Fish O’Clockery

2.2K posts

Fish O’Clockery

Fish O’Clockery

@handslaps

Katılım Mart 2010
2.5K Takip Edilen420 Takipçiler
John Galt
John Galt@MyStarlink123·
Why do retards like @RufusKings1776 lockdown replies? Cause they are little pussies that can’t fight their way out of a wet paper bag. Fuk off asshat.
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Matthew Keys
Matthew Keys@MatthewKeysLive·
Just one day after ending "The Late Show" on CBS, Stephen Colbert returned to TV — to host a public access show with rocker Jack White in Monroe, Michigan. Appearances by Jeff Daniels, Eminem and Steve Buscemi.
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مرحبًا
مرحبًا@pasdedeux2nite·
the concept of a porn star supporting palestine
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Amboy
Amboy@titoamboy·
@elonmusk Obamas always fighting 🤷‍♂️
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Humans using Mythos as seen by Mythos
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Fish O’Clockery
Fish O’Clockery@handslaps·
@SudoLinuxMaster @jbienkahn @JeremyWGR One of the most unlikable and unwatchable teams in history. I hope the Spurs send them packing. Literal data given to you on a platter and you plug your ears and shut your eyes. Thunder fans are fucking idiots.
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Andrew Strozyk
Andrew Strozyk@SudoLinuxMaster·
@jbienkahn @JeremyWGR All of this is just excuses. You don’t flop your way to 60+ wins. You don’t go 8-0 to make it to the western conference finals by flopping. OKC is one of the greatest teams to ever exist in the NBA and yall are just sore losers because of it.
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Harsha MV | OrbitX 💳
@brycent The 100x engineer framing conveniently redefines the people who got laid off as bottlenecks rather than colleagues. That's not an observation about AI productivity. That's a narrative structure designed to make a cost decision feel like a philosophical evolution.
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Brycent
Brycent@brycent·
The best job cut post I’ve ever read. This should be required reading.
Zeb Evans@DJ_CURFEW

