Mike Brewer

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Mike Brewer

Mike Brewer

@mbrewer

Author. Podcast Host. Love running, hiking, and PropTech. Thoughts/Opinions are my own. See You Out There!

Wherever I May Roam Katılım Mart 2007
6.4K Takip Edilen6.2K Takipçiler
Mike Brewer
Mike Brewer@mbrewer·
@okcthunder - let’s make this @KingJames last game -ever. His impact on the league is a travesty - time for him to retire!
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Jaynit
Jaynit@jaynitx·
Naval Ravikant reveals why Malcolm Gladwell got the 10,000 hours rule completely wrong "Malcolm Gladwell popularized this idea of 10,000 hours to mastery. I would say it's actually 10,000 iterations to mastery. It's about the number of iterations that drives a learning curve" "Iteration is not repetition. Repetition is doing the same thing over and over. Iteration is modifying it with a learning and then doing another version of it. If you get 10,000 error corrections in anything, you will be an expert at it"
Jaynit@jaynitx

x.com/i/article/2017…

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Ryan Saavedra
Ryan Saavedra@RyanSaavedra·
Ken Griffin slams Europe for refusing to help the U.S. deal with Iran: "Europe has depended upon American military strength and capability since World War II. We helped maintain stability and peace during the Cold War. Europe has benefited from the Americans’ willingness to spend on their defense. The Europeans should be there for us in a more profound way in this moment in history."
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Paul Graham
Paul Graham@paulg·
Sure you can earn a billion dollars. I've been teaching people how to do it for 20 years. The way you do it is to start a company that grows fast. You don't have to do anything bad to make a company grow fast. You just have to make something people want. paulgraham.com/ace.html
Marco Foster@MarcoFoster_

AOC: “There’s a certain level of wealth and accumulation that is unearned. You can’t earn a billion dollars. You just can’t earn that. You can get market power, you can break rules, you can abuse labor laws, you can pay people less than what they’re worth, but you can’t earn that”

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Gene Munster
Gene Munster@munster_gene·
Prediction: When people start getting cowork and codex rockin on their laptops, these gonna a run to upgrade laptops. Good for Macs I’m FY27. Street is looking for 7% growth. Question is how they’ll handle the increased component costs. They buy a year old. I bet prices go up. $AAPL
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a16z
a16z@a16z·
.@pmarca says AI is the biggest technological revolution of his life: "This is the biggest technological revolution of my life. This is clearly bigger than the internet. The comps on this are things like the microprocessor, the steam engine, and electricity." "The neural network as an idea continued to be explored in academia for the last 80 years. And essentially it didn't work, it was decade after decade of excessive optimism, followed by disappointment." "Then basically we all saw what happened with the ChatGPT moment. All of a sudden it crystallized, and it was like, 'Oh my God, it turns out it works.' We're sort of three years into effectively an 80-year revolution."
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TBPN
TBPN@tbpn·
.@Collision is bullish on two types of people: high-agency individuals and double majors. "There are two categories of people I would be super bullish on right now and I think will do incredibly well over the next 10-20 years. First, high-agency people. The people at Stripe who have been talking to customers and know exactly what we should do. It's the people who have that pep in their step and want to go make Stripe better. They are so much more empowered thanks to AI." "The second is double majors. I think if you understand software and understand finance, or if you understand software and understand marketing, you now can go massively improve the entire marketing funnel for your company. Now, one person can do what would have taken 20 people dredging through all these systems." "Charlie Munger talked about the importance of being multidisciplinary and multidisciplinary thinking. He thinks getting a functional understanding of many disciplines is not that hard. You can just go read the books now or you can talk to your AI about it. I think multidisciplinary thinkers are going to do incredibly well."
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Robert Greene
Robert Greene@RobertGreene·
After seven years of intense work, I am excited to announce that my new book, The Law of the Sublime, will be out in November. and is now available for pre-order (see link below). The book is designed to expand your mind, and to reveal to you a world to explore beyond what you consider reality: the realm of the Sublime. This adventure does not require travel, drugs, or any form of external stimulation. It only requires a new pair of eyes to see the extraordinary all around you. Through stories, exercises, and meditations, the book will immerse you in the Sublime and forever transform how you experience life.
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Chamath Palihapitiya
Chamath Palihapitiya@chamath·
Counterintuitive take: AI makes people more important than ever. While simple work may be automated, judgement and taste are still the sole domains of humans and will be for a long time. Software Factory allows us to capture what we know into a Knowledge Graph that then helps you to guide and manage your team - of people, agents, AI and everything in between. The result is a better product and more resilient software. Try it.
8090@8090_Factory

your company's most valuable asset is the one engineer who understands it. and AI agents just made that person 10x more critical, not less. cursor, copilot, claude code. these tools are only as good as the context you feed them. and in most enterprises the context lives in exactly one place: the head of the senior engineer who's been there seven years. when they take PTO, AI output quality drops. when they leave, the AI becomes useless for anything complex. that's the tribal knowledge problem. AI amplifies it. it doesn't eliminate it. unless you capture the knowledge first. at 8090 we built Software Factory around the Knowledge Graph for exactly this reason. Requirements captures business intent in plain english. Blueprints captures architecture decisions. Work Orders and Tests link every artifact forward and backward. nothing lives in a head. everything lives in the graph. EY deployed this across hundreds of consultants. new engineers reach productivity in weeks, not quarters. the context is in the system. tribal knowledge dies. documentation lives. that's not a slogan. it's the architecture. try it: factory.8090.ai/?utm_source=x&…

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