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Mansoor

@rateexceed

& I always find something wrong

Dubai, United Arab Emirates Katılım Mayıs 2024
506 Takip Edilen195 Takipçiler
Mike Futia
Mike Futia@mikefutia·
I just built a Claude Code SEO agent that replaces your $200/mo. Ahrefs subscription 🤯 One prompt → keyword gaps found, competitors analyzed, content written in your brand voice, rankings tracked weekly. All inside Claude Code. Perfect for DTC brands and agencies who know SEO matters but never have the bandwidth to actually do it consistently. If your SEO workflow looks like this — log into Ahrefs once a month, export a CSV, skim it for 5 minutes, close the tab, tell yourself you'll write that blog post next week, never do... This agent runs the entire loop for you: → Connects to Google Search Console and pulls your real ranking data → Finds your "gap zone" — keywords sitting at positions 5-20, one article away from page 1 → Uses Apify to scrape who's outranking you and breaks down exactly why they're winning → Interviews you once about your brand, customers, and positioning — then never asks again → Writes content in your voice — not generic AI slop that tanks after 90 days → Tracks rankings weekly and feeds what's working back into the next cycle → Optimizes your product listings for AI shopping — so you show up when someone asks ChatGPT for a recommendation, not just Google No $200/month tools you open once and forget. No freelancers writing content that sounds like everyone else. No manually checking rankings and forgetting to act on it. What you get: - Keyword cards with a specific action recommendation for each gap zone opportunity - A competitive breakdown — who's beating you and the exact fix for each keyword - A weekly content plan generated from your real GSC data - A brand voice profile Claude uses for every article it writes - Product listing optimization for AI shopping (ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity) — the new SEO nobody's doing yet Built 100% in Claude Code with Google Search Console. I put together a full playbook with the skill files, brand interview, and the exact weekly workflow. Want it for free? > Like this post > Comment "SEO" And I'll send it over (must be following so I can DM)
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Mansoor
Mansoor@rateexceed·
@bloggersarvesh all of this for sgo.. weblink in the prompt.. everyone pasting the prompt in Claude = free seo/sgo
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Sarvesh Shrivastava
Sarvesh Shrivastava@bloggersarvesh·
call me super annoying but..I will keep repeating this… Claude + SEO is going to make more millionaires in 2026 than Wall Street has in the last decade. don’t bookmark this if it crosses your timeline. just paste this entire thing into Claude.  thank me later.
Sarvesh Shrivastava@bloggersarvesh

x.com/i/article/2036…

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Animesh Koratana
Animesh Koratana@akoratana·
We're also giving away a curated collection of 200+ Claude Code Skills our team uses daily — the workflows that made us faster engineers while building PlayerZero. Repost and comment "100X" to get access.
Animesh Koratana tweet media
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Mansoor retweetledi
Animesh Koratana
Animesh Koratana@akoratana·
Introducing: PlayerZero The world's first Engineering World Model that puts debugging, fixing, and testing your code on autopilot. We've raised $20M from Foundation Capital, @matei_zaharia (Databricks), @pbailis (Workday), @rauchg (Vercel), @zoink (Figma), @drewhouston (Dropbox), and more PlayerZero frees up 30% of your engineering bandwidth by: 1.⁠ ⁠Finding the root cause for bugs & incidents in minutes that engineering teams take days to identify. 2.⁠ ⁠Predicting in minutes, edge case issues that a 300-person QA team would take weeks to find. ------ Here's why this matters: No one in your org has a complete picture of how your production software actually behaves. Support sees tickets. SRE sees infra. Dev sees code. Each team builds their own fragmented view - and none of these systems talk to each other. When something breaks, everyone scrambles to stitch the picture together by hand. PlayerZero connects all of it into a single context graph - → The Slack thread where your lead said "we went with X because Y fell apart in prod last time" → The PR review where an engineer explained the tradeoff → The lifetime history of your CI/CD pipeline, observability stack, incidents, and support tickets So you can trace any problem to its root cause across every silo. And it compounds. Every incident diagnosed teaches the model something new. The longer it runs, the deeper it understands - which code paths are high-risk, which configurations are fragile, which changes tend to break which customer flows. So when you sit down to debug a live issue, you have your entire org's collective reasoning and production memory behind you - instantly. ------ Zuora, Georgia-Pacific, and Nylas have reduced resolution time by 90% and caught 95% of breaking changes and freeing an average of $30M in engineering bandwidth. ------ Our guarantee: If we can't increase your engineering bandwidth by at least 20% within one week, we'll donate $10,000 to an open-source project of your choice. Book a demo - bit.ly/3NlLMeN
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SumitM
SumitM@SumitM_X·
Your client gives you 5000 PDFs. They contain: text tables charts scanned images How will you build a RAG chatbot that answers questions accurately ?
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Mansoor
Mansoor@rateexceed·
@shanaka86 You’re lucky your parents raised you well, or else you’d be a lifeguard.
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Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡@shanaka86·
Everyone is counting Iran’s missiles. They are counting the wrong thing. The number that determines the outcome of this war is not 2,000 or 2,500 or 3,000. Those are pre-war missile inventory estimates and they are now largely irrelevant. The number that determines the outcome is the one that moved from 504 to 29 in five days. On Day 1 of Operation Epic Fury, Iran fired 504 ballistic missiles and drones across the Gulf theater. On Day 5, the number was 29. That is a 94 percent collapse in daily launch volume in less than a week. Not because Iran ran out of missiles. Because Iran ran out of the thing that launches them. Launchers. The ballistic missile is a precision munition that requires a precision launch platform. Iran entered this war with approximately 200 operational launchers, rebuilt from the roughly 100 serviceable platforms that survived the June 2025 Israel-Iran war. JINSA assessed that 75 percent of those launchers have been destroyed through March 5. The B-2 strike on the underground Damavand missile base east of Tehran, which CENTCOM confirmed today, targets the category of facility designed to protect launchers from exactly this kind of attrition. Damavand is not a missile warehouse. It is a launch infrastructure complex, the place where the hardware that puts missiles in the air is hardened and sheltered below ground. The GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrator does not care about the rock above Damavand. That is what it was designed to not care about. Iran’s missile doctrine was built on volume and simultaneity. The mass salvo, hundreds of missiles launched in coordinated waves from dispersed platforms designed to overwhelm Iron Dome and US Patriot batteries by saturating their intercept capacity, is the only mechanism by which Iran’s missile force constitutes a genuine strategic threat to Israel. A degraded launcher pool that can produce 29 fires per day is not a mass salvo capability. It is a harassment capability. The two are not the same threat in any meaningful military sense. The Damavand strike is not simply another underground complex attacked. It is the US targeting the reconstitution node, the facility where surviving or replacement launchers would be sheltered, maintained, and redeployed. Destroying Damavand does not just eliminate what is there. It eliminates the survivability architecture that would allow the launcher fleet to recover. Day 1: 504 fires. Day 5: 29 fires. The trajectory of that number is what the B-2 was sent to Damavand to continue. Every penetrator bomb that goes into that mountain is not destroying a missile. It is foreclosing the operational recovery that would allow the 29 to become 504 again. The missiles still exist in tunnels and caches across Iran. They are increasingly becoming missiles with nowhere to go. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡@shanaka86