Today we reduced headcount by 22%. The business is the strongest it's ever been. So I think it's important to be direct about what I'm seeing and why. First, I made this decision and I own it. I did it because the way to operate at the highest level of productivity is changing, and to win the future, ClickUp needs to change with it. Second, this wasn't about cutting costs. Most savings from this change will flow directly back into the people who stay. We'll be introducing million-dollar salary bands. If you create outsized impact using AI, you'll be paid outside of traditional bands. Most importantly, I have the deepest gratitude for those affected. We're doing this from a position of strength specifically so we can take care of people properly. Everyone affected receives a package aimed at honoring their contributions and easing the transition. I only see two options: wait for this to play out gradually in the market or be honest about what I'm seeing and act proactively. THE 100X ORGANIZATION The primary change is that we're restructuring around what I call 100x org. The goal is 100x output. The roles required to build at the highest level are fundamentally different than they were a year ago. Incremental improvements to existing systems won't get us there. We need new ones. That means creating enough disruption to rebuild rather than iterate on what's already broken. The common narrative is that AI makes everyone more productive. It doesn't. Many of the workflows of today, if left unchanged, create bottlenecks in AI systems. These roles will evolve. But waiting for that to happen naturally means falling behind now. The 100x org is actually heavily dependent on people - infinitely more than today. This is only possible with 10x people that have embraced and adopted new ways of working. THE BUILDERS, AGENT MANAGERS, AND FRONT-LINERS — THE BUILDERS: 10X ENGINEERS I don't think most companies have internalized what's actually happening with AI in engineering. The common narrative is that AI makes all engineers more productive. That may be true in isolation, but at an organization level - that is the farthest thing from reality. Here's what we've validated recently at ClickUp: the great engineers, the ones who can orchestrate, architect, and review, are becoming 100x engineers. They're not writing code. They're directing agents that write code. The skill is judgment. AI makes the best engineers wildly more productive, and everyone else using AI slows these engineers down. Think about it - the bottlenecks are (1) orchestration - telling AI what to do, and (2) reviewing - what AI did. Everything is leapfrogged and no longer needed. So who do you want orchestrating and reviewing code? And how do you want your best engineers to spend their time? If your best engineers are spending time reviewing other people's code, then this is inherently an inefficient bottleneck. These engineers can review their agent's code much faster than reviewing human code. The new world is about enabling your 10x engineers to become 100x. The wrong strategy is to push every engineer to use infinite tokens. Companies doing this are celebrating 500% more pull requests. But customer outcomes don't match the volume of code being generated. I call this the great reckoning of AI coding, and every company will face this soon if not already. More code is just another bottleneck to the best engineers, and ultimately to your company's impact as well. — THE BUILDERS: 10X PRODUCT MANAGERS Product management and design roles are merging. Designers that have customer focus, become more like product managers. And product managers that have intuition for UX become more like designers. The bottleneck of user research is gone. It takes us just one mention of an agent to kickoff research and analyze results. The bottleneck of product <> design iteration is also gone. The product builder iterates on their own, along with agents and skills that ensure alignment with quality and strategy. Also controversial today - I believe that the wrong strategy is to have your PMs shipping code - that just introduces another bottleneck that the best engineers will waste their time on. To be clear, PMs should be coding but they should do this in a playground to iterate, validate, and scope. That code should not go to production. Everything outside of managing systems, orchestrating AI, and reviewing output becomes a bottleneck. That's why the other roles that are critical along with these are the systems managers (to reduce bottlenecks) along with a bottleneck you can't replace - customer meeting time. — THE SYSTEM MANAGERS Ironically, the people that automate their jobs with AI will always have a job. They become owners of the AI systems - agent managers. We have many examples of these people at ClickUp. The underlying systems in which we operate are absolutely critical to get right. I think most companies are delusional to think they can iterate on existing systems and compete in this new world. You must create enough disruption so that old systems are deprecated entirely. If there's any definition for 'AI native' that's what it is. — THE FRONT-LINERS In a world that will become saturated with AI communication, the human touch will matter more than anything to customers. This is a bottleneck that you shouldn't replace - even when agents are high enough quality to do video meetings. One-on-one meeting time with customers is something that shouldn't be automated. The systems around the meetings should be - so that front-liners spend nearly 100% of their time with customers. REWARDING 100X IMPACT In a world where companies are able to do so much more with less, where does that excess money go? In our case, much of the savings in this new operating model will flow directly back to those that enabled it. We must reward people that create productivity accordingly. This aligns incentives on both sides. Plus, in a world where your best people create 100x impact, you can't afford to lose them. You should aim to retain these employees for decades. The context they have and their ability to efficiently orchestrate and review will be nearly impossible to replace. Compensation bands of today should be thrown out the door. We're introducing $1 million cash/year salary bands with a path available to nearly everyone in the company if they produce 100x impact by creating or managing AI systems. THE FUTURE Nearly every company will make changes like these. The ones that do it proactively will define what comes next. The future is not fewer people. It's different work, new roles, and better rewards for those who embrace it. We're already seeing entirely new roles emerge, like Agent Managers, that didn't exist a year ago. ClickUp is positioning to lead this shift, not just internally, but for our customers too. I've never been more certain about where we're headed.

