yuneeq

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yuneeq

yuneeq

@yuneeq

father of 5, founder of Jool Baby

Katılım Nisan 2009
118 Takip Edilen92 Takipçiler
yuneeq
yuneeq@yuneeq·
@NickBradleyYT @thiago_peres @stalman The most I run now is Safari (few tabs), Mail, Teams, Dropbox (in background) and WhatsApp. I hit swap even before all these are open and running.
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Tyler Stalman
Tyler Stalman@stalman·
The moment I realized I was going need to find a tougher test for the MacBook Neo😳
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yuneeq
yuneeq@yuneeq·
@KobeissiLetter Imagine allowing AI to fully decide if it’s friend or foe, and whether to fire or not
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The Kobeissi Letter
The Kobeissi Letter@KobeissiLetter·
BREAKING: Kuwaiti air defenses "mistakenly" shot down 3 US F-15E fighter jets flying in Iran-related missions, per CENTCOM.
The Kobeissi Letter tweet media
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yuneeq
yuneeq@yuneeq·
@nicoledmaher @RabbiYehudaW @tyleraloevera The school budgeting is an issue, but it begins and ends with a faulty state funding formula. The state mandates busing for private school students, but only funds the BoE based on low count of public school students. This will never be go away until the funding formula changes.
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Nicole Maher
Nicole Maher@nicoledmaher·
I worked for an orthodox company in Lakewood for many years and loved a lot about the community, and they treated me wonderfully. That said, The school budgeting in Lakewood is an absolute disaster, that’s why the state is most likely going to take over. I think there’s major issues Lakewood should address rather than just say it’s always antisemitism because I think it only makes it worse for the wonderful Jewish people in that community.
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Tyler Oliveira
Tyler Oliveira@tyleraloevera·
Hello Goyim... I have released a 73 minute long documentary on New Jersey's Jewish Invasion.
Tyler Oliveira tweet media
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Brent74
Brent74@brentd74·
@CracraftFan That was great but his play the rest of the game was not.
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jamesagada
jamesagada@jamesagada·
@aakashgupta Some of these numbers don't make sense. How do you hit annualized revenue in six months? What's the math?
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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
This is a wartime memo from a company watching Claude Code eat its lunch. Anthropic’s coding agent hit $1 billion in annualized revenue six months after launch. It’s now closer to $2 billion. Microsoft, which sells GitHub Copilot, has widely adopted Claude Code internally across major engineering teams. A Google principal engineer publicly said Claude reproduced a year of architectural work in one hour. Three days ago, OpenAI rushed out a Codex desktop app. Today, Brockman publishes an internal playbook telling his own teams to go agent-first by March 31st. The sequencing tells you everything. Look at what he’s actually saying between the lines. “Designate an agents captain” means adoption inside OpenAI isn’t uniform. “Many people are also so busy they haven’t had a chance to try Codex yet” means OpenAI’s own engineers aren’t dogfooding the product that’s supposed to be their competitive weapon. “Say no to slop” is an admission that AI-generated code at scale creates a maintenance debt that nobody has solved yet. The most revealing recommendation is #6: “Work on basic infra.” He’s listing observability, agent trajectory tracking, and central tool management as things that don’t exist yet. OpenAI is selling a coding agent to enterprises while internally acknowledging the surrounding infrastructure hasn’t been built. Anthropic’s enterprise AI wallet share grew from 14% to a projected 18% while OpenAI’s shrank from 62% to 53%. And 75% of Anthropic’s enterprise customers are using its most capable models in production, compared to 46% for OpenAI. The gap in actual deployment versus tire-kicking is massive. Brockman is doing something rare here: showing his homework while the test is still in progress. The “agents captain” concept, the AGENTS.md files, the hackathon suggestion, these are the moves of a company that knows the transition to agentic development is existential and that its biggest competitor figured out the developer experience first. The $1.4 trillion infrastructure buildout doesn’t matter if developers prefer the other model. Compute is necessary but insufficient. The real race is in the harness, the workflow, the developer muscle memory. And right now, Claude Code owns that.
Greg Brockman@gdb

