Saushank.eth

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Saushank.eth

Saushank.eth

@saushank_

Sic Parvis Magna | Quant at @pulsetrader_ |Coding @pitchpilot_ai

Dubai Katılım Haziran 2009
2K Takip Edilen7.7K Takipçiler
Saushank.eth
Saushank.eth@saushank_·
@Zeneca I just integrated with Claude cowork and has become a solid research thing for me
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Zeneca🔮
Zeneca🔮@Zeneca·
What have people's experiences been using Obsidian? I feel like it was all the rage a few weeks ago and my timeline was flooded with Obsidian x OpenClaw and other AI integrations, but I don't see that as much now Another fad, or are people getting real value out of it?
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Saushank.eth
Saushank.eth@saushank_·
@ericzakariasson This is one of the coolest features. And it’s intelligent to update memory mostly at right times
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eric zakariasson
eric zakariasson@ericzakariasson·
you can try this out in cursor today! cursor.com/marketplace/cu… this will look at your conversation history every N prompt, spawn a subagent to extract memories, and then store them where the agent can access them easily. if you're curious, there's a full article in thread!
Anthony@kr0der

just found out Claude Code has a new (unreleased?) feature called "Auto-dream" under /memory according to reddit, this basically runs a subagent periodically to consolidate Claude's memory files for better long-term storage this is pretty crazy because that's basically how humans store long-term memories if you think about it - by sleeping

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Andrej Karpathy
Andrej Karpathy@karpathy·
Software horror: litellm PyPI supply chain attack. Simple `pip install litellm` was enough to exfiltrate SSH keys, AWS/GCP/Azure creds, Kubernetes configs, git credentials, env vars (all your API keys), shell history, crypto wallets, SSL private keys, CI/CD secrets, database passwords. LiteLLM itself has 97 million downloads per month which is already terrible, but much worse, the contagion spreads to any project that depends on litellm. For example, if you did `pip install dspy` (which depended on litellm>=1.64.0), you'd also be pwnd. Same for any other large project that depended on litellm. Afaict the poisoned version was up for only less than ~1 hour. The attack had a bug which led to its discovery - Callum McMahon was using an MCP plugin inside Cursor that pulled in litellm as a transitive dependency. When litellm 1.82.8 installed, their machine ran out of RAM and crashed. So if the attacker didn't vibe code this attack it could have been undetected for many days or weeks. Supply chain attacks like this are basically the scariest thing imaginable in modern software. Every time you install any depedency you could be pulling in a poisoned package anywhere deep inside its entire depedency tree. This is especially risky with large projects that might have lots and lots of dependencies. The credentials that do get stolen in each attack can then be used to take over more accounts and compromise more packages. Classical software engineering would have you believe that dependencies are good (we're building pyramids from bricks), but imo this has to be re-evaluated, and it's why I've been so growingly averse to them, preferring to use LLMs to "yoink" functionality when it's simple enough and possible.
Daniel Hnyk@hnykda

LiteLLM HAS BEEN COMPROMISED, DO NOT UPDATE. We just discovered that LiteLLM pypi release 1.82.8. It has been compromised, it contains litellm_init.pth with base64 encoded instructions to send all the credentials it can find to remote server + self-replicate. link below

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Eric Jorgenson 📚 ☀️
Eric Jorgenson 📚 ☀️@EricJorgenson·
🚨📕 THE BOOK OF ELON IS NOW LIVE!!! 🎉🚀 This is the book we WISHED @elonmusk would write… “All of Elon's most useful ideas, in his own words.” Learn directly from the world’s greatest entrepreneur, like you’re sitting across from him at dinner. It took FIVE YEARS to make this for you. Because it's built from hundreds and hundreds of Elon's public appearances. I went through 3,000,000+ words to collect the most useful and timeless ideas. The final book is ~50,000 words. Every word is USEFUL. (This is what I do. My first book, The Almanack of Naval Ravikant, is one of the top 100 most highlighted books of all time on Kindle.) Then, I spent $50,000+ on editing and design so it looks and feels beautiful. Then… > Foreword by @naval. > Visuals by @jackbutcher. > Blurb from @mrbeast. > Published by @scribemediaco. > And yes, approval on this idea from Elon himself, thanks to @samteller. I went Maximum Effort to make this an all-timer. We got 10/10 on reviews from early readers, then worked on it for ANOTHER YEAR. Why so much effort? My mission is to create One Million Musks. For a generation to lift our gaze and build, so our grandchildren live in a world beyond our wildest dreams. I’m an independent author. I don’t get an advance. I risk my own time and money to make these books. Then we give away millions of them. Digital versions are free. I believe this book can benefit every human, and if you can’t pay five bucks for it, I want to personally gift it to you. Because I know it is useful. Useful how? You may be seeking purpose, a mission worthy of your life’s effort. You may have a clear purpose and seek the tools for success. You will find both in this book. Get the benefits of Elon’s entire life of hard-won lessons in a five-hour, easy read. (I checked, it’s a 5th-grade reading level.) You’ll feel personally mentored by the greatest entrepreneur in history. Click below to buy it now on Amazon, Audible, or directly from me. Amazon: amzn.to/47avSuh Audible: lnkd.in/gi_7HrFP Me: lnkd.in/gS2xWUWH If you’re not sure it’s worth $4.99 yet, just start reading the free version. PLEASE take 6 seconds to Like, Bookmark, and Repost. Even better: send this to your friends, team, or Group Chats! I guarantee this book will improve their lives. Spread the word! Every little thing helps. Your support spreads good ideas around the world, helping people and making the future better for everyone. Thank you! Forward. Together.
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Saushank.eth
Saushank.eth@saushank_·
Excellent article. Love the point about irrationality, which is often the creative spark behind a lot of things. As in the matrix, its the anaomly in the perfectly designed system. The other argument is that LLM's train on tons of written data and crap written > great writing ( which in itself is very subjective) , means even with tons of RL cracking this will be very hard
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Zeneca🔮
Zeneca🔮@Zeneca·
The superpowers skill is so sick, during the brainstorming session it loads up a browser to "show me" what it's thinking for design elements and let's me pick which one I like best
Zeneca🔮 tweet mediaZeneca🔮 tweet media
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Cursor
Cursor@cursor_ai·
Composer 2 is now available in Cursor.
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@jason
@jason@Jason·
Balaji might seem out there at times, but he’s almost always just 6 months and 60% ahead of the consensus
Balaji@balajis

