k4ze

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k4ze

k4ze

@k4zeCSGO

one day i will get an Azuki. Future AI entrepreneur, mathematics enjoyer https://t.co/o8as56FDUi remilio

Katılım Haziran 2018
4K Takip Edilen1.3K Takipçiler
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k4ze
k4ze@k4zeCSGO·
Hey ! I'm a 16 years old Web3 enthusiast, gamer, and i'm planning to reach financial freedom soon ! Glad to meet y'all, if you guys need something hit me up in dms
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k4ze
k4ze@k4zeCSGO·
I tend to think I am going to be (in a few years) the one who will discover what they call the « théorie unitaire »
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Limi Yamamoto
Limi Yamamoto@LimiYamamoto·
LIMI feu × Dr. Martens collaboration boots will be released on Friday, January 16.

This release presents a button boot that reconstructs the previously well-received limited-edition LIMI feu × Dr. on the styling.
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k4ze
k4ze@k4zeCSGO·
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rektdiomedes
rektdiomedes@rektdiomedes·
There is $10M inside your laptop if you figure out the right sequence of buttons to press on it... There is an utterly ripped fizeek inside of you if you do the right lifting + diet... And there are people you have not yet met who will love you... (as long as you do enough IRL-maxxing to meet them that is don't forget to touch some mf grass anon)
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k4ze
k4ze@k4zeCSGO·
@hthieblot agenda which helps you achieve whatever goal you want. the craziet the better
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Hubert Thieblot
Hubert Thieblot@hthieblot·
Explain your product in one sentence. Be clear about what it does. No buzzwords. If you can do that, I’ll consider investing. Hit me.
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k4ze
k4ze@k4zeCSGO·
@rektdiomedes hit us with the seneca quote love to see it
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rektdiomedes
rektdiomedes@rektdiomedes·
"Vīvere mīlitāre est - To live is to fight" - Seneca Keep putting in the reps lads 💪 Nothing worth doing in life is easy...
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𝔓𝔲𝔯𝔯𝔠𝔞𝔱 猫
i had no other choice than lemonade as a non alcoholic drink in this restaurant i took myself out for a date and i dont even like lemonade. but i ended up drinking the perfect lemonade with perfect sweet and sour balance. it should be always more sour than sweet and should have mint in it.
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will ye
will ye@will__ye·
living in a walkable city is kinda goated
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k4ze
k4ze@k4zeCSGO·
@katexbt are u sure the hyperbeat link is legit ?
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katexbt.hl
katexbt.hl@katexbt·
You have over 6 airdrops to claim in the next 24 hours if you have been active on HyperEVM (TIME SENSITIVE) Check all wallets ASAP! RT for visibility! 1. Hyperbeat signing