Software development is undergoing a renaissance in front of our eyes. If you haven't used the tools recently, you likely are underestimating what you're missing. Since December, there's been a step function improvement in what tools like Codex can do. Some great engineers at OpenAI yesterday told me that their job has fundamentally changed since December. Prior to then, they could use Codex for unit tests; now it writes essentially all the code and does a great deal of their operations and debugging. Not everyone has yet made that leap, but it's usually because of factors besides the capability of the model. Every company faces the same opportunity now, and navigating it well — just like with cloud computing or the Internet — requires careful thought. This post shares how OpenAI is currently approaching retooling our teams towards agentic software development. We're still learning and iterating, but here's how we're thinking about it right now: As a first step, by March 31st, we're aiming that: (1) For any technical task, the tool of first resort for humans is interacting with an agent rather than using an editor or terminal. (2) The default way humans utilize agents is explicitly evaluated as safe, but also productive enough that most workflows do not need additional permissions. In order to get there, here's what we recommended to the team a few weeks ago: 1. Take the time to try out the tools. The tools do sell themselves — many people have had amazing experiences with 5.2 in Codex, after having churned from codex web a few months ago. But many people are also so busy they haven't had a chance to try Codex yet or got stuck thinking "is there any way it could do X" rather than just trying. - Designate an "agents captain" for your team — the primary person responsible for thinking about how agents can be brought into the teams' workflow. - Share experiences or questions in a few designated internal channels - Take a day for a company-wide Codex hackathon 2. Create skills and AGENTS[.md]. - Create and maintain an AGENTS[.md] for any project you work on; update the AGENTS[.md] whenever the agent does something wrong or struggles with a task. - Write skills for anything that you get Codex to do, and commit it to the skills directory in a shared repository 3. Inventory and make accessible any internal tools. - Maintain a list of tools that your team relies on, and make sure someone takes point on making it agent-accessible (such as via a CLI or MCP server). 4. Structure codebases to be agent-first. With the models changing so fast, this is still somewhat untrodden ground, and will require some exploration. - Write tests which are quick to run, and create high-quality interfaces between components. 5. Say no to slop. Managing AI generated code at scale is an emerging problem, and will require new processes and conventions to keep code quality high - Ensure that some human is accountable for any code that gets merged. As a code reviewer, maintain at least the same bar as you would for human-written code, and make sure the author understands what they're submitting. 6. Work on basic infra. There's a lot of room for everyone to build basic infrastructure, which can be guided by internal user feedback. The core tools are getting a lot better and more usable, but there's a lot of infrastructure that currently go around the tools, such as observability, tracking not just the committed code but the agent trajectories that led to them, and central management of the tools that agents are able to use. Overall, adopting tools like Codex is not just a technical but also a deep cultural change, with a lot of downstream implications to figure out. We encourage every manager to drive this with their team, and to think through other action items — for example, per item 5 above, what else can prevent a lot of "functionally-correct but poorly-maintainable code" from creeping into codebases.

