Mrinal Mohit

145 posts

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Mrinal Mohit

Mrinal Mohit

@wowitsmrinal

professional tinkerer. ex founding team @Glean, @Meta AI, @MIT

San Francisco, CA Katılım Nisan 2012
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Mrinal Mohit
Mrinal Mohit@wowitsmrinal·
we walked 50,000 steps to break our record and made an app so that you can break yours!
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Riley Brown
Riley Brown@rileybrown·
Hey @YouTube I would pay an extra $10/month on top of YouTube Premium to disable shorts. I don't want to see another short ever again. Please let me toggle them off.
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Mrinal Mohit
Mrinal Mohit@wowitsmrinal·
we walked 50,000 steps to break our record and made an app so that you can break yours!
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Deedy
Deedy@deedydas·
Every single one of these ~$100M+ companies were started by alumni of a small ~25yo Silicon Valley school with <200 students/yr. DoorDash Greenoaks Capital alexanderwang Windsurf Chan Zuckerberg The avg SAT score is 99%ile in the US, 1525. It's the Harker School, San Jose.
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Mrinal Mohit
Mrinal Mohit@wowitsmrinal·
We wanted an app that lets us brag about how much we walk. 😅 Didn’t find one. So made our own. Walk a ton. Add photos. Add notes. Press share.
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Mrinal Mohit
Mrinal Mohit@wowitsmrinal·
@karpathy a flow i've been playing with -- build a personal "will i want to read this" prompt -- giving it examples of things i've liked (witty, entertaining, deep) and things i haven't (dry, clickbait, pamphlet turned into a book) and using that to decide if want to skip directly to 2
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Andrej Karpathy
Andrej Karpathy@karpathy·
I’m starting to get into a habit of reading everything (blogs, articles, book chapters,…) with LLMs. Usually pass 1 is manual, then pass 2 “explain/summarize”, pass 3 Q&A. I usually end up with a better/deeper understanding than if I moved on. Growing to among top use cases. On the flip side, if you’re a writer trying to explain/communicate something, we may increasingly see less of a mindset of “I’m writing this for another human” and more “I’m writing this for an LLM”. Because once an LLM “gets it”, it can then target, personalize and serve the idea to its user.
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Mrinal Mohit
Mrinal Mohit@wowitsmrinal·
started asking coding agents to use git more and its been surprisingly powerful. some favorite prompts:
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Mrinal Mohit
Mrinal Mohit@wowitsmrinal·
@soumithchintala What an epic run Soumith! Thank you for PyTorch of course, but also thank you for making time to help clueless new grads like me ship models back in the RNNG days.
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Soumith Chintala
Soumith Chintala@soumithchintala·
Leaving Meta and PyTorch I'm stepping down from PyTorch and leaving Meta on November 17th. tl;dr: Didn't want to be doing PyTorch forever, seemed like the perfect time to transition right after I got back from a long leave and the project built itself around me. Eleven years at Meta. Nearly all my professional life. Making many friends for life. Almost eight years leading PyTorch, taking it from nothing to 90%+ adoption in AI. Walking away from this was one of the hardest things I've ever done. But I'm leaving with a full heart. PyTorch handles exascale training now. It powers foundation models that are redefining intelligence. It's in production at virtually every major AI company. It's taught in classrooms from MIT to rural India. The tools I dreamed about making accessible? They are. The barrier to entry I wanted to lower? It's almost gone. To be clear, there’s so much more to do. As long as AI evolves at a breakneck pace, PyTorch will continue to play catch up. Obsessing over the yet-to-come sometimes makes us forget how much we’ve already done. To everyone who built this with me—who believed research should be joyful, that tools should be elegant, that open source changes everything—thank you. This wasn't my journey. It was ours. What's next for me? Something small. Something new. Something I don't fully understand yet. Something uncomfortable. I could have moved to something else inside Meta. But I needed to know what's out there. I needed to do something small again. I couldn't live with the counterfactual regret of never trying something outside Meta. It's very hard to leave. I probably have one of the AI industry’s most leveraged seats, I lead the