Chadjective

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Chadjective

Chadjective

@Chadjective

Founding team of https://t.co/jLX4LHGcx0 All Roads Lead To YES

Semiosphere of Lanikea Entrou em Temmuz 2022
1.1K Seguindo383 Seguidores
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Alif Hossain
Alif Hossain@alifcoder·
Prompt engineers make $120k-$300k yearly. That's why I built "1000+ GPT-4 Prompts": • 1000+ Prompts • 5000+ AI Tools • Tips, Tricks, Techniques & more. And for 24 hours, it's 100% FREE! To get it, just: 1: Follow me (so that I can DM) 2: Like and repost. 3. Reply " Prompts "
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Chadjective
Chadjective@Chadjective·
Let's talk about space bubbles for a minute
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Chadjective@Chadjective·
What stories are we telling ourselves today?
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Chadjective
Chadjective@Chadjective·
you learn something everyday whether you wish to or not
GIF
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Chadjective
Chadjective@Chadjective·
When in doubt Make art
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Hardhat Chad
Hardhat Chad@HardhatChad·
Solana developers... I've created an interactive runbook for Claude code to streamline your program deployments on Solana. Just import it and tell Claude "run the deployment runbook" 🧵
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Codigo
Codigo@CodigoPlatform·
Another Colosseum build we loved: Avoid Net Built by @Chadjective Avoidnet is like a Wikipedia for crypto risks starting with scams and rugs across the Solana ecosystem Community stakes a small amount to validate quality and the URL itself becomes the warning. @Chadjective used Código to launch his first Solana smart contract, skipping setup pain and getting straight to a working MVP
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supersimon
supersimon@supersimon77·
gm 🍁 starting the year off right, locked in at the Superteam office
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Chadjective
Chadjective@Chadjective·
Westward jetlag is such a cheat code. My rhythms are still firmly planted in CET, so waking up at 4am feels like I slept in. A good time to focus in on upgrading frontpage infra for avoid.net
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Avi
Avi@AviFelman·
Someone asked me what I think will “bottom” the market. To be abundantly clear, I do not think markets bottom on a positive catalyst. Bottoms are not formed because something good suddenly happens or because sentiment flips overnight. Instead, I think we have to reach a level where people collectively decide that selling no longer makes sense. That decision is made purely from exhaustion. It is the moment when marginal sellers are gone and remaining participants are either already out or willing to sit through volatility. From a price perspective, I am looking somewhere in the range 70-80k, but the price itself is not the primary signal. What really matters is volume. Specifically, I am looking for a slowdown in volume, not just on down days but across the board. High volume reflects urgency and forced decision making. Low volume reflects indifference and acceptance, which is far more consistent with a durable bottom. The process likely includes some form of capitulatory event. That event creates the low, not because it resolves uncertainty, but because it flushes out the last sellers who need to exit. After that, price likely moves sideways for a period of time. During this phase, volume stays low, yet price does not meaningfully move lower. That combination is critical. It shows that despite the absence of excitement or positive news, there is also an absence of pressure to sell. It helps significantly if there’s a negative news and the price doesn’t move lower. That is a great sign. Only after this phase do we probably bottom out.
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Chadjective
Chadjective@Chadjective·
Small steps in the right direction Add up over time Which ways are you heading?
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Chadjective
Chadjective@Chadjective·
@SimiStern This is only the beginning! Thanks for the opportunity to explain the lore behind the project.
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Simon
Simon@SimiStern·
On this weeks Speakeasy Pod: > Be Chadjective > Staring at the moon in rural New Brunswick in 2005 > Have a vision: Wikipedia for consumer warnings so my mom stops buying bad products > Launch v1 in 2007, it actually takes off :o > 66k users and 200 pages of content > feelsgoodman.jpg > Site gets absolutely overrun by SEO spam bots selling drugs and shady pills > Devs bail, lose the platform entirely :( > life goes on. spend next 15 years learning community building > Enter crypto in 2019, launch a joke Valentine's NFT project > Project unexpectedly moons :o > Get recruited by Chads dot wtf because he "embody the ethos" > Realize blockchain finally solves the spam problem that killed his project 20 years ago > Building Avoid dot net for the Colosseum hackathon > Implement "Truth Escrow": users stake crypto to verify warnings, making spam expensive > "The webpage is the warning" > URL itself warns you before you click > Finally executing the vision from 2005 with 2025 tech > wagmi youtu.be/Zi1FYLWuues
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Nate
Nate@c0gnate·
@peachiiiexo me and the gang next year outside Heathrow airport waiting for all the crypto bros to give us their watches...
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peach ♡
peach ♡@foidologist·
london has annoying street crime but the idea you’re gonna get randomly stabbed while attending breakpoint is preposterous >random violent attacks on tourists are extremely rare >the event will be in central london, a heavily populated and surveilled area >yes there are phone snatchers in populated tourist areas (as there are pickpockets in virtually every major city/tourist spot in the world), but this can be easily mitigated with a wrist strap >baseline threat level is much lower than in the us because gun culture is not even remotely a thing here >your odds of being stabbed in the UK are significantly lower than your odds of being shot in the US hope this helps
Temu Brian Armstrong@MrCampbell

