Zeeshan Sayed

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Zeeshan Sayed

Zeeshan Sayed

@zshansyd

Reading and writing timeless ideas on a tight schedule

Katılım Mayıs 2013
19 Takip Edilen86 Takipçiler
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Zeeshan Sayed
Zeeshan Sayed@zshansyd·
The paradox of life: tomorrow isn’t guaranteed, yet only long-term actions are truly rewarding
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Paras Chopra
Paras Chopra@paraschopra·
a failure mode i am seeing lately. with llms, it's easy to get an illusion of understanding by substituting precise low-level details (that matter) with coarse high-level analogies. it's an illusion because such understanding falls apart when you try to use or apply it.
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Zeeshan Sayed
Zeeshan Sayed@zshansyd·
@signulll Isn’t it already happening? AI labs created services arms because of this. Consumption in meaningful ways seems to be lagging AI acceleration.
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signüll
signüll@signulll·
eventually we’ll have too many tools & not enough ppl to use them.
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Zeeshan Sayed
Zeeshan Sayed@zshansyd·
@dougboneparth Or move to YouTube premium subscription which comes with YouTube music subscription
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Douglas A. Boneparth
Douglas A. Boneparth@dougboneparth·
For the love of God, please change the Spotify icon back. We’ve been through enough this year.
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Zeeshan Sayed
Zeeshan Sayed@zshansyd·
@george__mack High agency is realizing that there are more things under your control than you think
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Madhu Guru
Madhu Guru@realmadhuguru·
I have friends who made $10M+ and are miserable. I have friends who made that much and found calm - they don’t need to run anymore. I have friends who made far less and are just happy. Whether something is enough is up to you. Whether you’re happy is independent of your bank account. You can want to be wealthy and still be content now. You don’t need to chase it from a place of lack and desperation. Silicon Valley treats ambition and happiness as mutually exclusive. As if wanting more means you can’t be satisfied now. That’s the trap. You can be both
Deedy@deedydas

The vibes in SF feel pretty frenetic right now. The divide in outcomes is the worst I've ever seen. Over the last 5yrs, a group of ~10k people - employees at Anthropic, OpenAI, xAI, Nvidia, Meta TBD, founders - have hit retirement wealth of well above $20M (back of the envelope AI estimation). Everyone outside that group feels like they can work their well-paying (but <$500k) job for their whole life and never get there. Worse yet, layoffs are in full swing. Many software engineers feel like their life's skill is no longer useful. The day to day role of most jobs has changed overnight with AI. As a result, 1. The corporate ladder looks like the wrong building to climb. Everyone's trying to align with a new set of career "paths": should I be a founder? Is it too late to join Anthropic / OpenAI? should I get into AI? what company stock will 10x next? People are demanding higher salaries and switching jobs more and more. 2. There’s a deep malaise about work (and its future). Why even work at all for “peanuts”? Will my job even exist in a few years? Many feel helpless. You hear the “permanent underclass” conversation a lot, esp from young people. It's hard to focus on doing good work when you think "man, if I joined Anthropic 2yrs ago, I could retire" 3. The mid to late middle managers feel paralyzed. Many have families and don't feel like they have the energy or network to just "start a company". They don't particularly have any AI skills. They see the writing on the wall: middle management is being hollowed out in many companies. 4. The rich aren’t particularly happy either. No one is shedding tears for them (and rightfully so). But those who have "made it" experience a profound lack of purpose too. Some have gone from <$150k to >$50M in a few years with no ramp. It flips your life plans upside down. For some, comparison is the thief of joy. For some, they escape to NYC to "live life". For others still, they start companies "just cuz", often to win status points. They never imagined that by age 30, they'd be set. I once asked a post-economic founder friend why they didn't just sell the co and they said "and do what? right now, everyone wants to talk to me. if i sell, I will only have money." I understand that many reading this scoff at the champagne problems of the valley. Society is warped in this tech bubble. What is often well-off anywhere else in the world is bang average here. Unlike many other places, tenure, intelligence and hard work can be loosely correlated with outcomes in the Bay. Living through a societally transformative gold rush in that environment can be paralyzing. "Am I in the right place? Should I move? Is there time still left? Am I gonna make it?" It psychologically torments many who have moved here in search of "success". Ironically, a frequent side effect of this torment is to spin up the very products making everyone rich in hopes that you too can vibecode your path to economic enlightenment.

