Mike Plisco

27 posts

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Mike Plisco

Mike Plisco

@mikeplisco

building @modus_app // notes on agency, personal intelligence, running, and general existence. new here. be gentle.

nyc Katılım Ağustos 2022
134 Takip Edilen6 Takipçiler
Mike Plisco
Mike Plisco@mikeplisco·
@signulll They will get what’s coming to them when they visit the garden in approx 12-15 days.
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signüll
signüll@signulll·
the thunder encapsulate all that is wrong with modern basketball. how can anyone enjoy watching & rooting for this team? clearly playing dirty again with holding wemby, & foul baiting too. ridiculous.
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Mike Plisco
Mike Plisco@mikeplisco·
@WSJ Can assure you there is not one Drake fan that gives a flying F what the WSJ thinks about these projects. Go back to writing about the private credit meltdown or AI. It ain’t for yall.
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The Wall Street Journal
The Canadian rapper unexpectedly released not one but three albums last week—‘Iceman,’ ‘Maid of Honour’ and ‘Habibti’—and the result is an overlong, uneven statement from one of hip-hop’s reigning figures. on.wsj.com/43kgk4G
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Mike Plisco
Mike Plisco@mikeplisco·
@NYMag I have processed it all. It’s phenomenal.
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New York Magazine
In releasing three new albums, 42 songs, and 14 music videos in a day, Drake is borrowing from the MAGA playbook of flooding the zone. You can’t process it all, and that’s by design. vulture.com/article/drake-…
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Packy McCormick
Packy McCormick@packyM·
It is 70 and sunny in New York City, we’re heading to a kite festival, and I haven’t heard the words “agent” or “token” once all morning. Greatest city in the world.
Deedy@deedydas

The vibes in SF feel pretty frenetic right now. The divide in outcomes is the worst I've ever seen. Over the last 5yrs, a group of ~10k people - employees at Anthropic, OpenAI, xAI, Nvidia, Meta TBD, founders - have hit retirement wealth of well above $20M (back of the envelope AI estimation). Everyone outside that group feels like they can work their well-paying (but <$500k) job for their whole life and never get there. Worse yet, layoffs are in full swing. Many software engineers feel like their life's skill is no longer useful. The day to day role of most jobs has changed overnight with AI. As a result, 1. The corporate ladder looks like the wrong building to climb. Everyone's trying to align with a new set of career "paths": should I be a founder? Is it too late to join Anthropic / OpenAI? should I get into AI? what company stock will 10x next? People are demanding higher salaries and switching jobs more and more. 2. There’s a deep malaise about work (and its future). Why even work at all for “peanuts”? Will my job even exist in a few years? Many feel helpless. You hear the “permanent underclass” conversation a lot, esp from young people. It's hard to focus on doing good work when you think "man, if I joined Anthropic 2yrs ago, I could retire" 3. The mid to late middle managers feel paralyzed. Many have families and don't feel like they have the energy or network to just "start a company". They don't particularly have any AI skills. They see the writing on the wall: middle management is being hollowed out in many companies. 4. The rich aren’t particularly happy either. No one is shedding tears for them (and rightfully so). But those who have "made it" experience a profound lack of purpose too. Some have gone from <$150k to >$50M in a few years with no ramp. It flips your life plans upside down. For some, comparison is the thief of joy. For some, they escape to NYC to "live life". For others still, they start companies "just cuz", often to win status points. They never imagined that by age 30, they'd be set. I once asked a post-economic founder friend why they didn't just sell the co and they said "and do what? right now, everyone wants to talk to me. if i sell, I will only have money." I understand that many reading this scoff at the champagne problems of the valley. Society is warped in this tech bubble. What is often well-off anywhere else in the world is bang average here. Unlike many other places, tenure, intelligence and hard work can be loosely correlated with outcomes in the Bay. Living through a societally transformative gold rush in that environment can be paralyzing. "Am I in the right place? Should I move? Is there time still left? Am I gonna make it?" It psychologically torments many who have moved here in search of "success". Ironically, a frequent side effect of this torment is to spin up the very products making everyone rich in hopes that you too can vibecode your path to economic enlightenment.

