timtimtim

8.3K posts

timtimtim banner
timtimtim

timtimtim

@timtimtim_eth

Building @Creader_io

London, England Katılım Kasım 2013
4.6K Takip Edilen8.2K Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
timtimtim
timtimtim@timtimtim_eth·
I wrote this article for two aims - You should never forget what you dream of. I spent 10+ years finding the right timing. It is never too late to work on your dream. - I wrote this by hand. I still love writing raw; it is a way for me to express my philosophy and my emotions. I know, many times I write shit grammar, but writing is still a fun activity to me.
timtimtim@timtimtim_eth

x.com/i/article/2026…

English
20
0
51
4.2K
timtimtim retweetledi
Shuyao Kong
Shuyao Kong@hotpot_dao·
I'm seeing FX on the timeline and it's one of those up and coming narrative everyone flocks toward. Mega has been building in FX space since the beginning, largely because the founding team has deep belief that crypto is Programmable Money ( thanks @0xFirewallFlirt for bringing this term back to my vocab) and PM serves global audience first and foremost However, people don't really think through when they talk about FX. To me, FX (and to some extent Stablecoins ) means the following opportunity zones: 1) Cross-border money transfer: the OG use case of bitcoin. The ability to send money wherever and whenever is powerful, esp in the age of ai ( yes they will send loads of $$$ to each other) the bottleneck here is on/off ramps 2) Financing: Programmable Money really means empowering one dollar to do more than one dollar does. This becomes tricky when companies are operating in multiple jurisdiction: how does one gracefully get supply chain financing without getting rugged by currency risks? how does one even calculate revenue? ( tradfi would hire a 100-people team to do just that) the bottleneck here is to find real business who's willing to digitalize their finance supply chain and enable a marketplace for those who have money and those need it 3) Structured Products: there's a psychology term called "home bias" which means people tend to buy multiple properties where they live in. this is similar to how most people manage their savings: they are more comfortable and familiar with homegrown structured product, but then miss a vast green field that comes from global arbitrage. this is enabled for the first time by crypto technology the bottleneck here is reg clarity and lots of boots-on-the-ground risks management. remember, the higher the yield, the bigger the risks. Anyhooo, I've spent a lot of time thinking about crypto's role in a global economy. Despite the current geo conflict, I think AI will break the world isolation even further and fundamentally mix the global liquidity pool into one ( with way more expressive risks )
Shuyao Kong@hotpot_dao

x.com/i/article/2009…

English
3
6
14
1.2K
timtimtim
timtimtim@timtimtim_eth·
不忍吐槽 几个城市高铁的网约车接送,真的是什么垃圾设计 两个道都等车,后面的车一个都进不来。我就好奇了人都去哪里了🫠 等了40分钟的我无能狂怒中
中文
1
0
3
70
timtimtim retweetledi
Elizabeth Lui
Elizabeth Lui@elizabethluihy·
Our paper got accepted at IEEE SaTML 2026! Presenting in Munich next Monday 🎉 "SoK: Blockchain-Based Decentralized AI (DeAI)" — we systematize the DeAI landscape and benchmark cryptographic defenses against model theft. Joint work with @flock_io @rui_sunn @vatsalshah01 Xihan Xiong @0x7SUN @DavideCrapis @will_wjk & Zhipeng Wang This work was partially supported by @ethereumfndn 📄 Full paper: arxiv.org/abs/2411.17461 Wrote up a related pice on verifiable training (see the article below) My first tweet actually, say hi back? 👋 :D
Elizabeth Lui@elizabethluihy

