Rakesh Waghela

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Rakesh Waghela

Rakesh Waghela

@webiyo

Software, current affairs, solitude. ex Dhan @dhanhq , ex Nazara

Mumbai,India Katılım Ekim 2009
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Rakesh Waghela
Rakesh Waghela@webiyo·
Real compounding of equity happens in the early years in a high growth startup. Your knowledge, network and equity all should compound in a fair world. Don't work just for a year or two, one should lock-in the fair upside and commit till the right milestone is achieved.
Gabbar@GabbbarSingh

Someone I know joined Swiggy in the initial days. Then quit within couple of years. Now suddenly made 60 crores. Now confused what to do, has a stable job. All incremental horders of money envy the windfall guy.

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Santosh Yadav
Santosh Yadav@SantoshYadavDev·
It's amazing how much productive AI makes you if you are able to ask right questions.
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Rohan Das
Rohan Das@rohaninvestor·
Stock market falling hard. My own experienced friends are thinking of selling EVERYTHING. Perfect setup for a bottom. 🔥 If even experienced players lose confidence, markets are CLOSE TO BOTTOM.
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Tuana
Tuana@tuanacelik·
We just open-sourced LiteParse 🎉 A lightweight, local document parser in the shape of an easy-to-use CLI. No API calls, no external service, no cloud dependency. Just fast text extraction from common file formats, right from your terminal. It's built for developers who want parsing that stays on their own infrastructure and gets out of their way. Clean PDFs, DOCX, HTML: run it, get your text, move on. The output is designed to be fed straight into agents so they can read parsed text and reason over screenshots without any extra wrangling. When you hit more complex territory like scanned docs, dense tables, or multi-column layouts, that's where LlamaParse picks up. Same philosophy, more horsepower for the hard stuff. 📖 Announcement post: llamaindex.ai/blog/liteparse… 🔗 GitHub: github.com/run-llama/lite… 🎬 Walkthrough: youtu.be/_gcqMGUWN-E
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Shantanu Goel
Shantanu Goel@shantanugoel·
PS: If you tried this by hiding an install command for oxydra, you won't be able to take over the computer even if you wanted to :D Oxydra is secure by default! It has most of the bells and whistles for functionality but not compromising on security.
Shantanu Goel@shantanugoel

You can hide an install command for openclaw in a skill and get your own zombie computers fully taken over under your command to do anything you want. This is malware distribution on steroids.

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Sai Krishna ⚡️ Superblog.ai
Phase 1 It is so awesome, saves a me a lot of time Phase 2 I have to be super productive because it is easy Phase 3 I need to run a minimum of 6 sessions simultaneously working on different problems Phase 4 I need to keep the AI working on _something_ all the time. Cant let it rest (its actually me who is working even harder than before) Phase 5 I just need to use AI to make my life easier
andrew chen@andrewchen

AI is supposed to save me time, but now I find myself building stuff all evening and weekend and it's actually increasing my time in front of the computer WTF