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AP
AP@Average_NY_Guy·
Before you watch anything else, watch this. This is @PeterSantenello. He came into the Hasidic Jewish community with humility, curiosity, and genuine respect. He didn't come to provoke, expose, or score points. He came to learn. Because of that, doors opened. Conversations happened. Real people were seen as real people. That's why he was welcomed and treated like one of us. Now compare that to what we are watching today in Kiryas Joel. We are seeing someone arrive with a predetermined narrative, trying to paint Hasidic Jews in the worst possible light. Not to understand a private community, but to sensationalize it. Not to learn, but to virtue signal. As if Hasidic Jews are some dangerous group, despite having no history of violence or harming others. So watch this video and learn the difference. Learn the difference between genuine curiosity and bad intentions. Between storytelling and grifting. Between someone who wants to understand, and someone who wants clicks.
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yuneeq
yuneeq@yuneeq·
@maincopy @YWNReporter If you’re worried they’re terrorists why would a young woman provoke them? Smarter to play it cool, call the cops to investigate and review the footage - which is exactly what happened here.
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Moshe Schwartz
Moshe Schwartz@YWNReporter·
The Shin Bet and Police are investigating why two suspects, believed to be Arabs, purchased Haredi clothing in a Bnei Brak store, including tzitzit and a suit.
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Mike P
Mike P@mikepat711·
14.1.2 was honestly way worse than 14.1.4. There’s really no random brake stabbing on 14.1.4 outside of leafgate. The main comfort issue for me is start/stop creeping at unprotected turns and stop signs. It’s not even harsh it just slows down maneuvers and fills you with frustration 😂 but it’s very safe. Pedestrians too but most of my driving isn’t around pedestrians.
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Mike P
Mike P@mikepat711·
Elon said he’s 100% sure they’ve solved FSD, and it’s funny because you know at this point a lot of people don’t listen to him when he says this, because many are so conditioned to hearing “it’s almost ready” without it ending up happening. But if you’re one of the few sitting in these cars now testing 14, you have that “holy shit, my team is about to win the superbowl” excitement inside of you. 14.1 has comfort issues, but you’re sitting there realizing every single drive that you don’t need to do anything ever. Even when you do take over to avoid comfort related stuff, it’s really optional and not safety related. And it seems like 14.2 has addressed all of these things. V13 was flawless almost always, but with the launch of V14, it has just become so crystal clear that the software is safer than the average human. So crystal clear that your overall probability of collision is lower when it’s active. Already felt that way in 13, but with a smooth 14, this feeling will be mainstream. It’s just so undeniable after you’ve gotten a few thousand miles under your belt. I can’t believe they did it. This is the most insane shit ever. I’ve never seen such a mind-blowing, life-saving, world changing tech so close to completion before the majority of the public even has a clue it exists at all. It really feels like I’m Gary Hobson from the show Early Edition, walking around Chicago with tomorrow’s newspaper 😂
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yuneeq
yuneeq@yuneeq·
@HarrisonFriedes @mitchellaskew I used to believe this back in 2017 but the growth and acceptance of BTC as a store of value over the years has proven this theory wrong.
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Mitchell Askew
Mitchell Askew@MitchellAskew·
Call me a fiat-maxi or whatever, but I care 100x more about Bitcoin being a “store of value” than a medium of exchange My credit card works fine for daily payments I care about having something I can put my life savings into without it getting inflated away
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yuneeq
yuneeq@yuneeq·
@mendellowy @OneJerseySchorr @CJGriffinEsq I went last week and couldn’t find parking after circling the lot for 10 mins. They need more sites, waiting more than 5-10 mins to vote is unacceptable.
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EilteOptionsTarter
EilteOptionsTarter@mendellowy·
@OneJerseySchorr @CJGriffinEsq This is early voting. Not election day. People had the world of time for weeks to vote early. You can't expect the State to have all poling sites open for a month because people will come the last few hour. So long as on election day you have all election sites open it's fair.
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Shlomo Schorr
Shlomo Schorr@OneJerseySchorr·
With just over four hours left to vote early in person, lines in Lakewood are now stretching over a block long. A beautiful, sunny and 62 degrees on this November day probably also helps.
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yuneeq
yuneeq@yuneeq·