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R.F. Kenmore
R.F. Kenmore@rfkenmore·
I’m not saying you ought to wear bespoke tailoring, but dressing like this at 50 is so crazy to me
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Maarten
Maarten@MaartenAMS1·
@HunterKingIndia @FoxNews We voted for closed borders. Got it Men can’t get pregnant. Less crime Less Muslims We won!
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Fox News
Fox News@FoxNews·
BREAKING NEWS: Tulsi Gabbard is resigning as director of national intelligence
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Kathy Miller
Kathy Miller@alwayseektruth·
@HunterKingIndia @FoxNews Your from India and clueless to what he is really doing But your probably paid The minute anyone reads this it shows you have no idea of what he is doing and has done for us
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Amend and Pretend
Amend and Pretend@amendandpretend·
@StartupArchive_ Sales rep cost vs revenue is the most basic analysis you can run. Pretty much something an intern could do
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Startup Archive
Startup Archive@StartupArchive_·
Brian Armstrong on what he learned about management from Balaji Srinivasan “Balaji is a brilliant guy. He’s probably one of the top couple smartest people I’ve ever met in my life,” Brian begins. “He was briefly the Chief Technology Officer of Coinbase. He came in through an acquisition and did some amazing work. And he taught me how to manage a totally different type of person.” Brian continues: “Balaji is kind of unmanageable. He’s what some people might call a ‘free radical’ within an organization. He kind of bounces around, absorbing vast amounts of information — even things that aren’t his responsibility — and occasionally he would come back to me with these incredible insights.” Brian gives one funny example: “At one point he came back to me and said, ‘These are all the salespeople that are making more revenue than their salary, and these are all the people that are not.’ And the first thought I had was, ‘You’re not supposed to have access to anybody’s salary. How did you get that?’” Balaji replied, “Don’t worry about it. I found it in some database that I wasn’t supposed to have access to.” The next question Brian asked was, “How did you connect that all up?” The previous week Brian asked the data team to connect Salesforce to Coinbase’s salary data so they could start running some reports to have more accountability. But it was supposed to be a three-week project. Balaji responded, “Oh well I couldn’t sleep this weekend, and I just knew something felt off. So I had to code it up and put it all together.” When the data team completed their analysis three weeks later, they confirmed that Balaji was 100% right. “He was continually doing things like that,” Brian explains. “And he’s incredibly high in disagreeableness, which I learned from him as well. He would go into a team and ask, ‘Why isn’t this functioning well?’ And he would suffer no fools. He would not be afraid to go in there and turn half the people on a team — whether he had the permission to fire them or not… He was a very contrarian figure. I’d say about once a week someone would come into my office and say, ‘I can’t work with Balaji. He’s causing so much collateral damage.’ And I’d say, ‘Yes, but he’s also generating an enormous amount of value and I need you to learn how to work with him.’” Brian knew Balaji wasn’t going to last forever at Coinbase because it was incredibly disruptive, but ultimately he taught Brian how to be a “turnaround CEO” when needed: “In the past I was opting a little more toward trying to be liked instead of being clear about what we’re doing, where we’re going, and what the bar is. He helped me become a better CEO and have a little more disagreeableness.” Source: @stripe (Aug 2025)
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
Take too much Ozempic, and your brain stops wanting things: food, sex, even the urge to get out of bed. People end up in hospital beds for days, staring at the ceiling, feeling nothing. The medical name for that state is anhedonia, and it tells you how the drug actually works. Ozempic, Wegovy, and Mounjaro all belong to the same drug family, called GLP-1s. They kill hunger. They also quiet almost every other craving your brain produces. Inside your brain there is a small region that makes a chemical called dopamine. Dopamine is your brain’s “this is worth wanting” chemical, the reason you reach for one more bite of pasta, refresh your inbox one more time, or pick up your phone every few minutes. GLP-1 drugs reach that region and turn the dopamine down. The right dose dampens the loudest craving first: food. Take too much, and the volume drops on everything else, sex, exercise, work, even the urge to get out of bed in the morning. Anhedonia is the medical name for not feeling pleasure from anything at all. It looks identical to deep depression. The good news is that anhedonia from GLP-1s has an off switch: once the drug clears your system, the wanting comes back. The FDA has logged over 1,150 reports of bad reactions tied to compounded GLP-1s through July 2025. These are custom-mixed versions made by smaller pharmacies. In many of those cases, patients accidentally took five to twenty times their prescribed dose. The cause is usually confusion between milliliters and units when measuring out a dose with an insulin syringe, since compounded versions come in plain vials instead of the pre-filled pens that brand-name Ozempic uses. About 15 million Americans currently use a GLP-1, roughly one in eight adults. Around 75% of them eventually quit. Cost and side effects are the top reasons. A growing number describe a third reason that patients call “the lights dimming,” a flat, gray feeling across the whole day that doctors now recognize as anhedonia caused by the drug itself. This same mechanism has caught pharma’s attention. Eli Lilly is now running two large clinical trials with a combined 2,200 patients to see if a GLP-1 drug can treat alcohol addiction. The bet is that the same brain switch that turns off cravings for food can also turn off cravings for alcohol, cocaine, nicotine, and gambling. A 2026 psychiatry review put it bluntly: doctors should be treating these as psychiatric drugs, because that is what they have turned out to be. The drug works by quieting your brain’s signal that something is worth wanting. A normal dose turns the volume down on food cravings. Push the dose too high, and everything else goes quiet too.
Overlap: Business & Tech@Overlap_Tech

Sam Altman Overdosed on GLP-1s⁣ ⁣ "Taking enough of it makes you have not a desire for anything else. Few days laying in a hospital bed staring at a white ceiling thinking nothing, not wanting anything." — @sama