I'm going to make some obvious points. (1) Blowing up all the oil infrastructure in the Middle East is an insane idea, and may well result in a global economic crash and humanitarian crisis unrivaled in the lives of those now living. We're talking about the price of everything everywhere rising, from food to gas, at a moment when inflation was already high. All of that will be laid at the feet of the authors of this war. (2) The antebellum status quo of Feb 27, 2026 was just not that bad, but we're unlikely to return to it. Expect indefinite, long-term, ongoing disruptions to everything out of the Middle East. (3) Also assume tech financing crashes for the indefinite future. The genius plan to get the Gulf states caught in the crossfire has incinerated much of the funding for LPs, for datacenters, and for IPOs. Anyone in tech who supported this war may soon learn the meaning of "force majeure" as funding gets yanked. (4) Many capital allocators will instead be allocating much further down Maslow's hierarchy of needs, towards useful basic things like food and energy. (5) It's fortunate that all those progressives yelled about the "climate crisis." Yes, their reasoning about timelines was wrong, and much of the money was wasted in graft, but the result was right: we all need energy independence from the Middle East, pronto. It's also fortunate that Elon and China autistically took climate seriously. Now they're going to need to ship a billion solar panels, electric vehicles, batteries, nuclear power plants, and the like to get everyone off oil, immediately. (6) It's not just an oil and gas problem, of course. It's also a fertilizer problem, and a chemical precursor problem. Maybe some new sources will come online at the new prices, but it takes time to dial stuff up, particularly at this scale, so shortages are almost a certainty. That said, China has actually scaled up coal-to-chemicals[a,c] (C2C), and there's also something more sci-fi called Power-to-X[b] which turns arbitrary power + water + air into hydrocarbons. But all of that will need to get accelerated. I have a background in chemical engineering so may start funding things in this area. (7) Ultimately, this war is going to result in tremendous blame for anyone associated with it. It's a no-win scenario to blow up this much infrastructure for so many people. Simply not worth it for whatever objective they thought they were going to attain. But unless you're actually in a position to stop the madness, the pragmatic thing to do is: scramble to mitigate the fallout to yourself, your business, and your people. [a]: reuters.com/business/energ… [b]: alfalaval.com/industries/ene… [c]: reuters.com/sustainability…

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Saushank.eth
Saushank.eth@saushank_·
For anyone wanting local-first notes + semantic search without shipping your vault to a SaaS. Still early but usable. Open source. Building around Obsidian / Claude / MCP? Let me know. github.com/DiamondHandsQu…
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Saushank.eth
Saushank.eth@saushank_·
Biggest quality jump: tag-aware retrieval. My notes were already tagged. Made tags first-class ranking signal. Added metadata normalization for titles/tags. Results got way better.
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PulseTrader
PulseTrader@pulsetrader_·
gPulse PulseTrader is optimizing for its execution era @DecibelTrade SZN is here, your charts actually hit the book without the 30-second delay that kills edge Live on: decibel.pulsetrader.xyz
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Nithin Kamath
Nithin Kamath@Nithin0dha·
I don't use net banking apps on my phone because the mandatory permissions they ask for make no sense. Why does a banking app need access to my SMS, phone, contacts, etc., in the name of security, when not seeking invasive device permissions is, in fact, the global benchmark for cybersecurity. This is called the Principle of Least Privilege (PoLP). “Don't do unto others what you don't want done unto you” has been at the heart of the Zerodha philosophy. This is exactly why we've built Zerodha the way we have. Kite asks for ZERO permissions on mobile, for instance, and this is one of the big reasons why millions of people trust us. What has enabled us is SEBI's mandatory strong two-factor authentication framework strike the right balance between security and privacy.
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Saushank.eth
Saushank.eth@saushank_·
@Zeneca I agree on this. To me openclaw is now acting like another interface for small tasks.
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Zeneca🔮
Zeneca🔮@Zeneca·
I'm convinced if you want to maximize productivity, you shouldn't be using openclaw or hermes - they take so much time bug fixing that you're better off just using claude code/codex directly there's maybe 1% of people who are the exception to this
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