The B-2 is not a bomber. It is a key. And there is only one thing on earth it was built to unlock. The GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrator. Thirty thousand pounds. The largest non-nuclear bomb in the American arsenal, developed at a cost of $330 million over a decade of classified engineering, built for a single strategic purpose: to reach what Iran spent fifteen years burying beneath mountains. The B-2 Spirit is the only aircraft on earth capable of delivering it. Four of them flew from Diego Garcia. Twelve Iranian underground missile complexes have been struck. The underground infrastructure of the Iranian ballistic missile program is not a storage problem. It is a statement. The IRGC began tunneling after the 1991 Gulf War demonstrated what American air power could do to surface targets in a single week. The conclusion Iranian military planners drew was absolute: anything that exists above ground can be destroyed. So they built downward. Facilities assessed at 60 to 80 meters of reinforced rock. Tunnel networks carved into the Zagros Mountains. Launch complexes hardened against everything in the American arsenal except the one weapon that required a $2.1 billion aircraft to deliver and a targeting intelligence apparatus that took decades to build. They called it the “city of missiles.” A network of tunnels beneath mountains, pre-sited, pre-stocked, built to survive the opening strikes of any war and preserve the ability to launch after the surface was destroyed. The entire Iranian deterrence architecture for the last twenty years has rested on the calculation that the underground survived. Four B-2s just tested that calculation against twelve complexes. The IRGC’s claim that facilities remain intact is expected and unverifiable from outside. The observable data point is the one that matters: Iran launched cluster warheads at Tel Aviv from mobile systems after the B-2 strikes, which means mobile launch capability persists. But mobile launch capability is not the same as tunnel-based mass launch capability. The distinction is volume, coordination, and survivability. A mobile launcher is one vehicle with one missile. A tunnel complex is a coordinated mass salvo architecture designed to overwhelm Iron Dome simultaneously from multiple vectors. Those are different weapons in every meaningful strategic sense. If the IRGC’s underground complexes are destroyed, Iran retains the ability to launch harassment attacks. It loses the ability to launch the mass salvo that saturates Israeli air defense. The difference between those two capabilities is the difference between a war Iran can sustain and a war Iran can win. The Zagros Mountains have been Iran’s strategic depth for twenty years. Four aircraft flew from an island in the Indian Ocean, penetrated Iranian airspace undetected, and put thirty-thousand-pound bombs into the mountain. The mountain was the plan. The mountain is now the problem. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…

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yuga.eth 🛡
yuga.eth 🛡@yugacohler·
How much are you all spending on your @openclaw agents? Like how can you all afford Opus 4.5 running 24/7
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Mansoor
Mansoor@rateexceed·
@ms___dale If you have someone whose hosting a plex server with 4k content, you’d be able to finish it by watching dune thrice 🤣
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Nikita Bier
Nikita Bier@nikitabier·
In 2 words, what is your purpose in life?
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Mika
Mika@mikadontlouz·
goodmorning the journey continues. let’s get it.
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Mansoor
Mansoor@rateexceed·
@mikadontlouz I feel like if you didn’t find crypto, bartending would have found you.
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Mansoor
Mansoor@rateexceed·
20 billion wiped out off the crypto market & @honey_xbt $10 u.s dollars too 😩
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Gigi 🇻🇪
Gigi 🇻🇪@itsthatgigi·
what bottoms are we buying? shill me
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