Gagandeep Singh

166 posts

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Gagandeep Singh

Gagandeep Singh

@jungledesh

Engineer

Menlo Park, California Katılım Eylül 2024
30 Takip Edilen25 Takipçiler
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Gagandeep Singh
Gagandeep Singh@jungledesh·
Labor to keep alive in your breast that little spark of celestial fire called conscience.
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ThePrimeagen
ThePrimeagen@ThePrimeagen·
Dear @sama Please refer to GPT as gipidy (jipidy). It's much nicer to say that way
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Cale 🥬
Cale 🥬@CaleCrypto·
I’m 33 and my husband and I met each other when we were 18 All of this time later and we are still obsessed with each other Soulmates are real
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Sophia
Sophia@kaliyugacowgirl·
i wonder if every man is at war with himself
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Gagandeep Singh
Gagandeep Singh@jungledesh·
@nbaschez That's a new way to see it all. Instilled it, and work on it. Thanks for the new view! Followed you :)
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Nathan Baschez
Nathan Baschez@nbaschez·
I have a lot of empathy for this worldview because I used to be this way. And not just about SF. I used to think most people basically sucked, they’re shallow and even sometimes soulless, they didn’t like me or understand me, it’s all a status game, etc. This was basically wounds from childhood and hyper-vigilance to protect myself. (And of course only accomplished the opposite.) The reality is that almost everyone is actually great. They will love you when they get to know you, and you will love them. They are interesting and real, and worth talking to and being honest with. Sure, they have wounds too, but most people’s wounds quickly melt when they sense that you like them. And sure, this doesn’t mean it will make sense for you to become besties or for them to join your company or hire you or anything. But sometimes maybe it will! Golden retriever energy is real, it will change your life, and it can be yours, I promise.
Clara Gold@Clara_Gold

6 months ago, I moved to San Francisco. It’s the best place in the world to build, and one of the worst places to stay human. My unfiltered take: 1. SF is both overhyped and underrated The overhyped part: there are a lot of people with incredible resumes who are deeply unimpressive in real life. They were at the right company, at the right time, in the right market, and got carried by the wave. They made money, got comfortable, and now spend their time “exploring opportunities” over coffee, wasting your time. The underrated part: the top 1% here is insane. But almost impossible to get. Hiring in SF feels like being a guy on a dating app: everyone you want is out of your league, and everyone in your league wants someone out of theirs. The best people have unmatchable packages, endless options, and are optimizing for maximum impact: labs, frontier companies, or startups raising $100M pre-seed rounds. If you raised $10M from Tier 1 investors, you’re not hot shit here. You’re a B-player. It’s humbling. 2. There are fewer mission-driven people than I expected Especially on the application layer. A lot of people are in “secure the bag before it’s too late” mode. And honestly, it gives me the ick. The real religious builders I’ve met are often in labs, hardware, biotech, deeptech, defense — places where the work is hard enough that you can’t fake obsession. 3. The status game favors builders This is what SF does better than anywhere else. It rewards obsession. It rewards weirdness. It rewards people who make building their entire personality. Europe punishes that. SF gives it status. If you’ve felt like an outsider your whole life because you care too much, work too much, think too radically, or refuse to be chill about things that matter, this city will make you feel less insane. 4. The market liquidity is absurd Even if you don’t build a billion-dollar company, if you manage to build a strong product with a great team, someone smart might still acquire you for $ 100M. Yeah I know, it’s not your dream outcome as a founder, but on the days you feel desperate, it helps to keep going. 5. SF does not care about the meaning crisis that’s coming Anyone paying attention here can feel that something massive is happening with AI. But I’m shocked by how little people talk about the meaning crisis coming next. Everyone wants to talk about AI liberating humanity. Almost no one wants to talk about what happens when work — the thing that gives most people identity, structure, dignity, status, and purpose — starts disappearing. The vacuum will not be peaceful. People are underestimating the chaos that comes from humans suddenly having no idea why they matter. And I really feel like no one cares. 6. Personally, I’ve never been more unhappy I moved to SF and entered the matrix. I’ve always been intense. I’ve always worked crazy hours. But here, I lost the last parts of myself that were not about building. I don’t go to events. Most networking events feel like theater for people pretending to be important. The only events worth going to are small, curated dinners with people who are actually alive. I’ve made 0 real friends. I don’t do well with transactionality. I don’t do well with people constantly performing greatness. I don’t do well with rooms where everyone is optimizing and no one is being honest. So yes, SF is lonely, transactional, delusional, addictive, inspiring, boring, extraordinary, and completely insane. But it is still the only place to be right now if you’re a founder trying to build the next wave of humanity. And for now, that’s enough.

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Gagandeep Singh
Gagandeep Singh@jungledesh·
@elonmusk If you win, which you should, given the nature of the case. Can we have a party at X's palo alto office?
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Celeste Amadon
Celeste Amadon@Celesteamadon·
I have the marriage I always wanted: - separate bedrooms - shared dog (he handles the poop) - joint business in growth mode - I'm right more than half the time He's gay. Otherwise: flawless.
Celeste Amadon tweet media
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Daddy
Daddy@ChudDaddy·
You’re sick if you find Caitlin Clark attractive
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Riley Gaines
Riley Gaines@Riley_Gaines_·
The local PD showed up to my house to hand deliver flowers for my birthday earlier this week. This is why so many people are moving to TN. I'm so grateful for my community and our law enforcement officers.
Riley Gaines tweet media
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Gagandeep Singh
Gagandeep Singh@jungledesh·
@Bilalbinsaqib Not a Pakistani, but since my great grandparents were, and we still have roots there, this is good to see. Go Pakistanis, touch high!
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Bilal bin Saqib MBE
Bilal bin Saqib MBE@Bilalbinsaqib·
The era of AI billionaires is upon us! A 26 year old Pakistani, Sualeh, just co-founded a company that SpaceX is reportedly considering buying for $60 billion. This is a profoundly proud moment for Pakistan, and undeniable proof for our youth that there is no ceiling to what they can achieve. I met Sualeh in Silicon Valley not long ago, and his brilliance felt incredibly familiar. It’s the exact same clarity of thought you see in young minds all over Pakistan. What MIT provided was access to capital, computing power, and a culture that champions ambitious youth. The gap between our homegrown talent and the infrastructure we offer them is the most costly issue in Pakistan's economy today. Closing it isn't just about economics; it’s about giving a generation the backing they deserve. Talent has never been our problem. I’ve seen Pakistani engineers pushing the boundaries of what's possible globally. What we lack is the ecosystem to support them locally. Sualeh’s story should inspire two things in every young Pakistani: immense pride, and the stubborn conviction that the next $60 billion idea can be built at home. We don't lack brilliant minds; we lack the right conditions. With the right policy, capital, and leadership that treats our youth as our greatest asset, this is a fully solvable problem.
Bilal bin Saqib MBE tweet mediaBilal bin Saqib MBE tweet media
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Sarah Longwell
Sarah Longwell@SarahLongwell25·
I can’t imagine a more humiliating way to go out.
Sarah Longwell tweet media
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Gagandeep Singh
Gagandeep Singh@jungledesh·
If you run vLLM, let me know what you find with profile. What's something you wish it could do?
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Gagandeep Singh
Gagandeep Singh@jungledesh·
Your GPU is at 97% util & still wasting compute.
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