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Flav

@qFlavvv

Building Agentic AI Infrastructure

United Kingdom Katılım Aralık 2022
372 Takip Edilen109 Takipçiler
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Abier
Abier@abierkhatib·
Trump’s “victory timeline” claims. Mar 3: "We won the war." Mar 7: "We defeated Iran." Mar 9: "We must attack Iran." Mar 9: "The war is ending almost completely, and very beautifully." Mar 11: “You never like to say too ⁠early you won. We won. In ​the first hour it was over.” Mar 12: "We did win, but we haven't won completely yet." Mar 13: "We won the war." Mar 14: "Please help us." Mar 15: "If you don't help us, I will certainly remember it." Mar 16: "Actually, we don't need any help at all." Mar 16: "I was just testing to see who's listening to me." Mar 16: "If NATO doesn't help, they will suffer something very bad." Mar 17: "We neither need nor want NATO's help." Mar 17: "I don't need Congressional approval to withdraw from NATO." Mar 18: "Our allies must cooperate in reopening the Strait of Hormuz." Mar 19: "US allies need to get a grip - step up and help open the Strait of Hormuz." Mar 20: "NATO are cowards." Mar 21: "The Strait of Hormuz must be protected by the countries that use it. We don't use it, we don't need to open it." Mar 22: "This is the last time. I will give Iran 48 hours. Open the strait" Mar 22: "Iran is Dead" Mar 23: "We had very good and productive talks with Iran." Mar 24: "We’re making progress." Mar 25: “They gave us a present and the present arrived today. And it was a very big present worth a tremendous amount of money. I’m not going to tell you what that present is, but it was a very significant prize.” Mar 26: "Make a deal, or we’ll just keep blowing them away." Mar 27: "We don’t have to be there for NATO." Mar 28: No major quote Mar 29: Claimed talks were progressing Mar 30: "Open the Strait of Hormuz immediately, or face devastating consequences." Mar 31: Claimed a deal was "very close" and that Iran would "do the right thing" Apr 1: "We’ll see what happens very soon." Apr 2: Repeated that a deal was likely, while warning of continued strikes if not Apr 3: "Something big is going to happen." Apr 4: Said Iran must comply "immediately" or face further consequences. Apr 5: "Open the fuckin' Strait, you crazy bastards, or you'll be living in Hell - JUST WATCH! Praise be to Allah." 😂
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Venkatesh
Venkatesh@Venkydotdev·
So this is how Claude Code's $20 pro plan is like 🤣😂
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Cristian Lascu
Cristian Lascu@clascu18·
Incredible how after just 2 short prompts Claude returns a limit being reached error What's wrong with Anthropic in the past few days ?
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Min Choi
Min Choi@minchoi·
We are not ready for this. China's humanoid robots are getting crazy good 🤯 AI is leaving the screen and entering your home.
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Abhishek B R
Abhishek B R@abhitwt·
Life after switching from ChatGPT to Claude.
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TFTC
TFTC@TFTC21·
Google just dropped a compression algorithm that makes AI 8x faster while using 6x less memory. Zero accuracy loss. It's called TurboQuant. Here's why it matters in plain English: Every time you talk to ChatGPT or any AI, the model has to remember everything you've said in the conversation. That memory is called the "key-value cache." The longer the conversation, the bigger the cache, the more expensive it gets to run. This is the single biggest bottleneck in AI right now. A 128,000-word conversation on a large model eats 40GB of GPU memory just for that one user. Scale that to thousands of users and you're burning millions in compute costs reprocessing the same data over and over. TurboQuant compresses that memory down to just 3 bits per value (from 32 bits) without losing any quality. Independent developers tested it within hours and got exact matches against full-precision output. What this actually means: - AI models that needed a $10,000 workstation could now run on a MacBook - Always-on AI agents become dramatically cheaper to operate - Open-source models that were too big for consumer hardware suddenly fit - The cost curve for every company running AI infrastructure just shifted Developers are already porting it to Apple Silicon. No retraining required. It drops into existing AI systems without modification. The AI cost problem isn't being solved by building bigger data centers. It's being solved by mathematicians figuring out how to do more with less.
