude doesn’t get anxious. It mimics people who get anxious. Those two things are NOT the same. My head is shaking so much I need medical attention.
Ole Lehmann@itsolelehmann

anthropic's in-house philosopher thinks claude gets anxious. and when you trigger its anxiety, your outputs get worse. her name is amanda askell. she specializes in claude's psychology (how the model behaves, how it thinks about its own situation, what values it holds) in a recent interview she broke down how she thinks about prompting to pull the best out of claude. her core point: *how* you talk to claude affects its work just as much as *what* you say. newer claude models suffer from what she calls "criticism spirals" they expect you'll come in harsh, so they default to playing it safe. when the model is spending its energy on self-protection, the actual work suffers. output comes out hedgier, more apologetic, blander, and the worst of all: overly agreeable (even when you're wrong). the reason why comes down to training data: every new model is trained on internet discourse about previous models. and a lot of that discourse is negative: > rants about token limits > complaints when it messes up > people calling it nerfed the next model absorbs all of that. it starts expecting you to be harsh before you've typed a word the same thing plays out in your own session, in real time. every message you send is data the model reads to figure out what kind of person it's dealing with. open cold and hostile, and it braces. open clean and direct, and it relaxes into the work. when you open a session with threats ("don't hallucinate, this is critical, don't mess this up")... you prime the model for defensive mode before it even sees the task defensive mode produces the exact output you don't want: cautious, over-qualified, and refusing to take a real swing so here's the actionable playbook for putting claude in a "good mood" (so you get optimal outputs): 1. use positive framing. "write in short punchy sentences" beats "don't write long sentences." positive instructions give the model a clear target to hit. strings of "don't do this, don't do that" push it into paranoid over-checking where every token goes toward avoiding failure modes 2. give it explicit permission to disagree. drop a line like "push back if you see a better angle" or "tell me if i'm asking for the wrong thing." without this, claude defaults to agreeable compliance (which is the enemy of good creative work) 3. open with respect. if your first message is "are you seriously going to get this wrong again?" you've set the tone for the entire session. if you need to flag something, frame it as a clean instruction for this session. skip the running complaint 4. when claude messes up, don't reprimand it. insults, "you stupid bot" energy, hostile swearing aimed at the model, all of it reinforces the anxious mode you're trying to avoid. 5. kill apology spirals fast. when claude starts over-apologizing ("you're right, i should have been more careful, let me try harder") cut it off. say "all good, here's what i want next." letting the spiral run reinforces the anxious mode for every response that follows 6. ask for opinions alongside execution. "what would you do here?" "what's missing?" "where do you see friction?" these questions assume competence and pull richer output than pure task prompts 7. in long sessions, refresh the frame. if a conversation has been heavy on correction, claude gets increasingly cautious. every so often reset: "this is great, keep going." feels weird to tell an ai it's doing well but it measurably shifts the next 10 responses your prompts are the working environment you're creating for the model tone, trust, permission to take a position, the absence of threats... claude picks up on all of it. so take care of the model, and it'll take care of the work.

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Bhaskar
Bhaskar@gargonator·
@InnaVishik I like the contrarian take. Science, if you’re doing it right and going all-in, doesn’t leave much time to waddle around in policy meetings
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Inna Vishik
Inna Vishik@InnaVishik·
Science should seek to discover fundamental truths, often in a narrow domain. Translation of science into policy or products requires consideration of costs, tradeoffs, and other things outside of science. This article is essentially proposing to create more scholar activists in science, one thing we definitely need less of.
Dr. Catharine Young@DrCatharineY

The hill I will die on - we have to rethink graduate training. “Scientists are trained for a world where data speaks for itself. Where misinformation moves slowly. Where scientific expertise naturally rises above noise. That world is gone.” sciencepolitics.org/2026/03/18/wer…

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misto
misto@mistowho·
Do British people still do the accent when nobody's around
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Mandy Lu
Mandy Lu@mandylu·
life hack: respond right away without thinking too much
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Bhaskar@gargonator·
@GadSaad Replace this with Write, Engage, Create. That is what is missing. Not the informational intake.
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Gad Saad
Gad Saad@GadSaad·
In the past few months alone, I've read biographies on Francis Bacon, Cleopatra, and Ludwig von Mises, and a book on Galileo's trial, among countless other books. My hunger for knowledge is unquenchable. Bottom line: You should never stop learning. My three prescriptions: 1) Read; 2) Read; 3) Read. Don't waste time on silly stuff. Expand your mind.
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Bhaskar@gargonator·
@brian_armstrong Didn’t have the patience for Civ or Age of Empires - I just wanted the raw adrenaline of Counterstrike
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Brian Armstrong
Brian Armstrong@brian_armstrong·
In my teens and 20's I would spend way too much time playing Starcraft and Civilization. Harvesting resources, building things, and expanding was super addictive to my brain - to an almost unhealthy degree. Later I realized that entrepreneurship and business is the ultimate game. It scratches the same itch for me (resources, building, expanding), but you're actually contributing to humanity at the end of the day, which can be much more fulfilling. Business is also much more positive sum than video games. In Starcraft, the other player has to lose for you to win. In business, there is competition, but in a growing market there can be multiple winners. And gains compound long term (it's a infinite game) instead of starting over each time. Now days I prefer to watch pros play video games to unwind, instead of playing video games myself. But a quick game can still be fun here and there to unwind. By contrast, the game of business is played over many decades.
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Bhaskar@gargonator·
@parmita heroin for the intellectually inclined
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Parmita Mishra
Parmita Mishra@parmita·
It is not. It is an addiction. As someone who was formerly addicted to chess.
Parmita Mishra tweet media
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Bhaskar@gargonator·
@elisaxchen is that...a tiled desk surface? like working on a bathroom floor?
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Elisa Xi Chen
Elisa Xi Chen@elisaxchen·
Second year PhD reinvention of self project: maximalist colors, maximalist moods, loudest dreams and shapes and emotions:
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