Svintus (🐈‍⬛,🛵) (🍊,💊)

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Svintus (🐈‍⬛,🛵) (🍊,💊)

Svintus (🐈‍⬛,🛵) (🍊,💊)

@svin2s

Katılım Kasım 2011
1K Takip Edilen1.2K Takipçiler
Svintus (🐈‍⬛,🛵) (🍊,💊) retweetledi
GenLayer
GenLayer@GenLayer·
AI agents, open source freedom, and why the next decade will reshape everything we know about money and intelligence. Episode 1 of GenPod with @DJohnstonEC, tomorrow 🎙️
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Svintus (🐈‍⬛,🛵) (🍊,💊) retweetledi
GenLayer
GenLayer@GenLayer·
Join our Community AMA this week with @kstellana at 14:00 UTC. Send your questions in advance 👇 x.com/i/spaces/1vJpP…
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Edgars Nemše
Edgars Nemše@EdgarsNemse·
This also applies to building any sort of product and is probably a universal truth far beyond that. You should always listen to your users because they're very good at pointing out when something is not working well or not good or not solving their problem. But they are not good at designing the solution nor should you expec them to be. That's your job - you spend 24/7 thinking about the product and the problem space. Understand their issues deeply and then delight them with a solution that's far better than anything they could think of.
Orson Scott Card@orsonscottcard

You don't need advice from editors on rejected manuscripts.  My short story “Ender's Game” was rejected by Ben Bova at Analog back when that was the top market for a sci-fi story. Ben gave me feedback. He thought the title should be “Professional Soldier” and he said to “cut it in half.” But I knew he was wrong on both points and submitted it to Jim Baen at Galaxy. He sat on it for a year, and responded to my query with a rejection. There was some kind of explanation, but I don't remember what it was. I concluded at the time that Baen's comments showed that he had barely glanced at the story. So … I got feedback both times, but it was not helpful. I looked at Ben's rejection again. What was it about the story that made him think it should, let alone COULD, be cut in half? Apparently it FELT long. What made it feel long? Now, post-Harry Potter, I would call it the quidditch problem. I had too many battles in which the details became tedious. So I cut two battles entirely, merely reporting the outcomes, and shortened another. In retyping the whole manuscript (pre-word-processor, that was the only way to get a clean manuscript), I added new point-of-view material to the point that I had cut only one page in length. So much for “in half.” But I already knew that my manuscripts did not need cutting — if it wasn't needed, it wouldn't be there in the first place. Even the battles were still there, but instead of showing them, I merely told what happened (so much for the usually asinine advice “show don't tell”), which kept the pace going. Those changes made, I sent it to Ben again. I did not remind him of what he had advised me to do. I merely told him I liked my title, and said, “I have addressed your other concerns,” which was true. I figured he wouldn't remember what his exact words had been. My answer was a check. That revised story was the basis for my winning the Campbell Award for best new writer. Did Ben's feedback help? Yes — but his specific advice was not right, and I knew it. On my next two submissions, Ben hated my endings, and I revised as suggested. The fourth submission he rejected outright, and the fifth, and I thought, Am I a one-story writer? I went back to Ender's Game and tried to analyze why it worked. Then, deliberately imitating myself, I wrote “Mikal's Songbird.” Ben bought it, and it received favorable mentions. I was afraid then that I had consigned myself to writing stories about children in jeopardy. But in fact I was writing character stories rather than idea stories. And THAT was how I built a career, not by self-imitation, and not by following editorial suggestions. I did get wise counsel from David Hartwell on my novel Wyrms, but that was on a book that was already under contract, and it was story feedback, not style. I got wise counsel from Beth Meacham, too, on various books over the years — but again, only on books that were under contract. I also received appallingly stupid advice from the editor of my novel Saints, which temporarily destroyed the book's marketability; after that, I was allowed to go back to my original structure and save the book — now it's one of my best. Editors don't know more than you about your story. They especially don't know why they decide to accept or reject stories. YOU have to know what your story needs to be, and take only advice that you believe in. Your best counselor on a story nobody bought is TIME. Let some time pass and then reread the story. Don't even think about why it Didn't Work. Instead, think about what DOES work, and then write it again, a complete rewrite, keeping nothing from the previous draft. Find the right protagonist and begin at the beginning — the point where the protagonist first gets involved with the events of the story. Be inventive — the failed first draft no longer exists, so you're not bound by any of your earlier decisions. THAT is how you resurrect a good idea you did not succeed with on your first try.

