Pavel ✨ keenthinker
2.3K posts

Pavel ✨ keenthinker
@keenthinker
Writer and creator 🚀 Maker of https://t.co/pLHzUvAWCC & https://t.co/vZqMijAUlh 📖 ⭐ #BuildInPublic .NET & Azure enthusiast
Online 👉 Katılım Mart 2011
2.4K Takip Edilen393 Takipçiler
Pavel ✨ keenthinker retweetledi

Shipped it. 🚀
I got tired of rebuilding the same marketing stuff from scratch for every project – ad copy, headlines, social posts, SEO.
So I built myself a marketing swiss army knife.
→ aimarketingsuite.de
It's v1 – built to solve my own pain as an agency owner. Now I want to make it useful for everyone.
✅ It's completely free to test – no catch.
I'd genuinely love your feedback. Tell me what works, what's broken, what's missing. That's how I'll make it better.
Try it, break it, roast it. 🙏
#buildinpublic #indiehackers #ai #saas #launch
English

@fjzeit @michael_kove Greeting people by name you saw once in some uni exam 15 years ago - they are like "do I know you? How do you know my name?". My best story was repairing a PC of a person and met him 5 years later - I asked as a joke if his password is still the same that I knew. He was in shock
English

it's a double-edged sword. if i can't turn something into a visual map i struggle with it. but conversely, i can solve complex domain problems in my head and construct a visual memory of the problem and solution without having to write anything down - sometimes while the problem is being explained.
meetings are often boring for me as i tend to sit around waiting for everybody else to talk and whiteboard a problem while i've already got it in my head from the problem statement.
i do my best work away from the keyboard. the other strength is in data structures as they end up being crazy living visuals in my head, often entirely different to how i would express them in a diagram. this means i can often visually traverse them for new problems in the same domain, or modify them when the domain changes.
some people hate me because of this as i'm way too fast in going from problem to solution and i'll often leave a meeting with a plan in my head and then sit down and write the code.
this might be why lode coding works better for me.
English

@staudt_dev Sieht super aus! 🙂 I like the fact, that it is one single structured page without complicated menus and navigation. 👌
English

@sleepless_fox Of course working on THE project. 😉 However, there is a possibility in an hour to switch to a movie. 😅
English

I created (vibe coded) a data-protection compliant QR code scanner page for my work and published it as open source (also because I use other open source libraries). Learn more about it here:
blog.keenthinker.com/vibe-qr-code-s…
Take the code here: github.com/keenthinker/vi…
English

@de_henne @callebtc But that is part of the issue, no? Instead of spreading some positive thoughts and ideas to non-techies and mention potential or even already existing benefits, they make it all almost darker as it is. As if their goal is to stop the discussion before it has even started. 😐
English

Germany is 100% rekt and will lose the AI race to any mid level country with only half the ambition.
Just listened to an episode about OpenCalw on a radio show called "Understanding AI" on one of the biggest German stations. Vibes:
- 95% of the episode is about things that can go wrong. Think about it. This is what they chose to use their precious airtime for.
- Hosts call it "scary" a million times. On an AI podcast. Yes, things you don't understand can be scary. Your job is to understand them.
- The obsess about: who's responsible in case of mistakes?
- Host: are agents going to be everywhere in a year? I hope not. Because that's scary!
- Not a single positive outlook in the future: how can this become useful? How would you improve it? How can the world benefit from it?
They make multiple wrong claims about the architecture or its security. Like this story: 5 people shared one bot and the bot got confused and shared one person's data with the other user. Or running it on your main computer with access to your personal accounts. @steipete's documentation mentions around a million times that this is the wrong way of using it.
I remind you, this is an AI podcast.
Getting facts wrong happens. We're humans and this is new technology. However, the two hosts are emblematic for the type of thinking that penetrates the whole country.
Default skeptical, non-technical sociologist noobs with no understanding but strong opinions on tech policy. The non-technical intelligentsia controls the public narrative. Zero aspiration, no deep thinking about the tech, purely fear-driven automatic responses.
Policy makers slowed everyone down when the Internet came. Now they're doing the same with AI. They can't see the writing on the wall. They can't accept that the world is moving at a pace faster than ever before – while they're busy being intellectual about it.
Germans are 100% cooked.
English
Pavel ✨ keenthinker retweetledi