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Fish O’Clockery
Fish O’Clockery@handslaps·
Derek worked at The Atlantic during Biden's term, and his colleague covered this here: theatlantic.com/politics/archi… "For the most part, Biden adhered to a much nobler and more honorable standard of the presidency. That’s what made this final act so painful: He proved the cynics right." So, your "whataboutism" falls flat. Now, address the actual concern, or are you unable to?
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Derek Thompson
Derek Thompson@DKThomp·
Within one 24 hour period, Trump: - got out of a $100 million IRS fine - secured "immunity" from all future tax investigations for his family and friends - created a $1.8 billion slush fund for lawbreaking supporters - was reported for likely insider trading worth nearly $1 billion All of the obvious things to say about this are true. It's bad. Nobody even tries to defend it. The closest thing to a defense you get is something about how "but Democrats suck" and "woke was also bad," which is not a defense, but rather a kind of moral blank check made out to the administration to give them the right to do anything. But what I'm most curious about is whether this sort of lurid corruption creates a countermovement that successfully returns government to rule of law or whether it's establishing a norm of executive imperialism that every future administration will use to achieve its ends, which can always be justified by the moral blank check of "the other side is worse, so let us do whatever we want."
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staysaasy
staysaasy@staysaasy·
The vibes in NJ feel pretty great right now. The convergence in outcomes is the best I've ever seen. Over the last 5yrs, a group of ~10k people - guys who own paving companies, guys who own marinas, ShopRite deli managers, Wawa shift leads, and a guy named Sal - have quietly become millionaires and nobody knows because they still drive a Silverado from 2008. Back of the envelope Taylor ham estimation. Everyone outside that group feels like they can work their well-paying (but <$500k) job their whole life and easily get there. My cousin works at PSE&G. He has a boat. Better yet, hiring is in full swing. Many tradesmen feel like their life's skill is more useful than ever. The day to day role of most jobs has stayed exactly the same for 40 years. As a result, 1) Everyone's settled into a tried and true set of career paths: take over my uncle's HVAC, get my CDL, get into landscaping, marry into a pizza place. People are switching diners less and less. You can't betray your home diner. 2) There's a deep contentment about work (and its future). Why chase "tech" when you can own three rentals in Hoboken and complain about your tenants at a barbecue. Will my job exist in a few years? This is Jersey. The job is paving things. You hear the "I'm never leaving" conversation a lot, especially from people who tried Brooklyn for a year. They come back saying the energy was off. The energy was fine. They missed their mom. 3) The mid to late middle managers feel energized. Many have families and plenty of energy to open a pizzeria with their cousin Anthony. Not that Anthony. The other one. They don't particularly have any AI skills and they don't need any. Middle management is alive and well at PSE&G and you get a pension. My uncle retired at 58. He's been on a boat since 2019. 4) The rich aren't particularly humble either. They're at the shore house. They've been at the shore house since 1987. Some have gone from <$150k to >$5M slowly, through a paving company, or by buying a duplex in Jersey City in 2003 and just kinda holding it. For some, they escape to LBI to live life, which means sitting on a deck. For others, they buy a boat just cuz, use it four times, and describe it as the best decision they ever made at every party for the rest of their life. I asked a contractor friend why he didn't retire. He said "and do what, Donna does NOT want me home all day." I understand many reading this scoff at the simple pleasures of the Garden State. They live in places where the bagels are bad and they've made peace with it. But the truth is, you can surf Belmar in the morning, skate the Asbury bowls in the afternoon, hike the Delaware Water Gap, and camp the Pine Barrens by nightfall. You can drive an hour and be anywhere. You can see Bruce at the Stone Pony for what feels like the 400th time and cry about it. The slice somehow tastes better than every slice in every other state. It's the water. It's always the water. Unlike many other places, knowing a guy, having a guy, and being a guy is tightly correlated with outcomes in NJ. Need a permit? Tony's brother. Need a kidney? Probably still Tony's brother. Call him. Ironically, a frequent side effect of this clarity is to spin up the very pork roll egg and cheese making everyone happy in hopes that you too can SPK your way to economic enlightenment. Salt pepper ketchup. Hard roll. Don't ask for it on a bagel. That's how civilizations fall.
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