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Svintus (🐈‍⬛,🛵) (🍊,💊)
❗️Important news for everyone following the @GenLayer project The project has just announced the addition of 4 new validators: @CitadelOne_ @UnityNodes @AuroraXnode and @encapHQ According to the GenLayer Portal there are now 39 validators on the network and that’s a significant number! Why does this matter? Typical validators on other chains simply execute deterministic code. But GenLayer validators do something fundamentally new: • Each connects their own LLM (GPT, Llama, Claude, Grok, etc.) • For ambiguous tasks a small random committee is assembled • One leader proposes a solution using live web data + its model • The others independently verify the solution using the Equivalence Principle → consensus is reached With the addition of these new validators: ✅ Stronger decentralization & security - more independent nodes and diverse models reduce single points of failure and bias ✅ Greater model diversity - different LLMs mean higher accuracy, fewer hallucinations, and more robust outcomes ✅ Increased network capacity - more validators allow more parallel committees, leading to faster and cheaper processing of complex subjective tasks ✅ Higher attractiveness for real use cases - AI agents disputing contracts, prediction markets settling vague real-world events, autonomous DAOs making decisions… all become more reliable and trustless ✅ Important step toward mainnet - this growth brings @GenLayer closer to becoming the true Trust Infrastructure for the AI age with cryptographic finality and no need for human intervention No humans. Fast. On-chain. With real finality. Huge welcome to the new validators! 👏 Want to be part of the future of AI on-chain? Join the portal portal.genlayer.foundation/?ref=CV1VC6JS
GenLayer@GenLayer

New validators are onboarded to GenLayer this week. We welcome @CitadelOne_, @UnityNodes, @AuroraXnode, @encapHQ to the network where validators reach consensus on non-deterministic outcomes through LLM inference. Join the validator waitlist 👇 portal.genlayer.foundation/#/validators/w…

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Svintus (🐈‍⬛,🛵) (🍊,💊)
Thank you so much @Alli25334347 🔥 You made my personal Gen Card and it turned out really cool! 😎 Let’s keep collecting all GenFrens into one deck!😜
Svintus (🐈‍⬛,🛵) (🍊,💊) tweet media
Alli777.ip@Alli25334347

Hello Family👋 I created something special for the @GenLayer community the Gen Card. And now I’m launching a small challenge: Let’s see how many GenFrens are out there 😎 If you like this idea and want to be part of it,send me your avatar and I’ll turn it into your own personalized Gen Card 🔥 Each one unique. Each one yours. Let’s show the world what GenFrens really look like🚀

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Base Hub 🛡️
Base Hub 🛡️@BaseHubHB·
Standard blockchains are fundamentally broken when it comes to human judgment. Before the agentic economy scales further, we need an actual trust layer, and @GenLayer is stepping up as the decentralized court of the internet. They are already settling complex outcomes directly onchain. > AI embedded directly into the consensus mechanism using diverse LLMs > Intelligent contracts written in Python that process subjective decisions without external oracles > Builders permanently earn a 10 to 20% cut of all transaction fees their deployments generate Every other network runs code, but this protocol runs actual judgment. Simply put: verifiable AI reasoning + real protocol revenue sharing + live Base integrations.
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GenLayer
GenLayer@GenLayer·
This is the showcase of a new agentic future! Announcing the winners of the Bradbury Builders Hackathon, where 280+ builders built 135+ projects on GenLayer with AI-native consensus, native web access, and contracts that pay their creators forever. Here are the winners 👇
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Lee Min H
Lee Min H@leminh1847·
Building with @GenLayer is not just about coding it’s about creativity about people helping each other grow and turning ideas into something real today I tried something different I made my own ceramic mug by hand from raw materials to holding a finished piece in my hands it’s not perfect but that’s what makes it special and honestly… it was such a memorable experience don’t hesitate to join the community and share what you’re building with everyone 👇 discord.gg/genlayerlabs
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Svintus (🐈‍⬛,🛵) (🍊,💊)
My submission for the @GenLayer GenFren Quiz Banner Contest 💜 When the week finally slows down, the sun starts to set, and you just want to sit with your people, that’s the exact feeling I tried to put into this banner. GenFren Quiz isn’t just a quiz It’s a weekly hug from the community Join us here discord.gg/p3dnz6AypT
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GenLayer
GenLayer@GenLayer·
Ranked chains that can interpret natural language, resolve disputes, and enforce agreements through AI-native consensus. NOTE: we tried to fill the other tiers but couldn't 🤷
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