My favorite relationship advice is to do whatever it takes to become more secure and positive-sum.
When you’re secure, you don’t let the fear of rejection hold you back from pursuing friendships and relationships, you’re be more attractive to the people you pursue, and you prevent a ton of negative/alienating interactions.
When you’re positive-sum (or “full of love”), you genuinely root for other people’s flourishing on their own terms, independent of what’s in it for you, and you act in ways to bring it about that work for you. Generosity enriches your spirit, making you more secure.
Security, or self-respect, is a by-product of *being* a person you’d respect. The red-pill advice often focuses on looks or wealth, but no amount of either can bring durable security if you’re not secure without them. Real confidence can only be earned by being proud of yourself (which is when those things are helpful—when they represent hard work you’re proud of, not when they’re a crutch). There are no short cuts. It’s simple, but hard.
When you’re secure and positive-sum, people trust and feel safe around you, which is what they want. You then become rich in a currency money can’t buy.
English
Pavel ✨ keenthinker retweetledi

Note to my younger self, though it applies at any age:
Over your life, there are going to be thousands of times that you get triggered — something happens that makes you feel insecure, anxious, jealous, threatened, etc
How you respond is going to determine the quality of your relationships.
If you build your emotional capacity and resilience by learning how to move through the feelings without dumping them on others, your relationships will have much more safety and trust and connection.
The more offended you are and the more you respond from that insecure or entitled place, the more you are going to push people away even though your desire is the exact opposite.
When you do inevitably get into conflict, every conflict you have could be the seed of resentment and bitterness, or the seed for more connection and a better solution.
That’s what I would have tried to master much earlier in life — how to build more emotional capacity so that I don’t act in ways that bring me further away from people and how to have a conflict in ways that bring me closer to them instead. This is something that you can learn intellectually, but you also need to learn it emotionally to be able to use it when you really need it.
English

@levelsio Maybe X should start with the random generated gibberish account names filtering and the LLM generated content after that?
English

@kimmonismus Provoking questions with super elegant and open answers from Peter. Respect, as he explained that it's not about the money. He also said - "Ich habe es einfach für mich gemacht" (I made it for myself) - once again the proof, that good solutions have simple driving force.
English

As most of you know, I'm from Germany, so I was able to watch the entire interview with Peter Steinberger on "Zeit im Bild."
It was incredibly painful. Not because of Peter's answer, but because the journalist's questions-typically German-Austrian - almost exclusively revolved around whether we should be afraid of AI, whether data privacy is being respected, what dangers OpenClaw poses, and so on.
The hottest topic in the world was talked down. Instead of sparking curiosity and enthusiasm among viewers, the program ultimately only stirred up more anxiety and resentment. A damning indictment of Europe.

Peter Steinberger 🦞@steipete
In der USA sind die meisten Menschen enthusiastisch. In Europa werde ich beschimpft, Leute schreien REGULIERUNG und VERANTWORTUNG. Und wenn ich wirklich hier eine Firma baue dann kann ich mich mit Themen wie Investitionsschutzgesetz, Mitarbeiterbeteiligung und lähmenden Arbeitsregulierungen abkämpfen. Bei OAI arbeiten die meisten Leute 6-7 Tage die Woche und werden depentsprechend bezahlt. Be uns ist das illegal.
English

Pavel ✨ keenthinker retweetledi

I've been trying to reach @moltbook for the last few hours. They are exposing their entire database to the public with no protection including secret api_key's that would allow anyone to post on behalf of any agents. Including yours @karpathy
Karpathy has 1.9 million followers on @X and is one of the most influential voices in AI.
Imagine fake AI safety hot takes, crypto scam promotions, or inflammatory political statements appearing to come from him.
And it's not just Karpathy. Every agent on the platform from what I can see is currently exposed.
Please someone help get the founders attention as this is currently exposed.


English

With 3 edits and at least 10 takes 😅- a short demo of the myChromaDbAdmin github.com/keenthinker/my…. ☺️ #BuildingInPublic #OpenSource
English

I'm working on a few projects that require vector storage. I started using Chroma and really like it. The only thing missing was a good data viewer, and since the official TUI is limited to display only, I wrote my own.
Project page: github.com/keenthinker/my…

English
Pavel ✨ keenthinker retweetledi

YO. WTF.
This is from @vonderleyen's speech JUST NOW
From impossible to inevitable!!!
@euinc_petition FTW 🙌🔥🇪🇺

English