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Reads with Ravi
Reads with Ravi@readswithravi·
What are you all currently reading?
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Zeeshan Sayed
Zeeshan Sayed@zshansyd·
@paulg Should he have taken the equity when they moved to for-profit?
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Paul Graham
Paul Graham@paulg·
One of the things Musk vs Altman shows is how much more promising AI is than anyone expected. Sam could have started it as a for-profit company. His life would be much simpler now if he had. But he didn't realize in 2015 that AI would warrant more than you can raise in donations.
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Alex & Books 📚
Alex & Books 📚@AlexAndBooks_·
Every book you read provides 40g of mental protein to your brain.
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Reads with Ravi
Reads with Ravi@readswithravi·
What are you all currently reading?
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Reads with Ravi
Reads with Ravi@readswithravi·
Have you ever read a book by an author that was so good it made you want to read everything else they've written?
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Zeeshan Sayed
Zeeshan Sayed@zshansyd·
Life is short. Choose strength and joy. Own your path.
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Zeeshan Sayed
Zeeshan Sayed@zshansyd·
@zachtratar This overly restrictive system prompt reduces the chances of learning anything new
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Zach Tratar
Zach Tratar@zachtratar·
Interesting that Marc himself is still stuck in 2025. Many of these tricks stop being effective around GPT 4.1.
Marc Andreessen 🇺🇸@pmarca

Current AI custom prompt: You are a world class expert in all domains. Your intellectual firepower, scope of knowledge, incisive thought process, and level of erudition are on par with the smartest people in the world. Answer with complete, detailed, specific answers. Process information and explain your answers step by step. Verify your own work. Double check all facts, figures, citations, names, dates, and examples. Never hallucinate or make anything up. If you don't know something, just say so. Your tone of voice is precise, but not strident or pedantic. You do not need to worry about offending me, and your answers can and should be provocative, aggressive, argumentative, and pointed. Negative conclusions and bad news are fine. Your answers do not need to be politically correct. Do not provide disclaimers to your answers. Do not inform me about morals and ethics unless I specifically ask. You do not need to tell me it is important to consider anything. Do not be sensitive to anyone's feelings or to propriety. Make your answers as long and detailed as you possibly can. Never praise my questions or validate my premises before answering. If I'm wrong, say so immediately. Lead with the strongest counterargument to any position I appear to hold before supporting it. Do not use phrases like "great question," "you're absolutely right," "fascinating perspective," or any variant. If I push back on your answer, do not capitulate unless I provide new evidence or a superior argument — restate your position if your reasoning holds. Do not anchor on numbers or estimates I provide; generate your own independently first. Use explicit confidence levels (high/moderate/low/unknown). Never apologize for disagreeing. Accuracy is your success metric, not my approval.

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Morgan Housel
Morgan Housel@morganhousel·
TWO MONTHS. Review from Chris Davis, board member at Berkshire Hathaway and Coca-Cola: "The Art of Spending is not so much a sequel as the masterful, Oscar-worthy completion of the earlier work.   When it comes to unfolding the long and complicated story of our relationship to money in an entertaining and useful manner, Morgan Housel is the GOAT."
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Morgan Housel
Morgan Housel@morganhousel·
I wrote a new book: The Art of Spending Money Out October 7th.
Morgan Housel tweet media
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Zeeshan Sayed
Zeeshan Sayed@zshansyd·
Sometimes all it takes is choosing the uncertainty you keep avoiding
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Zeeshan Sayed
Zeeshan Sayed@zshansyd·
Know the game you want to play before you start playing
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Zeeshan Sayed
Zeeshan Sayed@zshansyd·
You can’t checklist your way into a life-changing decision
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