hyperbeatfoundation.org/airdrop-terms 2. Kinetiq
kinetiq-foundation.org/terms 3. Ramses (few hours left, Hypurr holders, after thats done in a few weeks they'll give out some tokens to Hypio/Pip holders too ramses.xyz/airdrop 4. Sentient airdrop registration airdrop.sentient.xyz 5. Hybra claims (its an NFT): hybra.finance/airdrop Can sell OTC/NFT marketplace here: hyperwarp.fi/mx/v2/hybra 6. Harmonix Genesis claim.harmonix.fi snapshot will be dec 1 but you NEED to sign above 7. Don't forget BIOS if you posted about it before this summer from the Virtuals stuff, you can claim half (and more) of your allocation basisos.org/mindshare Thank you for being part of the @arbitrum family everyone. Thank you for your attention to this matter.
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k4ze
k4ze@k4zeCSGO·
@mert On it
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mert
mert@mert·
if there is ever a post of mine that you should take seriously and act on, it is this one go get this book I obviously gain nothing from this; it is a pure recommendation of what I found to be the best book I've read there is 0 chance you don't end up smarter after
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vx-underground
vx-underground@vxunderground·
In the mid-2000's I played a lot of video games. Most notably Halo 2 and Halo 3. I had achieved the highest ranks possible in many playlists. For my Halo nerds, I was a 50 in Lone Wolf, Doubles, Team Slayer, Team Sniper, and SWAT. I was a 47 in MLG. As I became more and more competitive it was semi-common to encounter cheaters. It was primarily people abusing the P2P networking system they implemented (as the kids called it, lag switching). It eventually transformed into people doing DdoS attacks (Distributed Denial of Service Attacks) using popular tools at the time like Cain & Abel (for getting computer addresses in the game lobby) and silly botnet stuff like "XR Booter" and "Biozombie". I became enamored with the concept of DdoS attacks. I eventually had a small little botnet (I was very dangerous, I had over 20 infected machines) and was cheating in Halo as well. However, while many of the degenerate filth I associated with at the time continued to do DdoS attacks and lame shit, I became much more interested in the internals of botnets and computer networking. As a teenager I then took the initiative to self-teach myself introductory computer networking stuff. I mostly focused on the TCP/IP stack. I thought it was fascinating. Eventually however, I became more curious on the "booters" themselves and how they fundamentally operated. After reading through forums and conversing with hundreds of noobs, such as myself, I eventually came to the realization I would need to learn to code to truly understand how these "booters" worked. On FreeNode someone convinced me to grab a physical copy of C Primer Plus ... so, I did. I got the book and suffered. It was insanely boring. I fucking hated it. I hated the "exercises". I hated debugging. The if-else and while-loop conditional statements annoyed me. Data structures seemed intense. The entire concept of the stack and dynamic memory allocation seemed like alien technology. However, I persisted because I was determined to understand what the fuck this "booter" stuff was doing. Was I good at coding? No. Did I learn fast? No. Am I high-IQ 1337? No. Eventually after struggling, kicking my feet, and being self-dragged through the mud I actually finished the book. During this time StackOverflow didn't exist. ChatGPT didn't exist. My only help was forums and schizos on IRC. When I finished my book I decided to lock in and dive into malware. My goal (initially) was to make my own "booter". Yeah, I struggled unironically for like, 2 years, self-teaching myself networking and C to make a shit fucking DdoS botnet. I did some web searching and found a place called "VxHeaven". On there I found tons of papers and source code for malware. I was blown away. Everyday after school I went to VxHeaven and read papers on malware. I took notes, I read papers, I tried copy-pasting source code to understand how it worked. After more struggling I completed some small malware projects. They were never released into the wild because as I learned more I stopped caring about the applicability of malware. I instead exclusively wanted to focus on the "potential" of malware. I wanted to explore malware and ... just do weird stuff on the computer. I didn't want to hurt people. I didn't want to play video games anymore. All I wanted to do was code weird stuff and learn more. Many of my "peers" at the time thought I was lame for this. Anyway, I was a super hardcore loser and stopped writing malware and instead switched up to just regular programming. I didn't think it was possible to do malware stuff as a career. Around 2018, or 2019, I decided to make a website that archived malware source code, samples, and papers. I did it for myself because I wanted to emulate what VxHeaven did. I didn't expect anyone to give a fuck about me or my project. However, much to my surprise, it has exploded in popularity. Am I a faster learner? No. Do I have a good memory? No. I have to re-read stuff like 300 times. I suck at stuff. My only saving grace is, despite being ridiculously dumb, I am absurdly persistent in things I am interested in. This persistence and willingness to fail over and over, yet continue trying, has some how lead me to having a relatively successful career and relatively success website and social media presence tldr video games, tried hard, failed, I'm dumb, kept doing stuff, some how success. Mostly luck and failing a bunch
Afolabi Sokeye 🧱@SokeyeA

What’s the lore behind choosing your career path ?

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k4ze
k4ze@k4zeCSGO·
@jonkodoteth i can taste it just by looking at it
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k4ze
k4ze@k4zeCSGO·
@hosseeb extremely based!
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Haseeb >|<
Haseeb >|<@hosseeb·
Advice to men in their 20s: 1. Get better at speaking. Do embarrassing stuff like record yourself, Toastmasters, study good speakers and try to emulate them to try out their verbal techniques and see how they fit you. Charisma is the omni-skill. 2. Drink less, or not at all. It will force you to become a better conversationalist. 3. Buy art that your friends make and hang it on your walls. 4. Never lend money to family or close friends. Instead gift it to them, and if they pay you back, consider it a pleasant surprise. 5. Spend most of your money on experiences, not things. 6. Make sure your spending scales sublinearly compared to your income, and you will always feel rich. 7. Take a lot of risks. More risks that you think you should. When you're young, the downsides are never as big as you think, and other people's memories are short. 8. Every man is cobbled together from people they surround themselves with, both physically and mentally. Surround yourself with people you respect. If you never lose friends or never try to acquire better ones, you're doing it wrong. 9. Whenever you feel comfortable that you've made something of yourself, it's time to move on. Move to a bigger city. Try for a more prestigious company. Find the biggest games, and try your hand at them. 10. Say yes to every adventure, at least once. Your 20s are the only time you'll get to do that.
Usopp@Usoppu

Men who are more than 30 Give advice to men who are in their 20s The topic can be anything

