sarlalian

361 posts

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sarlalian

sarlalian

@sarlalian

Engineering Manager • AI + Cloud • Always learning

Katılım Haziran 2025
539 Takip Edilen12 Takipçiler
sarlalian
sarlalian@sarlalian·
@LifeMathMoney @p_millerd They are misleading about the timeframe. Yes you lose the data, just not immediately. No one expects them to hold onto it forever.
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LifeMathMoney ₿ | Unapologetic Truths.
This is not a dark pattern. Keeping your data alive costs money AWS S3 currently charged $0.023 per GB for storage. To keep 500gb of your stuff around, they are paying $11.50 a month to AWS (or whatever cloud provider they are using) They may do so for a limited period hoping that you'd come back and become a paying customer But if you do not intend to do that, they have no reason to keep spending the $11.50 to preserve your data. Speaking as a many time SaaS founder, it simply does not make sense.
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Paul Millerd
Paul Millerd@p_millerd·
just trying to cancel a service i dont need anymore (riverside) oh yeah, you wanna cancel, we're wiping you out
Paul Millerd tweet media
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sarlalian
sarlalian@sarlalian·
@kytho8 @mattyglesias That’s weird, I went to school in Shreveport LA and was taught the real thing. Admittedly that was in the 80’s before the south became allergic to admitting racism.
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KYte
KYte@kytho8·
@mattyglesias I grew up in Montgomery AL and you were absolutely not taught anything other than she was a little old lady whose feet hurt and she didn't want to move for the big gruff white men
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Matthew Yglesias
Matthew Yglesias@mattyglesias·
I guess I went to better school because this is exactly what they taught me — it’s a brilliant case study in disciplined, strategic, non-violent action.
Matthew Yglesias tweet media
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sarlalian
sarlalian@sarlalian·
@TylerFCloutier Simple answer is someone wanted to make something. How people build isn’t determined by it necessarily having a “point”. That said, TypeScript native, a decent standard library, compile to static binary, package manager, code formatter, etc. built in developer tooling is nice.
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Tyler F. Cloutier
Tyler F. Cloutier@TylerFCloutier·
What even is the point of Bun? It’s only marginally faster than Node.
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sarlalian
sarlalian@sarlalian·
@philthistweet Because google has spent a ton of money making V8 really good and fast
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phil bohun
phil bohun@philthistweet·
Why is anyone using JavaScript on the server in the first place?
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sarlalian
sarlalian@sarlalian·
@Grantsrants317 @AjayCnyc @ramit @SenTuberville He's pointing out a pretty fair criticism, the only people telling him to stick to finance are white men. And your criticism of him, is just another variation on telling actors to stick to acting, and basketball players to just dribble. FYI, this is you talking about politics
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Grant
Grant@Grantsrants317·
@AjayCnyc @ramit @SenTuberville Well after I said it was unprofessional for him to involve politics in business he said he was going to add me to a list, then I looked at the list and it was only white males disagreeing with him as if to cancel me, trying to insinuate that I’m racist for disagreeing with him.
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sarlalian
sarlalian@sarlalian·
@Grantsrants317 @AjayCnyc @ramit @SenTuberville 1. You said "You’re messing up your business speaking about politics man. Good way to lose 50% of your audience.", not that it's unprofessional. 2. He's not stupid, he knows there's a cost for speaking out. 3. Life is filled with politics, you talk about politics all the time.
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sarlalian
sarlalian@sarlalian·
@camp_terrence @atrupar Power generation is additive… people don’t decommission old plants during their useful lifetime. The graph shows, most of China’s coal production came online by 2010, usage hasn’t changed much since then, so yeah, you just proved that most of their new power isn’t coal.
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Aaron Rupar
Aaron Rupar@atrupar·
MIN: Do you know how much new energy China put online last year? BURGUM: Intermittent or base load? MIN: All energy. 543 GW. How much was renewable? 434 GW. BURGUM: But only when the wind is blowing and sun is shining MIN: Meanwhile, the US put up 53 GW of new energy last year -- less than 10% of China. You're clear bias against renewables is harming our national security.
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sarlalian
sarlalian@sarlalian·
@Zaphoid13 @atrupar You clearly don’t know much about recycling. Tesla’s battery recycling program will be surprised to find out that batteries aren’t recyclable. Windmill blades are metal and therefore recyclable. Solar panels vary depending on plastic or glass, but mostly recyclable.
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jim Fuentes
jim Fuentes@Zaphoid13·
@atrupar Windmill blades not recyclable, solar panels not recyclable batteries not recyclable so where is the green in green energy?
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sarlalian
sarlalian@sarlalian·
@hardingaggies @atrupar Not necessarily… Trump shut down multiple wind farms that were due to come online soon, to the point that the fed is paying the builders and investors of those farms money to not complete projects that were already well underway.
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Craig Harding
Craig Harding@hardingaggies·
@atrupar How long does it take to bring a new power plant on line? Seems Biden owns what happened in 2025. But agree that China is ahead of the US here and in other key areas. Why? They don’t have the same restrictions and safeguards
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sarlalian
sarlalian@sarlalian·
@yannusd @atrupar Cars … same reason LA used to be riddled with pollution. There’s probably very little power generation happening directly in Shanghai/Beijing, most happens nearby. New energy doesn’t necessarily remove old power plants. Energy sources are almost always additive.
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binkleberg
binkleberg@yannusd·
@atrupar wait this is cool and all but then why is beijing and shanghai always riddled with pollution or is that not a thing anymore or am i being dumb idk
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sarlalian
sarlalian@sarlalian·