Breakpoint 2026 will be in London? I got a great merch idea: branded stab vests.

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🀅@ecomchigga·
I made $600K before 19 selling digital products online. here's the 40-step system I followed: 1. picked a niche where people were already spending money. not what I was passionate about. what people pay for. 2. searched twitter and reddit for "how do I" and "struggling with" to find real problems people have. 3. made a list of 15 problems I could realistically help solve based on my own experience. 4. checked gumroad to see if products existed in that space. competition means demand. 5. picked the problem I understood best and could explain simply. 6. opened google docs and brain dumped everything I knew about solving it. 7. organized the mess into: problem, why it happens, solution, steps, examples. 8. kept it 20-30 pages. short enough to finish, long enough to be valuable. 9. added screenshots wherever something needed visual clarity. 10. recorded a 15-min loom walking through the main points. 11. made a cover in canva using free templates. took 10 minutes. 12. named it something specific with a clear outcome. not vague guru stuff. 13. created a gumroad account and uploaded everything. 14. wrote a description: what it is, who it's for, what result they get. 15. priced it at $37. low enough for impulse buys, high enough to filter tire kickers. 16. took the first 5 pages of my product and turned it into a free lead magnet. 17. set up beehiiv for free email collection. 18. built a landing page on carrd. headline, bullets, email capture. simple. 19. wrote 5 automated emails in beehiiv. first 3 value, last 2 pitch. 20. created a twitter account about this one specific topic. 21. wrote a bio explaining who I help and what transformation I offer. 22. found 10 accounts in my niche with 30K-100K followers. 23. screenshotted their top 50 tweets and studied the patterns. 24. used claude to generate 40 tweet variations based on those winning formats. 25. mixed content types: quick tips, stories, hot takes, threads, screenshots. 26. scheduled 4 tweets daily using tweethunter. 7am, 12pm, 5pm, 9pm EST. 27. pinned a tweet offering the free guide with a comment CTA. 28. set up auto-DM so commenters get the freebie link instantly. 29. spent 30 mins every morning in my DMs and replies. only real daily work. 30. replied to bigger accounts with actual value, not "great post" nonsense. 31. batched all content creation on sundays. 2 hours max. 32. tracked what tweets hit and made more like those. 33. screenshotted every sale and testimonial for future content. 34. posted proof consistently. nothing sells like receipts. 35. raised the price $10 every 25 sales. same product, more perceived value. 36. added bonuses based on customer questions. templates, checklists, quick videos. 37. stayed consistent even when growth felt slow. momentum builds invisibly. 38. ignored people who said it wouldn't work. they're still at zero. 39. reinvested early profits into better tools and more content. 40. repeated what worked and cut what didn't. **what I used:** - tweethunter: $49/mo - beehiiv: free - gumroad: 10% per sale - carrd: $19/year - canva: free - loom: free **the timeline:** week 1-2: $200 month 1: $1.2K month 2: $4K month 3: $11K month 6: $25K/month consistent I put all 40 steps into a 45+ module course. way more detail than fits in a tweet. full walkthroughs, templates, scripts, everything. comment "40" and I'll DM you the link. must be following + RT.
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