x.com/i/article/2034…

English
2
4
12
864
timtimtim
timtimtim@timtimtim_eth·
After receiving feedbacks, things changed a lot. Never was expecting Creader rolling into EduTech or Coop area. But truth is that people actually want this badly for education needs and coop use. To be far the original plan is to lean towards wattpad/web novel lol. I guess this is why you should build product and go out to talk
English
0
0
2
54
timtimtim
timtimtim@timtimtim_eth·
@JarrettYe I have jlpt n2 But I tend to just read Chinese subs. I am just too lazy. I found reading jp tweet is a good way. A lot interesting talks
English
1
0
1
26
Jarrett Ye
Jarrett Ye@JarrettYe·
I have watched 16 animes without Chinese subtitles since September 2025. Now I can understand ~90% lines of an episode without any subtitles if its genre is slice of life. Immersion learning is magic. I plan to attend the JLPT N2 test in the summer. Good luck to me!
Jarrett Ye tweet mediaJarrett Ye tweet media
English
3
3
63
2.9K
timtimtim
timtimtim@timtimtim_eth·
@dingyi 同意的,我一直没从cursor跳出。我觉得目前虽然很多工具。但是自己用的舒服的才是最重要的。真的太多能学的了
中文
0
0
0
124
Ding
Ding@dingyi·
@timtimtim_eth 刚试了一下已经很好用了,但还是没有从 vs code 抽离出去,性能是大问题
中文
1
0
1
446
Ding
Ding@dingyi·
Cursor 新的界面 Glass 看起来很不错,IDE 已成历史。
中文
10
2
101
22.9K
timtimtim
timtimtim@timtimtim_eth·
买了个雕刻家的23.8寸折叠 我觉得我是煞笔 感觉扛不回去了🙃🫠
中文
0
0
1
154
サブロウ・ジョウマエ
面接実話 社長「中国史好きなの?」 私「はい…」 社長「私もだけど、どうせ嘘でしょ?」 私「…」 社長「じゃさ、シンの前の王朝は?」 私「ぜ、前漢ですか?」 社長「…は?普通は明だろ…」 私「あ、シンってそっちの……」 緊張してて何故か頭に浮かんだのが「新」… 無事採用されました
日本語
384
1.1K
39.2K
5.2M
timtimtim
timtimtim@timtimtim_eth·
@bearliu 但是目前基本都是有运营的,或是公司。只有早期的of是艺人公司或是底部的。腰部基本很多都是有公司的 这个还适用于主播
中文
0
0
0
169
Bear Liu
Bear Liu@bearliu·
问个严肃的问题: 全职做 OnlyFans 算一人公司创业吗?
中文
41
0
24
12.9K
timtimtim retweetledi
Eivor
Eivor@Eivor_Koy·
This trending story blowing up on Chinese social media right now shows how China's whole-process people's democracy actually feels in real life—not some abstract theory, but practical, human help for everyday people. In March 2026, a deeply introverted 21-year-old from Cangxi County, Guangyuan, Sichuan—too anxious to even call employers or face interviews—turned to the government with a raw, honest plea for job help. He posted it on Sichuan Public Voice, the open online platform where any citizen can directly message government offices with complaints, requests, or personal struggles. His message hit hard: “I’m really self-closed and get super anxious around people. Can you help find a basic local job in Cangxi?” Just hours later, the Cangxi County Human Resources and Social Security Bureau replied with heartfelt, practical support that went viral for its warmth. They selected three low-interaction jobs at stable local firms, ideal for minimal talking: - Factory shoe sewing (mostly solo hands-on work) - Packing or simple processing - Eyeglass assembly and quality checks They handled the hard parts: - Contacting companies directly - Arranging interviews via text/WeChat - Preparing short scripts - Offering staff to accompany him and assist They assured him: once he starts, any ongoing social challenges? They’d keep helping—no pressure, no deadlines, just steady backup. All he had to say was basically “yes”—no cold-calling, no awkward follow-ups, no forcing himself into uncomfortable conversations. The post blew up online because it felt so real and caring. It’s a shining real-life example of China’s “whole-process people’s democracy” at work—not grand speeches or elections, but quiet, practical responsiveness to one person’s everyday struggle.
Eivor tweet media
Eivor@Eivor_Koy

A common misperception among Westerners is that ordinary Chinese people have no right to criticize the government. Here is a thread detailing how anyone, including foreigners in China, can lodge complaints with the authorities and get answers.   Westerners who think Chinese citizens cannot criticize the government are referred to by Chinese netizens as "cyber pets" because of the fun they derive from such ridiculous remarks.   I sometimes shared such remarks on Chinese Weibo, and many people there told me they've used the "12345 hotline" or the "mayor's hotline" to communicate with the government and resolve their problems (see screenshots below).   Anyone in China, even foreign tourists, can connect to the local authorities and submit concerns through the "12345 hotline," a public service implemented nationwide for years.   The service is available 24/7, and all calls are answered within 15 seconds, with a promise that your concern, query, or complaint will be addressed within seven days. The calls are forwarded to local authorities as needed to resolve the issue.   Many different things have been asked of the government, from fixing broken heaters to collecting trash from the street and demanding that businesses pay their employees on time.   My mother used the hotline to report about a pit on the road outside our home, and she received a response within a day. After the call was made, the road was fixed promptly.   Another channel for the Chinese citizens to contact the local authorities is "领导留言板" (Message Board for Leaders), an online platform where any Chinese citizen can complain about their local governments. Ministers and members of the State Council are also reachable to the public, and they will respond to suggestions and critiques from the general public. In China, most local governments are obligated to respond to complaints made on Message Board for Leaders.   On a monthly basis, the website will provide statistics on the amount of cases resolved and the satisfaction rating for each province. It will also include details about the officials nationwide who have resolved the most people's issues. 

