Dan

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Dan

Dan

@litcapitalist

professional opportunist

Присоединился Ocak 2026
12 Подписки4 Подписчики
Dan
Dan@litcapitalist·
Get into whatever tech trend or routine interests you as long as you believe it can make you money. Once the money starts coming in live an interesting life. Don’t let yourself get consumed by trying to become the hyper-optimized individual. That path is lame and boring.
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Dan
Dan@litcapitalist·
@Hoostethics is there a necessary break or what's the point of waiting 6 months?
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Hoo
Hoo@Hoostethics·
50ml cerebrolysin. over 9 days. administered into my vastus lateralis… 𝙝𝙚𝙧𝙚’𝙨 𝙬𝙝𝙖𝙩 𝙝𝙖𝙥𝙥𝙚𝙣𝙚𝙙 day 1: - nothing. day 2: - nothing. day 3: - sleep inertia lifted completely despite only getting 5-6hrs (increase in recovery per hour) - dream become more vivid day 4: - brainfog significantly improved - later day wakefulness improved - overall increases in energy/focus noted - the mind began to enter a new baseline state….imagine floating inside a bullet train with zero oscillation; the mind is still, yet flying simultaneously. day 5: - same as day 4 day 6: - inhibiting thoughts in social settings drastically decreased - overthinking obliterated almost entirely day 7 - slight improvements in emotional resilience were noted - morning brainfog lifted completely day 8: - same as day 7. all effects amalgamated into new baseline day 9 - everything continues to compound - facial aesthetics seemed more vibrant/debloated i am hard to impress when it comes to trying new pharmaceuticals/research chemicals/peptides but cerebrolysin definitely lived up to expectations. it’s a no-brainer addition to anyone’s longevity protocol. I’ll be running this again in the next 6 months or so. not medical advice.
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Dan
Dan@litcapitalist·
for law AI will get it 99% right, but the 1% is what gets you in trouble you pay a lawyer precisely because 'you don't know what you don't know', so they do the risk assessment and mitigation on your behalf for litigation AI might allucinate or might miss some strong argument, so would you really want to lose an important case for saving some thousands? issue is that the guy that spends on a lawyer will always beat the one that doesn't, because even the lawyer uses AI, but it also has that legal expertise and human perspective on issues, hence double damage
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Damian Player
Damian Player@damianplayer·
I just heard a Goldman Sachs exec say knowledge work is going to zero. and it’s something I’ve been thinking about.. every lawyer, consultant, accountant. they all get paid for the same reason. they know something you don't. that's it. that's the whole business model. AI made knowledge infinite. so what happens when everyone has the same information at their fingertips? what's actually worth paying for anymore?
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banana0x
banana0x@banan_crypto·
You have always been wrong about the arbitrage strategy on Prediction Markets Almost all people who have heard about the arbitrage strategy on @Polymarket and other PMs imagine it works like this: YES + NO < $1 But in reality, it's much more complicated. Let's take the market "Will it rain tomorrow in NYC?" as an example: YES $0.7 + NO $0.3 = $1. It seems that arbitrage strategy can't be used here. But if we find a logically opposite market to that one and perform math calculations, we will find an arbitrage opportunity. For example, "Will it be sunny tomorrow in NYC?" market where YES: $0.40 and NO: $0.60. And his is where you use an easy math formula to list all results and logically remove ones that don't work. Possible combos (2x2=4): 1. YES A + NO B (one side only) 2. NO A + YES B (one side only) 3. NO A + NO B ($0.3 + $0.6 = $0.9 < $1) 4. YES A + YES A (impossible) Now we see that the 3rd combination works for us. Where we initially didn't see Arbitrage, we got a spread of 10%. For more combinations and to eliminate those that don't work, you may use the formula from the attached pic. If you want to learn more about arbitrage strategy, read the quoted article. Gl guys!
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Roan@RohOnChain