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Mike Plisco
Mike Plisco@mikeplisco·
The entire plot of the movie ‘Sinners’
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Mike Plisco
Mike Plisco@mikeplisco·
Lazily referring to everything written by or with ai as “slop”… ngmi
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Mike Plisco
Mike Plisco@mikeplisco·
Went on vacation with my family for a week and didn’t touch my own app once… Not sure yet if this is a feature or a serious UX deficiency but the friction associated with reintegrating it into my day-to-day is definitely something that warrants attention. And the type of thing you can only learn by dogfooding your own product. I’ve said it once and I’ll say it again, infiltrating consumer workflows and behavioral patterns is hard. Happy building.
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gaut
gaut@0xgaut·
drop your favorite "sports nutrition" hack below, here's mine
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Mike Plisco
Mike Plisco@mikeplisco·
People who run in AirPods Max cannot be trusted and represent a legitimate threat to society
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Mike Plisco
Mike Plisco@mikeplisco·
(6x BQ and 2:41 marathoner here) Idk where on the bell curve this puts me but I’ve found that a lot of people focused on running faster (specifically at the marathon distance) should actually be running less. Long, over structured training blocks with high weekly mileage minimums and whatnot are physically and mentally taxing. They have a tendency to zap the fun out of running and out of life. Once you’ve established a solid base for that distance, shorter, lighter cycles are generally more effective and enjoyable.
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gaut
gaut@0xgaut·
“how do I become a better runner?”
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Mike Plisco
Mike Plisco@mikeplisco·
The majority of people dismissing the ‘permanent underclass’ narrative and touting things like ‘ai-empowered entrepreneurship’ are grossly overestimating the agency of the average person who will be impacted by these changes. They also, for the most part, happen to be highly secure financially… Probably not coincidental.
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MTS
MTS@MTSlive·
Are the 'permanent underclass' fears founded or not? @gbrl_dick: "If you're the CEO of a public company, and you've just hired the OpenAI Deployment Company to come in and do an audit... and then you go, 'Thanks, OpenAI Deployment Company. With their help, we laid off 10,000 people.'" "You're just completely losing control of the narrative, whether that's true or not." @theojaffee: "Maybe firms will be able to do a lot more with the same amount of people without laying people off. They'll just increase output a lot.. there are a lot of angles here that aren't just now you are completely unemployable and in the permanent underclass." @pitdesi: "Last week, I canvassed for a local representative here in San Francisco.... even in San Francisco, the most tech-forward place in the world, so many people are, are reluctant to embrace AI."
OpenAI@OpenAI

Today we’re launching the OpenAI Deployment Company to help businesses build and deploy AI. It's majority-owned and controlled by OpenAI. It brings together 19 leading investment firms, consultancies, and system integrators to help organizations deploy frontier AI to production for business impact. openai.com/index/openai-l…

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gaut
gaut@0xgaut·
remember to give that friend you haven’t seen in 7 years some kudos on strava
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Mike Plisco
Mike Plisco@mikeplisco·
It’s disproportionately individuals with exceptionally high agency and/or financial security that are the most vocal in dismissing the “permanent underclass” narrative. The vast majority of people most likely to be affected by this have never even heard the term.
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Mike Plisco
Mike Plisco@mikeplisco·
@0xgaut It’s all either: (a) agents (b) ngmi because (insert almost anything here) (c) you’re ngmi because agents Highly highly stress inducing.
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gaut
gaut@0xgaut·
what it feels like to log onto this app these days
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Mike Plisco
Mike Plisco@mikeplisco·
obviously this assumes workflows are relatively stable. but this is an increasingly unsafe assumption. as agents continue to restructure what “existing workflow” even means there is real alpha in placing bets on what they will look like in the future and building for that. many won’t do this because it requires conviction in a future that isn’t here yet and you may temporarily (or permanently) appear crazy. happy building.
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Mike Plisco
Mike Plisco@mikeplisco·
building consumer software is hard bc you have to infiltrate existing user workflows and usage patterns, many of which have existed for years. you need to either: (a) provide so much new value (insight, info, efficiency, entertainment etc) that your ICP has no choice but to return daily (b) integrate so seamlessly into existing behavioral patterns that your layer is virtually unfelt, aside from tangible impact on an existing layer (c) provide enough new value that any integration friction from (b) is worthwhile for your ICP most MVPs won’t do (a) or (b) and you’ll have to lean on (c) and iterate until one of the other two is attainable.
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Mike Plisco
Mike Plisco@mikeplisco·
@Prathkum But if they are competitive are they actually mediocre…?
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Pratham
Pratham@Prathkum·
Unpopular opinion: AI made the world super competitive for mediocre people.
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Mike Plisco
Mike Plisco@mikeplisco·
This is a good idea. Maybe also highlight organizational restrictions that actually don’t need to exist on the basis of said policy. In my experience at a large global consulting firm, the default seems to be “everything off” (MCPs, connectors, apps etc) until enough people pound the table with proof that the restriction is superfluous. This greatly exaggerates the amount of time between when the org has “access” to something and when it actually becomes useful.
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Zack Korman
Zack Korman@ZackKorman·
How many of you have an AI use policy at work? Thinking of making a feature to allow security teams to upload their policy so our models can detect and alert on actions that violate it. But I don’t want to make that only to find no one has a policy to begin with.
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Mike Plisco
Mike Plisco@mikeplisco·
@eladgil As an ny-based founder, im genuinely curious as to why we’d be operating on models 3-6 months behind SV? Is my X feed lagging based on my geography? Were GPT-5.5 and Opus-4.7 actually released sometime in January?
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Elad Gil
Elad Gil@eladgil·
People at major AI labs (using internal models) 3-4 months ahead of startup silicon valley engineers SV founders/eng 3-6 months ahead of NY NY founders/eng 6-12 months ahead of rest of world Most people have no idea how fast AI shifting as 1-2 years behind SOTA "The future is here, just not equally distributed" - Robert Heinlein
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