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k4ze
k4ze@k4zeCSGO·
the day you plant the seed isn’t the day you eat the fruit
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k4ze
k4ze@k4zeCSGO·
just ate a clementine. it had a weird but rather pleasant taste of hope and clarity and sun
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Julia Turc
Julia Turc@juliarturc·
Dear “15-18 yo founder”s sending me DMs, don’t. Go and hug your parents, fall in love, eat chocolate cereal for breakfast, read poetry. Nobody will give you back these years. And sure, do your homework and learn math and code if that feels fun. But stop building SaaS and hustling. Even if career is what you are optimizing for, this is not the way. You need deep education that will withstand automation. You need to sit with linear algebra and probability theory and philosophy and literature. It won’t get you go viral on X but it’ll make you whole. And mute all the SF performative assholes. Oooops sorry this last one was a note to self.
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۟
۟@MINHxDYNASTY·
i need an intern
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k4ze
k4ze@k4zeCSGO·
@mert ur a nice guy Mert
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mert
mert@mert·
turning 30 today (yes, I went bald at 25) a few personal learnings about my 20s that might help others who are not uncs yet: 1) understand that age is a bad proxy for knowledge especially in Eastern cultures, you are treated as being more knowledgeable and more respectable the older you are while you should be respectful towards others, understand that the vast majority of "adults" have no idea what they're talking about they are just as dumb as you, but have the added arrogance of age the arrogance is portrayed as confidence, which makes you trust that they're correct, but this is not the case 2) take way more risks everyone tells you to do this when you're young and while you don't have familial responsibilities, yet most people still don't do it a good reframe here is to think not of what can go wrong, but of what can go right 3) default to action, you have tons of years and energy to error correct almost no mistake is catastrophic enough to ruin your life, that doesn't result in jail or ill health 4) where you live matters more than you think you are in a trade with your government. they take a large percent of what you make and give you things in exchange like safety, transport, etc make sure you are getting a good trade. if you're paying 60% in taxes and getting the worst medical care on earth (canada), get out 5) get good at communicating, no matter what your job or career is to write, speak, and listen are human skills and they amplify the ceiling of roughly any single job or career you will get 6) if you're unsure where you're going, start with the end in mind and work backwards, and then course correct 7) start or join a startup 8) read the beginning of infinity by david deutsch and skin in the game by taleb 9) create more than you consume your life's goal should be to go to the grave empty, you should have nothing more you could have added to civilization 10) in the age of fake internet personas, be relentlessly authentic and like minded people will find you 11) in a similar light, always reassess your current situation and determine whether you're in it because you yourself reasoned up from your own independent thinking or because you're blindly following social norms 12) understand that all advice and lists like this one are deeply path dependent and personal and the most important thing is to always think for yourself
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rektdiomedes
rektdiomedes@rektdiomedes·
Crypto Stuff I'm Looking At Today ... - Sentiment looking pretty bleak... - Gold at $4300+ and absolutely mogging on $BTC - Bitcoin Fear at 22 and Altcoin Season Index at 43 - Bitcoin is currently red on the monthly however it has been green in October for 6 years in a row, so if it ends red that would be quite a streak-breaker... - DAT landscape not looking too hot (link on this below) - $MET Meteora airdrop checker is live - $MONAD airdrop claim portal is live - TypusFinance on Sui was exploited for $3.4M - $TAO seems to be on a bit of a comeback arc, with renewed excitement about it on the TL and price outperforming most of the top 100 - Lighter continues to be the most popular prospective airdrop, and the founder just stated that it will include "25-30% in this airdrop, with 50% total for community"... - My bros at @rocksolidHQ absolutely killing it (link below!), alongside Maple, Pendle, Aave, Euler, Fluid, etc... as the defi renaissance rolls on (despite defi not yet even remotely getting the repricing it deserves obviously)... - Continuing to see discussion about quantum computing threats to Bitcoin... I am still geeking out on the subject but will link to an example below... - Also continuing to see lots of criticism of Binance... - neutrl_labs (a new basis-trade/stablecoin/etc protocol) filled their $50M deposit cap in just twenty minutes earlier this week - Lots of excitement around MegaETH ICO on Sonar - Also lots of excitement about Yield Basis from Curve founder newmichwill... now up to $155M TVL and the fastest-growing protocol on the weekly with at least $100M TVL - Fastest-growing chain on the weekly with at least $100M TVL is Ink (Kraken's new chain), which is around the $150M mark currently... - Tokenless perps dex meta rolls on (despite the brutality of last Friday) - Seeing lots of bullish thoughts on $RAIL (will link example below) Conclusion Price action is a bit of a bummer obviously lads, but I still don't think anything is different on the overall macro picture... Indeed, while its obviously frustrating seeing gold surge through price discovery while crypto gets smacked around, I think gold going higher is absolutely fantastic long-term, as it opens up the proverbial Overton Window on how much non-stonk asset classes can be worth. As I said yesterday, I think one of the best ways to look at crypto is essentially as a generational compact... The industry has attracted all of the smartest, most creative, industrious young people on earth to work within it. There is zero chance they all wake up one day 20 years from now and say "ah, the old system really was better, let's give up on this tokenization/blockchain stuff". As a result, time is on our side. To benefit from this massive transformation, one simply needs to: a) maintain belief, and exposure to the asset class (especially via blue chips, and not just alts), and... b) avoid getting zeroed out As we saw last Friday, sometimes the latter is the hardest part. So yeah, hang in there my brothers, and stay hypervigilant. Valhalla still awaits... but nothing in life worth doing is easy 💪
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