x.com/i/article/2017…

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Dan
Dan@litcapitalist·
@MoonDevOnYT OP forgot to mention its daily ROI gg
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Moon Dev
Moon Dev@MoonDevOnYT·
Cracker, my clawdbot just found me a trading strategy with a 71,057% ROI if you are not using clawdbot for trading, you are cooked
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Dan
Dan@litcapitalist·
Option 6: Ask your investors for support. VCs are in this to make money, after all. They’ve already invested in you, so it’s in their interest to help you hit key milestones and protect their upside. It’s better than leaving you to carry everything alone and potentially burn out, especially when the outcome affects them too.
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Rohit Mittal
Rohit Mittal@rohitdotmittal·
Situation: $10M raised, $1.5M arr, 12 months runway. The founder wants out and admits, "This isn't my life's work." Options: 1. Fundraise: grow fast, burn more, and go for fundraise right now - Pro: Keeps optionality open, can take secondaries if you get a hot round - Con: Investors need growth, at least 3-5x, the market is brutal for Series A right now 2. Strategic acquisition: push to convert partnerships to acquisition conversations - Pro: Best potential multiple, buyers pay for distribution and talent, not just revenue - Con: Catching lightning in a bottle. Your push doesn't mean they want you. One VP leaves, one strategy shift, and the deal dies. It takes at least 5-6 months. Prior relationship needed. 3. Financial acquisition via broker - find brokers willing to work with low-revenue companies - Pro: More predictable process, actual market pricing. - Con: Math rarely works for founders. The price is not justifiable to the founders. Earnouts are structured so you'd make more by taking a job elsewhere. 4. Cut costs and grind it out - get to a skeleton crew and maintenance mode - Pro: Extends runway, buys time for something to break your way - Con: Opportunity cost is real. founders checked out means the company isn't going anywhere. Grinding without conviction kills companies slowly 5. Do everything at once - try all of the above at the same time. - Pro: None. - Con: Half-ass both processes. Investors hear you're selling, and you're dead. Action: 1. Commit to one lane. You can change later, but pick now. 2. If selling, get an actual offer from the interested party first. Soft interest means nothing. 3. Build relationships with 3-4 similar strategic buyers as leverage. Start from a partnership angle. 4. Keep the broker as plan D when the runway hits 6 months 5. Sell on momentum. "We 2x'ed last year" is a story. "Growth is slowing" is a different story 6. Assume 5-6 months to close. manage runway accordingly 7. Your team can't know. Your customers can't know. This is a full-time job on top of your full-time job. Do the above to increase your chances of an acquisition.
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Dan
Dan@litcapitalist·
@PlumbNick The fact that she was the 25th employee and still can't retire after 28 years is everything you need to know.
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Nick Plumb
Nick Plumb@PlumbNick·
Can anyone with an MBA help me understand the “theory” behind laying off the 25th most tenured employee in a company of over a million people? In my experience (I was top 8.58% of tenure), the cultural value and institutional knowledge, possessed by people like her was well worth her wages. But like 16k of us, she woke up locked out, laid off and jobless on Wednesday morning. And immediately pushed forward - which is why I don’t understand the “theory” behind some of these decisions. #amazonlayoffs @USDOL
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Dan
Dan@litcapitalist·
@whamcbfw4 This alreasy exists. You can buy IP royalties, albeit true that it might not be public yet, and only professional investors might get access to.
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Lil Baby
Lil Baby@whamcbfw4·
Imagine if you could buy shares of an artist like buying shares of Tesla or Amazon
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Dan
Dan@litcapitalist·
It is easier to enter a field that is already validated than to try to validate one yourself. Validation is more time-consuming and riskier. However, if you can provide a highly complex product that is difficult for others to imitate and there is a clear advantage to being a first mover, then you should definitely prioritize that approach.
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Navi
Navi@NaivaidyaY66600·
Two ways people build products: - Validate first, then build - Build first, then validate Which path are you on?
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Dan
Dan@litcapitalist·
@nickgiva1 Exaggerated take, but I am quite confident that his philosophy, given that those individuals were his apprentices, should help in assessing the outlook for the US.
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Nick G.
Nick G.@nickgiva1·
Stanley Druckenmiller now runs Treasury and Fed (in the background). I ain't betting against him. You do you.
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Dan
Dan@litcapitalist·
@OmriBuilds Correct. A properly distributed minimum viable product is far more valuable than a perfect product that reaches few people. If many users engage with it, leaving feedback or revealing usage patterns through analytics, you can refine it and make it even more compelling.
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Omri Dan
Omri Dan@OmriBuilds·
Your product doesn't need more features. It needs better distribution.
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Dan
Dan@litcapitalist·
@LizAnnSonders Investing = Long-term positive expected value Gambling = Long-term negative expected value
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Liz Ann Sonders
Liz Ann Sonders@LizAnnSonders·
Lines are blurring between investing and gambling and here are my basic thoughts: INVESTING = OWNING GAMBLING = HOPING
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