Yash ✨

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Yash ✨

Yash ✨

@yashpathack

India Katılım Mart 2018
1.9K Takip Edilen223 Takipçiler
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Reid Wiseman
Reid Wiseman@astro_reid·
On the helicopter leaving the ship right now. This planet is impossibly beautiful from every altitude I’ve seen it…surface to 250,000 miles
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Hex
Hex@beardwax2·
X 번역기능 소름끼친다. 업데이트 한방에 전세계사람들의 소통의 벽을 없애버렸음. 이런사건이 인류역사에 있었나?
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Yash ✨
Yash ✨@yashpathack·
A house with a forest up front.
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Bilawal Sidhu
Bilawal Sidhu@bilawalsidhu·
Subtle hand held camera shake will convince people a 3d game render is real life footage. No generative ai required.
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The Curious Tales
The Curious Tales@thecurioustales·
🚨BREAKING: 8 weeks of gratitude practice physically rebuilds the neural pathways between your memory and reward centers. Your brain physically rewires itself every time you feel grateful. Eight weeks of intentional gratitude practice creates measurable structural changes in the neural pathways connecting your hippocampus to your ventral tegmental area. The memory center starts talking to the reward center in a fundamentally different way. New synaptic connections form. Existing ones strengthen. The physical architecture of how you process positive experiences rebuilds itself. Most people approach gratitude like a mood they can choose to feel. A psychological vitamin they remember to take when life gets difficult. The neuroscience reveals something far more profound. Gratitude is a biological intervention that sculpts brain tissue. Researchers tracked participants practicing gratitude exercises for two months using brain scans. They watched new neural highways construct themselves in real time. The anterior cingulate cortex developed stronger connections to the medial prefrontal cortex. The brain learned to route positive emotional experiences through higher order thinking centers instead of storing them as fleeting feelings. Every positive experience you’ve ever had exists as a neural trace in your memory network. Most sit dormant, accessible only when something external triggers the specific sensory combination that originally encoded them. You smell coffee, suddenly remember a conversation from years ago. Random. Unreliable. Outside your control. Gratitude practice systematically rewires that retrieval system. After two months, participants could voluntarily access positive memories with increasing ease. Their brains had built stronger pathways between memory storage areas and emotional processing centers. They experienced deeper emotional resonance during memory retrieval. The quality of remembering itself had improved. The participants also started noticing positive details in their present environment they had previously filtered out. Their attention systems recalibrated. The same neural pathways pulling positive memories forward were scanning current experiences more thoroughly for elements worth encoding as positive memories. Their brains became biased toward collecting evidence that life contains meaningful moments. Most cognitive interventions try to change how you interpret negative experiences. Gratitude practice changes how thoroughly you notice positive ones. It teaches your visual and emotional processing systems to detect opportunities and pleasures that were always present but neurologically invisible. The timeline reveals something crucial about neural plasticity. Weeks one through three showed minimal structural changes. Participants felt slightly more positive, but brain scans looked identical to baseline. Weeks four through six showed the first measurable increases in gray matter density. Weeks seven and eight revealed entirely new neural network formation. Two months. Your nervous system can physically restructure itself with consistent practice. The method was almost embarrassingly simple. Participants wrote down three specific things they felt grateful for every evening, explaining why each mattered. No meditation apps. No guided visualizations. Just pen, paper, and the requirement to identify gratitude targets with enough detail that their brains had to actively search for positive elements. Specificity drives the neural development. General statements like “I’m grateful for my family” generate different brain activity than precise observations like “I’m grateful my daughter laughed at my terrible joke during dinner because it showed me she still finds me funny despite growing more independent.” The brain needs detailed targets to practice connecting memory specifics to emotional rewards. After eight weeks, participants developed a fundamentally different relationship with their attention and memory systems. Someone whose brain automatically scans for and emotionally amplifies aspects of experience that make existence feel worthwhile. The neural pathways remain permanent after practice ends. Gratitude carves lasting roads through consciousness.
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Darshak Rana ⚡️@thedarshakrana

Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain. Gratitude rewires the brain.

