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Nitin
9K posts

Nitin
@gniting
scaling ops ⚡ / taming chaos 💥 / always optimizing 🎯 / closet photographer 📸
Mougins, France Katılım Mart 2007
230 Takip Edilen2K Takipçiler

@Emeka3345 I feel this. Did something about it. May be useful: git.new/robin-skill
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Whenever I'm reading, I always make sure to stop at some point to see if I can remember what I've read so far. If I can't, I just start all over.
BUKOLA@WithBukky
Studying is one thing; retaining the information is another.
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Containers are fast. VMs are safe. Everyone building agent infra needs both.
That's not just an opinion, it's the problem Firecracker was built to solve.
I wrote about how it works with interactive components.
Kyle Jeong@kylejeong
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@demirbasayyuce Created something to deal with that very problem. Might be interesting. git.new/robin-skill
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I used to write notes directly on the pages of books so I wouldn’t forget what I read. Although this was a good solution, it required flipping through the book to find a specific note. Therefore, I started taking notes on separate pages.




Ayyuce Demirbas 🍀@demirbasayyuce
The Ancient Origins of Consciousness: How the Brain Created Experience
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@nderjung @jesi_rgb I also heard that @felipehuici moonlighted as "design engineer" on this one! 😂
Love the outcome! 🎉
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Our cracked design engineer @jesi_rgb decided our website needed a lick of paint 💅 check it out!
unikraft.com

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@stemonteduro @no_chutes @levelsio Notes need recall, built Robin to solve that very problem: git.new/robin-skill
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As I said, it was a feeling. I watched the video hoping to find an interesting way to take notes and I reached the end of the video feeling frustrated, thinking that if you want to do things right, you need to put a fucking amount of effort into it. Which is true, sometimes. But it wasn't for me at the time
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@thomaspaulmann @raycast Is there a timeline for general release? The teasers are working a little too well at this point. Excitement is gradually converting into mild brand resentment, which is probably not the intended funnel!
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AI Chat gets a major upgrade in the new @raycast:
🎨 Fresh new look
🥷 Built-in skills support
⚒️ Auto-loading extensions, MCPs, and skills
🖼️ Deeply integrated with macOS
… plus plenty more.

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@petradonka @justine_chang39 @warpdotdev Damn, now that's a cool callsign!!🙌
Well done @petradonka @warpdotdev! 👏
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If you post anything about @warpdotdev now, the entire Warp team will like, repost and comment.
This is me testing a theory.
It's Open Source now btw :D
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@jonhillymakes @tom_doerr That is why I built Robin. It surfaces what you would forget, so notes retrieve instead of just storing.
git.new/robin-skill
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@semil @haystackvc @aashaysanghvi_ @DivyaDhulipala Didn't realize Haystack Fund 1 was 13 years ago! 🤯
It's been so incredible to watch Haystack grow by leaps and bounds! Congratulations to you and the team!🚀
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[brief update]
we have a new set of funds for @haystackvc
announcing haystack 8 plus more, but it's really about my teammates @aashaysanghvi_ & @DivyaDhulipala
thank you to all of our frequent ecosystem co-conspirators, our LPs, our co-investors, our founders. i'm very grateful 🙏 and this is the most fun role in the world!
semilshah.com/2026/04/26/new…
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@AliceSmell Zettelkasten works because you are forced to synthesize, not collect. That is the key most people miss. FWIW I made a tool that handles the resurfacing automatically so you do not have to rely on stumbling across old notes.
git.new/robin-skill
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@zyrothh Built something along these lines. Take a look
git.new/robin-skill
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@Hderrsmithpoet Built a tool to help resurface things I collect before they disappear too. git.new/robin-skill
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@cryingvault The method that actually works: take notes in your own words as you read. Not highlights, actual summaries. Then review those notes within 24h. Most people skip the review part.
Also built an AI agent skill to help with recall: git.new/robin-skill
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@aCommittedGit This is the exact problem I built Robin for: a way to capture and resurface to reinforce learning.
Might be worth checking out: git.new/robin-skill
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Records, CDs, books, Are.na boards, Notion databases, physical notebooks. The collection is not the problem. Never knowing what you actually learned from any of it is.
Zettelkasten helps personally but I am wondering if this can become social / communicable in a more intelligent way. Not more slop feeds. Something that actually acts on the network and social dynamic.
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@kinginmotion @obsdmd Really interesting findings. Would love to hear more about what the agent surfaced beyond just source discovery.
For retaining the insights you DO want to keep from what you read, I developed an agent skill called Robin. Might be useful: git.new/robin-skill
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I’ve been testing an agent-only @obsdmd vault in parallel with my Zettelkasten.
My expectation: a faster way to surface sources worth reading.
What I found: it could do so much more than that.
A few findings 👇

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To make history, you have to honor it.
In 2004, long before I joined Kleiner Perkins, I sat at the iconic table at KP as a young business school student visiting Sand Hill Road for the first time. It was a dream to just be in that room, let alone become a partner at Kleiner Perkins one day.
I couldn't have known how much that moment — and this place — would shape my own journey.
This short film reflects on the people, partnerships, and defining moments that built this firm, and the principles that still guide how we back founders today.
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@ElongAbra That's a great mental model. The issue I keep hitting is actually finding that passage later. I wrote an AI Agent skill called Robin that surfaces what I've saved so I'm not hunting through books. git.new/robin-skill
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Someone asked: how do you actually retain what you read?
Here’s my honest answer.
I don’t try to.
My brain is a hard drive with limited space. I’d rather keep it clear for new ideas than crowd it trying to memorize old ones.
When I read I underline everything that moves me. Then I close the book and move on.
The insight stays in the book. I keep the book.
If I ever need that idea again, I know exactly where to find it.
Let the book hold the knowledge.
Your job is to know where to look.
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@jino_rohit I had the same problem with reading: save things and never see them again. Built Robin to surface what I've saved months later, so I'm actually encountering my own notes instead of forgetting them.
Still rough around the edges but works: github.com/gniting/robin
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