software layer that powers the entire AI industry. Every major AI company and hardware vendor are on a speed dial. This kind of power is really hard to give up. But curiosity ultimately won out in my head. Keep making AI delicious and accessible. I'll be watching. Probably filing issues. Definitely staying involved. Is PyTorch going to be okay? I don't want to be doing PyTorch forever. I don't want to be like Guido or Linus— bound to a single thing for decades. Last November, coinciding with the birth of my daughter, I started planning my exit with Aparna. My goal was to leave PyTorch in a good and stable place. By this August, during the second half of my parental leave, I knew: Edward, Suo, Alban, Greg, John, Joe and Jana were ready. The team faced hard people, product, technical and organizational problems and didn’t feel the need to lean back on me to solve these for them (unlike in the past). The product story they crafted for the PyTorch Conference was coherent—really coherent. The things I'd flagged red were turning healthy. The project didn't need me anymore. Unlike 2020-2022 (when I stepped down to go do robotics and came back when Lin, Dima and Dwarak left), I have strong confidence that this time PyTorch is truly resilient. The most aligned culture carriers of PyTorch – Greg, Alban, Ed, Jason and Joe are at the decision table now, and people with strong value alignment – Suo, John and Jana have joined them at the table. And there’s a long list of equally value-aligned people willing to sit at the table should any of these people leave. There are many little things that make up my confidence on the people – John worked on Julia and open-source for a very long time (in fact we hacked a Torch.jl in 2015), Suo has been the strongest systems builder and strategic partner I’ve had for the past two years, and Jana worked on resilient core systems for a very long time, I’ve had long technical and organizational discussions with her over the past few months that give me confidence. And the product lineup and execution in 2025 should be sufficient evidence for any remaining doubt. I’m confident that this band of PyTorchers are going to do exceptionally well. PyTorch might change in flavor because I no longer impose my own taste from the top, but I’m confident that the values are going to stay intact and the product is going to be awesome. My time at Meta The early years of FAIR were absolutely magical. I was part of a small family of absolutely brilliant people building state-of-the-art AI out in the open. From working on GANs with Emily Denton, Rob Fergus, Leon Bottou, Martin Arjovsky and the (now legendary) Alec Radford to building Starcraft bots with Gabriel Synnaeve, to building the first FAIR Cluster with Howard Mansell, to working on object detection with Adam Lerer and Piotr Dollar, to building PyTorch. It was more fun than I can describe in words. 2015 and 2016 were probably the most productive and professionally enjoyable years of my life. I’ll probably romanticize this period of my life forever. When I joined FAIR, I had massive impostor syndrome, and the first 3 months were very very difficult. I can’t credit Andrew Tulloch enough for being the most thoughtful, kind and welcoming mentor, without whom I wouldn’t have made it. I’m so damn bullish for Meta just from the fact that he’s back. --- My time on PyTorch was special. I loved every part of building it—designing it, managing it, being the PM, TL, comms lead, doc engineer, release engineer, squashing bugs, growth hacking, turning it into a coherent product with hundreds of people, transitioning it to industry stakeholdership – the whole nine yards. To the core PyTorch team at Meta: the engineers, researchers, open-source maintainers, docs writers, CI infrastructure folks, hardware partners, the community builders. To the hundreds more inside and outside Meta—thank you. You turned a library into a movement. There are too many people to credit and thank, but I can't not mention Adam Paszke, Sam Gross, Greg Chanan, Joe Spisak, Alban Desmaison, Edward Yang, Richard Zou, Tongzhou Wang, Francisco Massa, Luca Antiga, Andreas Köpf, Zach DeVito, Zeming Lin, Adam Lerer, Howard Mansell and Natalia Gimelshein. And Schrep. They made the launch happen. And so many more people became centrally important later: Lu Fang, Xiaodong Wang, Junjie Bai, Nikita Shulga, Horace He, Mark Saroufim, Jason Ansel, Dmytro Dzhulgakov, Yangqing Jia, Geeta Chauhan, Will Constable, Briah Hirsh, Jane Xu, Mario Lezcano, Piotr Balecki, Yinghai Lu, Less Wright, Andrew Tulloch, Bruce Lin, Woo Kim, Helen Suk, Chris Gottbrath, Peng Wu, Joe Isaacson, Eli Uriegas, Tristan Rice, Yanan Cao, Elias Ellison, Animesh Jain, Peter