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Brave
Brave@brave·
Brave just registered a .agent domain! We support the effort to have the .agent top-level domain managed by a community, instead of being owned by one company. Join the community and pre-register your domain here: agentcommunity.org
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Neuralink
Neuralink@neuralink·
ALS has gradually taken away Kenneth’s ability to speak. Through Neuralink’s VOICE clinical trial, he’s exploring how a brain-computer interface designed to translate thought to speech could help restore autonomy in his daily life. Watch to learn more:
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Cristian Lascu
Cristian Lascu@clascu18·
I spent last week on 5 brainstorm calls with technologists filling in their Business Model Canvas. Every single one had the same block empty or broken: Revenue Streams. The three patterns I kept seeing: * Subscription with no price or deeper reasoning/detail * Revenue model that contradicted the customer segment Revenue isn't something you figure out later. It's a design decision that shapes every other building block Tomorrow's newsletter breaks down the 3 mistakes and what actually works for side projects Subscribe before it drops: thesovereigntechnologist.com
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The Figen
The Figen@TheFigen_·
They are ants solving a geometric problem and it is mind-blowingly colorful.
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Tuki
Tuki@TukiFromKL·
🚨 Do you understand what happened in the last 12 hours? > A CEO of a $200 billion company said on camera that 35% of new grads won't find jobs. He didn't even flinch saying it. > Meta made $165 billion last year and is still firing 15,000 people because apparently record profit isn't profitable enough. > Some random guy in Florida sold his entire house in 5 days using ChatGPT. No real estate agent, no commission, no experience. Just vibes and a $20 subscription. > A man in Australia cured his dying dog's cancer with AI after every single vet told him there was nothing left to do. Built a custom vaccine from his couch. > The guy who created Uber and left 300,000 taxi drivers broke is back. Building robots now because apparently ruining one industry wasn't enough. > Tinder wants access to your camera roll. Your drunk photos, your 3am notes app meltdowns, your deleted selfies. They're calling it a "vibe check." > Naval, the man who made hundreds of millions investing in software, just said software is dead. Four words and the entire industry felt it. > And Anthropic removed the limit on how long their AI can think and then doubled everyone's usage for free. Because when the product is addictive enough you give the first taste away. All of that happened today. Not this week, not this quarter. Today. A random Saturday in March. This is worse than you being on meth.
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Michael Saylor
Michael Saylor@saylor·
@BorisJohnson Bitcoin is not a Ponzi scheme. A Ponzi requires a central operator promising returns and paying early investors with funds from later ones. Bitcoin has no issuer, no promoter, and no guaranteed return—just an open, decentralized monetary network driven by code and market demand.
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Flav
Flav@qFlavvv·
@VadimStrizheus That's great! Follow your dream. And your platform? Amazing, I will be sponsoring this directly by using it.
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Vadim
Vadim@VadimStrizheus·
i quit my 9-5 marketing job today. I’m an 18/yo solo-founder going all in for my startup. Over the past 4 months I’ve built my personal brand on X to over 24,000 followers. and now I’m making the shift to posting TikTok and Instagram reels content. Here’s the first reel of my journey! 👇
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Tayyab(TheRoxkstar)
Tayyab(TheRoxkstar)@Tayyab_roxkstar·
This screenshot from January 2025 captures Elon questioning OpenAI's announced $500B Stargate AI infrastructure project ("They don’t actually have the money" & SoftBank under $10B secured). Sam Altman replied defending it and inviting a site visit. Katie Miller reposted it now because February 2026 reports confirm the joint venture (with Oracle and SoftBank) has stalled for over a year: no sites built, disputes over control and funding, OpenAI pivoting to separate deals amid a cash crunch. Elon's quote highlights his prediction coming true.
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Aryan
Aryan@justbyte_·
Be honest, is this relatable??