@Shpigford @karat_sidhu Clearly this isn’t core functionality for most/all products in this space. It may seem that it should be, but obviously most products are skipping the OCR bit because there are a lot of other products that handle that specific case but ignore the data organization part.
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Josh Pigford
Josh Pigford@Shpigford·
@karat_sidhu I don’t want anything that needs a plugin for core functionality.
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sarlalian
sarlalian@sarlalian·
@tobi This definitely brings back the feeling of early GitHub chat ops talks and articles. Working in public empowers others to learn and do things.
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sarlalian
sarlalian@sarlalian·
@islamgshehata @leerob We try really hard to give every resume a good amount of time, but the avalanche of slop is oppressive.
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sarlalian
sarlalian@sarlalian·
@islamgshehata @leerob My company has been hiring basically non-stop, small number of hires but it’s one role after another. Each role opens up and we inevitably get 300+ applicants in the first hour. Most don’t meet the requirements, or require H1B sponsorship. Basically 95%+ aren’t eligible.
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Lee Robinson
Lee Robinson@leerob·
How to make your engineering job application stand out (from the perspective of someone looking at hundreds of resumes): 1. Your resume should be one page. If you really need more space, link to a website. You don't need 10+ bullets for each job. 2. You will immediately stand out >90% of applications if you link a personal website that has some intentionality behind it. 3. If you are going to link your X, you might want to clean up your posts? Seems obvious but... people post some wild stuff. 4. You should link your GitHub. Please avoid doing a profile README that looks like a MySpace profile with the badges and images. I'm trying to look at code and your ability to build interesting ideas. 5. You should try to customize your application to the company. If you're applying to a startup, the courses you took in college probably don't matter as much. Maybe more if you're trying to make it through the ATS screening for FAANG. 6. I'm seeing a surprising number of resumes which don't talk about AI or agents at all. Software engineering is changing and it's a pretty fair assumption that you will be expected to learn or understand coding with AI for your job. That should be reflected on your resume and projects (and I'm not just saying this because I'm at Cursor). 7. Take your LinkedIn seriously. Most devs are here hanging out on X but surprisingly still most people will send around your LinkedIn internally. 8. Find ways to show your unique strengths/tastes/interests. It's nice to see people are smart, well-rounded, and thoughtful. Maybe this is a collection of books you enjoyed and why. Or some writing you've done. Or films you liked. At the end of the day, people want to work with other people they like and respect. If nothing else, it will be a good conversation starter ("oh I love [book] as well!"). 9. Do not use AI to write your cover letter or resume text. It's incredibly obvious, especially if you are applying to an AI company. You can still use it to ideate on ideas or phrases, but write it by hand (don't fall victim to the overused in-the-distribution-AI-phrases). See: /humanizer skill. 10. No photos on resumes. Save those for whatever you link out to. 11. Quality over quantity. 3 really good, thoughtful, detailed, interesting projects versus a wall of 27 AI-slop ones. Remember that hiring managers / recruiters are getting hundreds or thousands of applications for a role. They're not going to spend 20 minutes on every single application. You need to cut the cruft and get to the point. I hope this helps you stand out!
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sarlalian
sarlalian@sarlalian·
@Nek__12 @cheesealloverme @badlogicgames It’s probably that he’s written an agent framework and has a better idea of how the harness and the model interact. Including using the same harness across multiple models and model generations.
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Nek.12
Nek.12@Nek__12·
@cheesealloverme @badlogicgames I got that, I asked what caused him to get triggered so bad as to resort to personal jabs at me. Not rocket science
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Mario Zechner
Mario Zechner@badlogicgames·
they thought gpt 5.5 to refuse reading full files. it sucks very very hard. this is opus all over again.
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sarlalian
sarlalian@sarlalian·
@kevindiescher @davidshor Oil may be down from the high it’s been at, but it’s still quite a bit up from before the war. Isn’t this like the 3rd or 4th time Trump has said it’s over?
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Kevin Diescher
Kevin Diescher@kevindiescher·
@davidshor That’s fine we won in Iran, oil prices down 10% in pre market.
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David Shor
David Shor@davidshor·
Just to emphasize how bad of a hole the Trump Administration is in right now, gas prices this morning literally plummeted so far we had to fix the Y axis of this chart.
David Shor tweet media
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sarlalian
sarlalian@sarlalian·
@FabioAngela79 @antirez Git did not force anyone to change their branch names, GitHub didn’t either, nor did Gitlab. People within companies lobbied for the name change and companies were free to change or not.
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Fabio Angela
Fabio Angela@FabioAngela79·
@antirez way less stupid that the master/main thing we had to swallow on git, at least this is a business/brand decision (like it or not)
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antirez
antirez@antirez·
One interesting thing about the name "X" is that the resistance to accept it was given not just by the way it was imposed, but by the fact it is a genuinely stupid name.
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sarlalian
sarlalian@sarlalian·
@_Sagiquarius_ @ThePrimeagen There aren’t any financial protections for crypto wallets… so you’re fine with them fucking up and other people paying the price?
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JStar
JStar@_Sagiquarius_·
Nothing wrong with this tweet if their repo is setup to better support it. Seriously, you older gen programmers are going to have to step back from the front gate of coding at some point. It’s starting to look like scolding and “get off my lawn” fist shaking for its own sake. Plus, if they fuck it up, fine let them. Y’all aren’t going to be the elite guard of software for much longer.
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ThePrimeagen
ThePrimeagen@ThePrimeagen·
"Non technical teams shipping production code" - coinbase
Brian Armstrong@brian_armstrong