Noordhuis, Tianyu Liu, Yifu Wang, Lin Qiao and hundreds more. It’s criminal of me to not take the space to list out everyone else I should be mentioning here. PyTorch is nothing without its people ❤️. The most joyful moments of building PyTorch was meeting users eager to share their happiness, love and feedback. I remember a grad student coming to me at Neurips 2017, in a slurring emotional voice he said he’d been trying to make progress on his research for 3 years but within 3 months of using PyTorch he made so much progress that he was ready to graduate. That moment made it tangible that what we do matters, a lot, to a lot of people, even if you don't constantly hear from them. I do miss the intimacy of the PyTorch community, with a 300 person conference that felt like an extended family gathering, but I feel that’s a small price to pay considering the scale of impact PyTorch is truly having today – yes the Conference is now 3,000 people where market-moving deals get brokered, but it’s helping orders of magnitude more people to do their best AI work. I miss the intimacy, but I'm proud of that growth. --- To Mark Zuckerberg and Mike Schroepfer, who believed that open-sourcing is fundamentally important and is a sound business strategy. This is so hard to understand for most people within the course of business, but we’ve run lock-step on this strategy without ever having to discuss it. Without you two, neither FAIR nor PyTorch would’ve happened. And those mean so much to me. To Yann LeCun and Rob Fergus, for building the magical early FAIR that I so revere. To Aparna Ramani, a leader that I find so rare at Meta in her ability to hold a really high bar for the org, technically brilliant with the span to discuss deep infra systems and industry-strategy within the same conversation and for being an absolute execution-machine! I’ve learned so much from you. To Santosh, Kaushik, Delia, Oldham and Ben for being so welcoming to Infra. For someone coming over from FAIR with a wildly different culture, you all made me feel at home and made me part of the family, and thank you for that. To all my managers who've championed me through the PSC video game – Serkan, Howard, Jerome, Abhijit, Yoram, Joelle, Aparna and Damien – I owe you a lifetime of drinks. --- Signing off for now. —Soumith
Soumith Chintala tweet media
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Mrinal Mohit
Mrinal Mohit@wowitsmrinal·
never too late to be an intern turning thoughts into actions at neuralink
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Mrinal Mohit
Mrinal Mohit@wowitsmrinal·
iphone air might be the best phone for photography over the past few years, as iphone pro cameras got better and better, my mirrorless often just sits quietly in my backpack on trips, waiting to be taken out for very brief glorious moments, all while lamenting how the phone is now "good enough" for everyday photos. but when i do take it out, i remember that putting that viewfinder next to my eye transports me to a mindspace where every view is a new frame and every corner is a new composition. not to undersell the still vastly better picture & bokeh quality a minimal phone like the air, with all its "constraints", might just nudge amateur photographers like me to let the bigger camera breathe in the open again
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Deedy
Deedy@deedydas·
Big personal news! After a remarkable 18mos at Menlo Ventures, I'm excited to announce that perhaps against better judgement, they have decided to make me a Partner at the firm. Wild that just 6yrs ago, I'd be up at 2am debugging Google Search. A little bit about my journey:
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Raphael Schaad
Raphael Schaad@raphaelschaad·
PSA: Set your DNS to 1.1.1.1 Your default DNS is set to your ISP's (Verizon, Comcast, whatever), which is slower and they make money by selling browsing data. 1.1.1.1 is by Cloudflare; link how to do it in 1min for free below:
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Mrinal Mohit
Mrinal Mohit@wowitsmrinal·
iOS shortcuts are criminally underrated. This one prevents me from being stranded at least once a quarter.
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Designer
Designer@untitled__psd·
@wowitsmrinal @mirdhaaakanksha Can we see an actual photo it generates and not the digital copy shown at the end of the video? Curious to see how you are printing the generated image on Instax paper
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Mrinal Mohit
Mrinal Mohit@wowitsmrinal·
We made a physical camera that prints you as an anime character, instantly! with @mirdhaaakanksha
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