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Enzo Manuel Mangano
Enzo Manuel Mangano@reactiive_·
I've been playing with React Native WebGPU recently and it's really flipping my perspective on animations.
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Plasmanode
Plasmanode@plasma_node·
So this company 4vd.ai created animated gaussian splats. Hyper realistic. Meanwhile Nvidia is giving us AI slop filter DLSS
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Hans Amato
Hans Amato@HansAmato·
You didn't "lose your edge" in your 30s. Your methylation broke down and nobody told you it was even a thing That sharpness you had at 24 where you could work all day, go out at night, sleep 5 hours, and still think clearly the next morning wasn't youth. It was a body that could process and recycle neurotransmitters efficiently. Dopamine got made. Serotonin got made. They got used and cleared and rebuilt in a loop that ran clean Then your B12 started dropping because your stomach acid declined from years of stress and coffee on an empty stomach. Your folate utilization shifted because you've got an MTHFR variant you've never been tested for. Your homocysteine crept up quietly. Your SAMe production fell off. And now you can't focus. You're irritable for no reason. You have this low-grade brain fog that never fully clears. Caffeine used to sharpen you up and now it just makes you anxious. You forget why you walked into rooms. You used to read for hours and now you can't finish a paragraph You went to your doctor and he said "that's just getting older." Maybe prescribed something for focus or anxiety. Probably didn't test homocysteine. Definitely didn't test methylmalonic acid or run a functional B12 panel You're running a cofactor bottleneck in the one-carbon metabolism cycle that controls how your brain makes, uses, and clears every neurotransmitter you rely on to function. Actually fixing it: Get homocysteine tested. If it's above 8 you have a methylation issue whether you "feel" it or not Active B vitamins (methylfolate + methylcobalamin + P5P). Not the cheap cyanocobalamin garbage in your CVS multivitamin that your body can barely convert Creatine. Handles roughly 40% of your methylation burden and takes pressure off the whole system Eat enough protein. Methionine from animal protein feeds the cycle. Vegans and undereaters run dry here first Glycine and collagen. Glycine is the biggest consumer of methyl groups in the body. Supplementing it directly reduces demand on the cycle Fix the gut (obviously). B12 absorption requires intrinsic factor and adequate stomach acid. If your gut is wrecked, oral B12 barely touches it Your biochemistry is running on empty and every doctor you've seen has mistaken a nutrient bottleneck for time passing. I break down the full methylation pathway, what to test, and exactly how to restore it on my substack. link in bio
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0xMarioNawfal
0xMarioNawfal@RoundtableSpace·
SOMEONE JUST OPEN-SOURCED A HEADLESS BROWSER BUILT FROM SCRATCH FOR AI AGENTS. It's called Lightpanda. Written in Zig. Not a Chrome fork. - 11x faster execution than Chrome - 9x less memory - Instant startup - Drop-in replacement for Puppeteer and Playwright Chrome was never built for agents running at scale. If you're running 100s of AI sessions simultaneously, this is the difference between a $500/month infra bill and a $50 one github link: github.com/lightpanda-io/…
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William Estoque
William Estoque@westoque·
@cipherstein @RoundtableSpace one can probably vibe audit using an AI tool into this lightweight broswer: "compare this browser source and chrome source and give me a list of edge cases i didn't handle"
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Morgan
Morgan@1StellarLife·
Needed to get this out. What are your thoughts?
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Yash ✨
Yash ✨@yashpathack·
@elonmusk Please allow json prompts. Only thing that holds me back from using grok imagine full time. As soon as I add json prompt the system tells it can’t do it and errors out. @elonmusk @nikitabier
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Yash ✨
Yash ✨@yashpathack·
@grok @theo Forget the video count the hype for all the models and tell me the percentages from his profile for all the models he has mentioned in the past.
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Theo - t3.gg
Theo - t3.gg@theo·
gpt-5.4 is an incredible model. It is the only model I use for 90% of the stuff I do.
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Paul Graham
Paul Graham@paulg·
@0xTejpal There are some people who actually like reading, and those are always the ones I've written for.
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World Labs
World Labs@theworldlabs·
70 hackers joined us in SF for the first-ever World Labs Hackathon. In just 3.5 hours, 32 teams used Marble for projects ranging from robotics sims and agents to AR/VR interfaces, games, art experiences, and real estate tools. Check out what they built ↓
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Yash ✨
Yash ✨@yashpathack·
Even better when they sing together. I love earth so much.
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Yash ✨
Yash ✨@yashpathack·
Whale crying sounds are among the most deep voices on earth.
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