This is an email I sent earlier today to all employees at Coinbase: Team, Today I’ve made the difficult decision to reduce the size of Coinbase by ~14%. I want to walk you through why we're doing this now, what it means for those affected, and how this positions us for the future. Why now Two forces are converging at the same time. We need to be front footed to respond to both. First, the market. Coinbase is well-capitalized, has diversified revenue streams, and is well-positioned to weather any storm. Crypto is also on the verge of the next wave of adoption, with stablecoins, prediction markets, tokenization, and more taking off. However, our business is still volatile from quarter to quarter. While we've managed through that cyclicality many times before and come out stronger on the other side, we’re currently in a down market and need to adjust our cost structure now so that we emerge from this period leaner, faster, and more efficient for our next phase of growth. Second, AI is changing how we work. Over the past year, I’ve watched engineers use AI to ship in days what used to take a team weeks. Non-technical teams are now shipping production code and many of our workflows are being automated. The pace of what's possible with a small, focused team has changed dramatically, and it's accelerating every day. All of this has led us to an inflection point, not just for Coinbase, but for every company. The biggest risk now is not taking action. We are adjusting early and deliberately to rebuild Coinbase to be lean, fast, and AI-native. We need to return to the speed and focus of our startup founding, with AI at our core. What this means To get there, we are not just reducing headcount and cutting costs, we’re fundamentally changing how we operate: rebuilding Coinbase as an intelligence, with humans around the edge aligning it. What does this mean in practice? - Fewer layers, faster decisions: We are flattening our org structure to 5 layers max below CEO/COO. Layers slow things down and create coordination tax. The future is small, high context teams that can move quickly. Leaders will own much more, with as many as 15+ direct reports. Fewer layers also means a leaner cost structure that is built to perform through all market cycles. - No pure managers: Every leader at Coinbase must also be a strong and active individual contributor. Managers should be like player-coaches, getting their hands dirty alongside their teams. - AI-native pods: We’ll be concentrating around AI-native talent who can manage fleets of agents to drive outsized impact. We’ll also be experimenting with reduced pod sizes, including “one person teams” with engineers, designers, and product managers all in one role. In short: AI is bringing a profound shift in how companies operate, and we’re reshaping Coinbase to lead in this new era. This is a new way of working, and we need to leverage AI across every facet of our jobs. To those who are affected I know there are real people behind these decisions — talented colleagues who have poured themselves into this company and our mission. To those of you who will be leaving: thank you. You’ve helped build Coinbase into what it is today, and I am sincerely grateful for everything you've done. All impacted team members will receive an email to their personal account in the next hour with more information, and an invitation to meet with an HRBP and a senior leader in your organization. Coinbase system access has been removed today. I know this feels sudden and harsh, but it is the only responsible choice given our duty to protect customer information. To those affected, we will be providing a comprehensive package to support you through this transition. US employees will receive a minimum of 16 weeks base pay (plus 2 weeks per year worked), their next equity vest, and 6 months of COBRA. Employees on a work visa will get extra transition support. Those outside of the US will receive similar support, based on local factors and subject to any consultation requirements. Coinbase prides itself on talent density. Our employees are among the most talented people in the world, and I have no doubt that your skills and experience will be highly sought after as you pursue your next chapters. How we move forward To the team that is staying, I know this is a difficult day. We’re saying goodbye to colleagues and friends you've been in the trenches with. But here’s what I want you to know as we move forward together: Over the past 13 years, we have weathered four crypto winters, gone public, and built the most trusted platform in our industry. We’ve made it this far by making hard decisions and by always staying focused on our mission. This time will be no different – nothing has changed about the long term outlook of our company or industry. And most importantly, our mission has never been more important for the world. Increasing economic freedom requires a new financial system, and we’re building it. The Coinbase that emerges from this will be more capable than ever to achieve our mission. Brian