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Duy Nguyen
Duy Nguyen@truongduy2611·
✈️ Just open-sourced App Store Preflight — an AI agent skill that scans your iOS/macOS project for common App Store rejection patterns before you submit. Built on top of @rudrank's asc CLI, it pulls your metadata, checks against 100+ Apple Review Guidelines, and flags issues like: • Competitor terms in metadata • Missing privacy manifests • Unused entitlements • Banned AI terms in China storefront • Misleading subscription pricing Organized by app type (games, AI apps, kids, health, macOS, etc.) with auto-fix suggestions where possible. I built this from my own painful rejection experiences 😅 What's the most frustrating App Store rejection you've dealt with? Drop your stories below — I'd love to add more rules based on real-world cases 👇 🔗 github.com/truongduy2611/… #iOS #AppStore #indiedev #buildinpublic
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Rakesh Waghela
Rakesh Waghela@webiyo·
@shantanugoel Both are typesafe and usually high quality engineering talent density ecosystems.
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Shantanu Goel
Shantanu Goel@shantanugoel·
You might have noticed AI companies are snapping up companies developing in rust and zig for tooling!
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Piyush.dev
Piyush.dev@ZingadePiyush·
Introducing Motionwind ✨ A Babel plugin that turns Tailwind-like classes into Motion animations. Zero imports, zero runtime overhead. Works with Next.js, Vite, and React. No imports. No runtime. Just classes. Link:👇
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adriaan.com 📊 Simple Analytics
We passed 35,000 users at Simple Analytics. Every month, around 1,000 new users sign up and use our product. Transparency notice: most of them are free users. We have 1,337 paying customers. I was super scared about what support would cost us, so I built a community to forward people to and blocked the support email for free users. But you know what? Our tool is super self-serve. Users can figure it all out themselves, while our customer support is wide open. That said, we don’t get much back from our free users. They obviously don’t pay us anything, but we expected a bit more talk about Simple Analytics online because of it. So we’re debating internally whether we should add a badge requirement to the Free plan. Then free users would need to add a badge linking to Simple Analytics, which would give us something back: more eyeballs (even on smaller websites) and some backlinks (which might help, especially from bigger websites). Open to other suggestions on what we can do to keep the Free plan attractive, while also making sense from a business perspective.
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Sindhu Biswal
Sindhu Biswal@sindhubiswal·
This looks disruptive, but the conclusion is too early. Replacing tools with one interface sounds clean. In practice, companies rely on depth, reliability, and control. A dashboard is not the product. The workflows behind it are. Yes, tools like Anthropic can reduce surface level SaaS usage. Fewer tools for basic tasks. Faster execution. Lower cost in some cases. But core systems don’t disappear easily. Data pipelines, security layers, compliance, and custom workflows still need specialized software. That’s why companies like Snowflake or GitLab exist. What actually changes is the stack shape. Instead of 20 tools, maybe 8 survive. The weak, feature thin tools get replaced first. Strong platforms that own critical workflows stay. This isn’t “SaaS is dead.” It’s SaaS getting compressed. The real shift is power moving to interfaces that control access to multiple tools. The front layer becomes smarter. Winners won’t be the ones with the most features. They’ll be the ones closest to user intent. Less software. More control.
George Pu@TheGeorgePu

Anthropic just launched a marketplace where enterprises swap their software budget for AI replacements. GitLab. Snowflake. Replit. All on day one. Why pay 100 SaaS companies for 100 dashboards when one interface can do the job. They're not competing with OpenAI. They're competing with your entire software stack. Saas is dead, again.

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Jeff Weinstein
Jeff Weinstein@jeff_weinstein·
Introducing the Machine Payments Protocol (MPP). mpp.dev: an open protocol for machine-to-machine payments, co-authored by @tempo and @stripe. Watch it in agentic action ⤵️
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Cuy Sheffield
Cuy Sheffield@cuysheffield·
Excited to share Visa CLI, the first experimental product from Visa Crypto Labs. Check it out and request access here visacli.sh
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Mike Freedman
Mike Freedman@michaelfreedman·
Introducing TigerFS - a filesystem backed by PostgreSQL, and a filesystem interface to PostgreSQL. Idea is simple: Agents don't need fancy APIs or SDKs, they love the file system. ls, cat, find, grep. Pipelined UNIX tools. So let’s make files transactional and concurrent by backing them with a real database. There are two ways to use it: File-first: Write markdown, organize into directories. Writes are atomic, everything is auto-versioned. Any tool that works with files -- Claude Code, Cursor, grep, emacs -- just works. Multi-agent task coordination is just mv'ing files between todo/doing/done directories. Data-first: Mount any Postgres database and explore it with Unix tools. For large databases, chain filters into paths that push down to SQL: .by/customer_id/123/.order/created_at/.last/10/.export/json. Bulk import/export, no SQL needed, and ships with Claude Code skills. Every file is a real PostgreSQL row. Multiple agents and humans read and write concurrently with full ACID guarantees. The filesystem /is/ the API. Mounts via FUSE on Linux and NFS on macOS, no extra dependencies. Point it at an existing Postgres database, or spin up a free one on Tiger Cloud or Ghost. I built this mostly for agent workflows, but curious what else people would use it for. It's early but the core is solid. Feedback welcome. tigerfs.io
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Cody Schneider
Cody Schneider@codyschneiderxx·
@eddywdavies no cold is handled. i just want traditional marketing email with api that can do everything
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Cody Schneider
Cody Schneider@codyschneiderxx·
if you build an email marketing platform that allows you do everything through the API you will make so much money
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