This system encourages governments and provinces to improve their service to the public by fostering healthy competition.
 liuyan.people.com.cn   As of July 2024, 388,055 complaints have been addressed through this channel in 2024.   And here's one example:   On June 9th, 2024, a citizen of Jilin Province complained to the government that the local library's air conditioner had broken and no one had arrived to repair it.   Three days later, the local tourism and culture officials addressed the netizen's concerns, explaining the delay in fixing the AC and confirming that the problem had been remedied.   You can even rate the government's performance and response.   liuyan.people.com.cn/threads/conten…   Democracy like this is what I seek. The nation will not progress if its citizens take pleasure in pelting the government with insults while receiving no actual help and if the government ignores its citizens' plight while promising them a fake "democracy."

English
34
568
3.7K
132.6K
Irene Zhao
Irene Zhao@Irenezhao_·
男人不可能三角 1. 有钱 2. 钱是自己挣的 3. 舔狗
中文
116
13
373
63.4K
timtimtim
timtimtim@timtimtim_eth·
ChainSaw Man just punches equally to everyone in chp 231, regardless of who you are lol
English
1
0
1
93
timtimtim
timtimtim@timtimtim_eth·
People really should read more and learn more about history. I am so into Chinese histories just some amazing learnings from the ancients
English
3
0
6
286
timtimtim retweetledi
Ding
Ding@dingyi·
我现在尝试的方案是: 1. 先用 variant.ai 出一个大概的风格,可以扩展不同的设计风格和布局,它可以把当前设计打包成一整套提示词,导出给其他 agents 使用。 2. 在其他 agents 比如我用 @Replit 还原,基本粘贴它的提示词都能完美还原,然后让 Replit 再基于这个设计完成其他页面和功能。(Replit agent 4.0 支持 canvas 也可以生成不同风格和布局的设计) 3. Replit 绑定 Github 后代码是实时同步到你的 repo 的,基本满意后 fork 到本地,让 Claude Code 重构。
图拉鼎@tualatrix

请教一下推上的设计师们,这会大家都是用什么工具设计产品的。之前刷到不少推文,好像很多都说不用 Figma 了,直接出最终产品了?那是具体怎么出的。我感觉设计方面的细节更难用语言描述,不像 UI 无关的代码,很容易用语言来约束。

中文
9
72
523
48.6K
timtimtim retweetledi
CuiMao
CuiMao@CuiMao·
郑重声明 本人萃猫,在此严正声明,接群众举报,最近有不法分子利用 CuiMao 的名义在各大 TG 群传播虚假投资消息,本人从未参与、发起或授权任何与虚拟货币、数字资产及相关领域的投资项目。凡以本人名义进行的此类推广、招募或募资行为,均与本人无关,系他人冒用身份的欺诈行为。 请广大朋友提高警惕,切勿轻信此类信息,避免造成不必要的财产损失,如发现上述情况,建议及时向有关部门举报。 特此声明。
CuiMao tweet media
中文
18
2
48
9.8K
timtimtim
timtimtim@timtimtim_eth·
正好在西安,第一次来。就逛了一下大雁塔。然后想到了贞观之治和开元盛世。我个人很喜欢历史,之前和 @0xminion 聊过这个,架空历史是我非常喜欢的一个分类。 唐代乃大盛之姿,尤其是太宗在隋朝基础上进一步完整的落实三省六部。重用房玄龄,杜如晦,魏征等贤臣。还有李靖,尉迟敬德,李勣。开朝盛世。我就好奇的看了一下同一时代的欧洲。为什么会有这个好奇,很简单,中国历史自始至终,都是崇尚政权集中的,朝代的更替还是回到政权集中。且反观唐,明(元,清)的版图可见板块扩张之大。 三省六部就是一个很好的集权框架下的,制衡+分工体系,三省,中书(起草),门下(审批+否决),尚书(执行)。并由六部落实。最早的模块化,流程化,官僚体系。也是急剧中中心化的典范。 反之这个时代的欧洲在干嘛?西罗马帝国刚刚破碎,英格兰的大地上还是七个小国并立,彼此征战的节点。法兰克的雄鸡逐渐羽翼丰满,东边的拜占庭延续着罗马帝国的传统和希腊化的荣光。欧洲此时的权力结构高度分散。名义上的国王权威有限,地方贵族依托土地与武力逐渐壮大,而教会则在宗教与文化层面形成跨地域的影响力。 从645年的对比可以看出,中国的大唐更像一个中心化的操作系统,而欧洲则更接近分布式的节点网络。这种结构差异,在后世不断演化,并在不同历史阶段以不同形式重现。但这并非某种固定不变的“基因”,而是一种路径依赖,它塑造了制度偏好,却不会锁死未来的可能性。
中文
0
0
9
719