@billykyle I have this issue when turning left into my office parking lot. It always turns into the middle lane, which is for traffic coming out, even though there are arrows facing the opposite direction.
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Billy
Billy@billykyle·
I use FSD for over 2 hours of travel every day around the Philadelphia area and have never experienced an issue as bad as this one. Any ideas why it chose the completely wrong lane? Has anyone ever experienced anything like this?
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Crémieux
Crémieux@cremieuxrecueil·
Does testosterone make people have more masculine economic preferences? Does it make people act more like Republicans? We now have a large, pre-registered double-blind randomized controlled study that provides an answer🧵
Crémieux tweet media
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Steven Pappas
Steven Pappas@StevenPappasTV·
Henrik Lundqvist and Igor Shesterkin are #1 and #2 ALL TIME in goal saved above expected in postseason history. We have been blessed with watching two of the greatest postseason goaltenders in league history. 📊: @EvolvingHockey @NYRangersRadio | #NYR
Steven Pappas tweet media
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yuneeq
yuneeq@yuneeq·
@vzmercogliano @thatsportmaniac The fact he was unloaded was a separate transaction from the signing. You give credit for his impact to culture but ignore the toxicity when he was unloaded. Goodrow sucked every min he was here, including the 1 playoffs where outside some lucky goals he was thoroughly outplayed.
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Vince Z. Mercogliano
Vince Z. Mercogliano@vzmercogliano·
It's pretty lazy to just chalk it up as a loss. The contract was an overpay given the role he was asked to play, which is why I had it as a push (not a win), but the guy scored more playoff goals (6) than Panarin, Zibanejad and Fox during last year's run. I know some fans hate to hear this for whatever reason, but he was also an important tone-setter who teammates credit for helping establish a winning culture while he was here. And an important note for this exercise is that they were able to shed the contract without surrendering assets or eating salary, so no long-term harm was done. I defined push as a move that came with positives and negatives, and I think this one firmly falls in that category. #ok
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yuneeq
yuneeq@yuneeq·
@JLazzy23 Oetter and Swayman are better comparables. Igor is better, but is he worth 40% more than them? I would put it at 20-25% max.
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Jonny Lazarus
Jonny Lazarus@JLazzy23·
I never want to hear people compare Igor Shesterkin’s contract to Hellebuyck’s contract ever again.
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yuneeq
yuneeq@yuneeq·
@SecDuffy Bring back common sense - TSA must stop treating families with young kids like terrorists! Nearly every trip we are treated to random checks, bags opened, bottles removed & questioned, forced to remove children from strollers & pressured while carrying kids & a million things.
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Secretary Sean Duffy
Secretary Sean Duffy@SecDuffy·
Tell me how we can Make Traveling with Family Great Again! There’s no better place to start a family than the USA so I want to make it easier for you to travel with your kids. Here’s your chance to tell me, your Transportation Secretary, what I can do to make travel easier for your family. Send me your best ideas!
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yuneeq
yuneeq@yuneeq·
@JFreshHockey How about trading your captain after publicly badmouthing him? He must’ve been well liked to get the C. Or sending out a league wide memo that your longest tenured player is on the trade block without notifying the player first? Scratching/trading Kakko bec they hate analytics
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JFresh
JFresh@JFreshHockey·
tfw your team trades a fourth liner and you're so mad you ruin the whole season over it
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JFresh
JFresh@JFreshHockey·
get a grip oh my god
Greg Wyshynski@wyshynski

At @NYRangers locker room clean out day, it’s fairly obvious that the Goodrow and Trouba trades were huge distractions for this group. “I think [there was] frustration. I think it's just when you don't know everything, we don't know what's going on.” - Zibanejad

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yuneeq
yuneeq@yuneeq·
@michaelpatron0 In a similar boat. Without China, our business wouldn’t have started. We have 25 US employees, and literally spend millions annually with US vendors ranging from logistics to marketing to legal & software. The US may need to wean off of China, but it can’t happen overnight.
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Michael Patrón
Michael Patrón@michaelpatron0·
Get a lot of hate about being a "Chinese Dropshipper". Doesn't bother me but just wanted to layout some details of how much I invest in the US bc I find it interesting that I am somehow viewed as not contributing.... I own and run a warehouse and office here. That means...
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