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Marlon Brandon
Marlon Brandon@RealMarlonB·
@FBIDirectorKash @branka_matkovic @FBINewark But... The Democrats told me, that there was absolutely no evidence of widespread voter fraud, during the 2020 election. People were getting investigated and suspended from social media for even suggesting that this was a possibility.
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FBI Director Kash Patel
FBI Director Kash Patel@FBIDirectorKash·
Today out of @FBINewark: Four individuals have been charged with illegally voting in federal elections and making false statements applying for U.S. citizenship. The individuals - all noncitizens - voted in elections including the 2020 Presidential election, 2022 midterms, and 2024 Presidential election cycles. More to come. Thank you to our investigators and partners for their great work in the case. @DAGToddBlanche
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sarlalian
sarlalian@sarlalian·
@0xdoug At my work, Claude cowork has taken off like wildfire. 1/2 of our spend is developers, 1/2 is sales, marketing, finance, support, etc. non-developers already are 4x our developer headcount for Claude subs, and that’s only going to grow.
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Doug Colkitt
Doug Colkitt@0xdoug·
I’m really struggling to see how the back of the envelope math on this works out… There are generously 4 million characterized “software workers” in America. That’s pretty broad and includes a lot of people who aren’t really classical engineers don’t produce that much code. That comes out to nearly $1k per month of average Claude spend across every dev in America. Yes, there’s some international usage, but it can’t be that much. Yes there is some non software Cowork usage, but that doesn’t use that many tokens. Yes, some non engineers are using Claude to vibe code, but I really doubt many are spending hundreds per month on. Even if we assume 50% of all software workers are using Claude, that comes out to $2k spend per month per Claude user. Thats 10X more than the highest tier Max subscription. So almost all of Anthropics revenue has to be API billing So the only explanation is that something like 20%+ of software engineers are not only Claude users but on API billing and regularly spending thousands per month. At $5/m Opus tokens that means the average API user has to be going through something like 25 million tokens per day. *OR* the other possibility is API revenue is heavily power law dominated. Maybe there’s just something like 100k super users who are making up the majority of the revenue. For that to work the typical super user would have to be spending on the order of $50k/month and guzzling nearly 1 billion tokens per day.
Tannor Manson@Futurenvesting

Anthropic is now showing off $44 BILLION in annual recurring revenue. This is up $14 billion (+46.6%) since last month! BULLISH for AI Infrastructure $NVDA $AMD

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