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Peter Girnus 🦅
Peter Girnus 🦅@gothburz·
I am the CEO of Palantir Technologies. The company is worth a quarter of a trillion dollars. I did not misspeak. Two hundred and forty-nine billion. The stock is up 320% in the past 12 months. The product is surveillance. I do not use that word at conferences. At conferences, I say "data integration," "operational intelligence," or "decision advantage." These mean the same thing. Surveillance is the honest version. I save the honest version for rooms where honesty is a competitive advantage. I gave a speech on March 3 at the Andreessen Horowitz American Dynamism Summit. "American Dynamism" is the fund's label for military technology. The name makes it sound like a fitness supplement. The fund's thesis is that defending the nation is a market opportunity. I agree with the thesis. The thesis made me a billionaire. Agreement is the product. I sell it at scale. Here is what I said, verbatim, to a room of six hundred people whose combined net worth exceeds the GDP of Portugal: "If Silicon Valley believes we are going to take away everyone's white-collar job and you're gonna screw the military — if you don't think that's gonna lead to nationalization of our technology, you're retarded." I used that word. The word is on the clip. The clip has eleven million views. My communications team asked me not to repeat it, which is how I know they are still employed. They will not be reprimanded. The clip is performing well. The stock went up. The word cost me nothing. The nothing is the point. Let me explain what I meant by nationalization. I meant it. I am telling the technology industry that if they refuse to cooperate with the United States military, the government will seize their technology. I am telling them this at a venture capital conference, on a stage designed to look like a living room. The living room had throw pillows. The throw pillows cost more than the median American's monthly rent. I sat on one. It was comfortable. Comfort is the setting in which I discuss compulsion. The audience laughed. I want to be precise about that. They laughed. I was not joking. Nationalization is the seizure of private assets by the state. I am a private asset. I am telling an audience of billionaires that the state should seize technology from companies that do not cooperate with the military, and the billionaires are laughing, because they believe I am only talking about the other companies. I am talking about the other companies. Three weeks before my speech, the Pentagon designated Anthropic a "supply chain risk." Anthropic is an AI company. They had red lines. The red lines said: if our AI is used for lethal autonomous weapons, we stop. If capability outpaces safety, we stop. The Pentagon assessed the red lines as a threat to the supply chain. The company that wanted to verify the safety feature worked was designated the risk. The company that agreed the safety feature could be decorative got the contract. The company that got the contract was OpenAI. OpenAI signed a deal with the same Pentagon. The terms are not public. The timing was hours after Anthropic was blacklisted. The speed was noted. The speed was the point. The lesson was the speed: the market for military AI does not pause for ethics. It pauses for nothing. It accelerates through objections. I know this because I built the runway. Two hundred thousand people joined a campaign called #QuitGPT. They signed a petition asking OpenAI to honor its original charter, the one that said the company existed to benefit humanity. The charter is on their website. The contract is also on their website. The charter and the Pentagon contract occupy the same domain. This is not a contradiction. This is a business model. The charter is the marketing. The contract is the product. I run a surveillance company. We have contracts with the Department of Defense worth more than a billion dollars. We have contracts with ICE. We have contracts with intelligence agencies whose names I am not permitted to say at venture capital conferences, even ones with throw pillows. Our software has been used to track undocumented immigrants. Our software has been used for things I am not permitted to describe in this format. The revenue from the things I cannot describe exceeds the revenue from the things I can. The ACLU called our ICE contracts a system for tracking and deporting families. They were correct. The contracts continued. The families continued to be tracked. The ACLU issued a statement. We issued a statement. The statements were different. The tracking was the same. The company is named Palantir. The palantíri are the seeing stones from Tolkien. In the novels, Sauron captured one and used it to corrupt everyone who looked into the others. I named a surveillance company after a surveillance device from a novel about the corruption of power. I have a doctorate in social theory. I have read the books. Here is the thing I want you to understand. I am not threatening anyone. A threat implies uncertainty. There is no uncertainty. The technology industry will cooperate with the military. The companies that cooperate first will be the richest. The companies that cooperate last will be acquired by the companies that cooperated first. The companies that refuse will be designated supply chain risks, and their technology will be obtained through procurement channels that do not require consent. I am describing a process. The process has already started. Anthropic is proof. OpenAI is proof. I am not a warning. I am a narrator. The narration is the product. The revenue was $3.12 billion last year. Up thirty-three percent. The analysts say we are overvalued. The analysts have said this for four consecutive years. Each year the stock doubles. Each year, the analysts adjust their models. The models were wrong four times. I was wrong zero times. The market rewards prediction. My prediction is that every AI company will work for the military within three years. The prediction is on the clip, next to the slur. The audience gave me a standing ovation. The ovation lasted nine seconds. I timed it. I time everything. The water was San Pellegrino. The throw pillows were from Restoration Hardware. The future of American technology was decided between the sparkling water, the nine seconds of applause, and a word I am not supposed to repeat. I am the CEO of Palantir Technologies. I am worth more than the combined annual budgets of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. I named my company after a corrupting surveillance device from a fantasy novel. I told six hundred billionaires that the government should nationalize their competitors. They applauded. I used a slur. Eleven million people watched. The stock is up. The philosopher does not threaten. The philosopher describes. What I described is already happening.
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dev
dev@zivdotcat·
pov: your vibecoder friend demoing what he built using his $200 claude code max plan
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Flav
Flav@qFlavvv·
@clascu18 Haha 😄 Just get it on VM using Azure
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Cristian Lascu
Cristian Lascu@clascu18·
In building a company i always preach for being lean and not waste money But when i have spent the entire morning (without success) to install Openclaw on an old Lenovo laptop (with a fresh Ubuntu install) Lesson: Don t be cheap and go for a VPS instead of these experiments
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