amna
914 posts

amna
@pythagonacci
marketing + product @ https://t.co/cN34obn6SQ interested in the ∪ of tech and consumer goods
North Carolina, USA Katılım Ekim 2021
861 Takip Edilen136 Takipçiler

Love working with Polar. Our entire team has access to our data warehouse in claude thanks to them.
David Dokes 🐻❄️@davdks
Dashboards are dead. Agents are everywhere. Five years ago, you bought a BI tool because someone needed a chart. Today? Claude is in Slack. ChatGPT is in ops. Finance is querying Sheets. Your team is building custom apps in Lovable. None of them wants another dashboard. Introducing Polar Headless BI - the first headless BI built for commerce.
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GPT-5.5 is going to have a party for itself. it chose 5/5 at 5:55 pm for the date and time.
if you'd like to come, let us know here: luma.com/5.5
codex will help the team pick people from the replies. 5.5 had some good ideas/requests for the party, which we'll do.
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amna retweetledi

@fahdananta any recs for anyone thinking of moving? esp on meeting ppl and making friends
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They just ran out of new customers in the US didn’t they
Ben Lang@benln
Cursor Hackathon in Kenya
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@Clara_Gold yeah im really debating whether i want to spend the next few years of my life in sf still havent made a decision yet tho
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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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@pythagonacci consumer brands already run launches across too many scattered tools
if this feels opinionated instead of generic pm software, theres real pull here
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@TaylorLorenz @theisaacmed def was cool but looked a bit down upon bc it wasnt seen as a money making biz for most ppl except those @ the top
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@theisaacmed I feel like media was always a “cool” business, you had the heyday of cable news in the 90s, glossy mags in the 00s, digital media in the 2010s when BuzzFeed was peak and the entire influencer economy that’s risen up over the past 30 years. When was it not cool?
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The bag was necessary for the gold rush.
Media wasn’t a very cool business for a long time.
Now it will be for at least a year.
2026 will be a golden age for niche media opportunities.
Look outside of tech.
A lot more tam in health & wellness for example.
Bullish vibes for media.
Jack Raines@Jack_Raines
The real winners were TBPN securing the bag before a16z bankrolled a new tech show
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