Zeb Hermann

1.1K posts

Zeb Hermann

Zeb Hermann

@zeb_hermann

Entrepreneur. Former Vercel, Sequoia Capital, Segment.

Portland, Oregon เข้าร่วม Kasım 2011
1K กำลังติดตาม694 ผู้ติดตาม
Josh Reynolds
Josh Reynolds@JoshReynolds24·
If I drank alcohol, I’d be in a reeeeaaalll dark place watching these lmao Dammit, man… What could have been
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Zeb Hermann
Zeb Hermann@zeb_hermann·
@nicjbae I wore a Frankie Smokes Jersey for the finals today to honor him
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nb
nb@nicjbae·
i used to think frank ntilikina was the future
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Adam Ozimek
Adam Ozimek@ModeledBehavior·
The only thing keeping me from selling my AirBNB stock is the conviction that AI enabled travel agents can unlock a ton of potential when you combine AirBNBs great data and the massively heterogeneous market they operate in. Vacations, especially that AirBNB serves, are very un-commoditized. Matching is a huge multidimensional challenge there. A desired vacation is often best described in a very qualitative way and not in a check-list. Consider: - I want to be in a family friendly cabin on the water within 4 hours of me - I'd like to find a beach house somewhere in South but within a short drive to a quaint town - I want to take a hiking trip to Oregon with my family and be near nice restaurants - I'd like to see the American west but not be too remote These are less easily sorted with a check-list and something that an AI travel agent could be a lot of help with. I think the focus on adjacent services is a waste of time. AirBNB should help super hosts expand by providing them capital and other resources. And if they need adjacent markets, I bet many superhosts are landlords also. They are increasingly doing longer term stays, which is a small jump from being an apartment platform. I think they have floundered for the last few years because @bchesky is too focused on adjacent services. The opportunity is in AI enabled travel agents to replace search as well as real estate adjacent services. $ABNB
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Zeb Hermann
Zeb Hermann@zeb_hermann·
@DeanO_Lytics Very interesting. I’m surprised Champagnie lost more value on offense - Brunson was cooking him 1:1
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Dean Oliver
Dean Oliver@DeanO_Lytics·
What players did after the Spurs went up 14 in the third quarter.
Dean Oliver tweet media
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Emmit Douglas
Emmit Douglas@emmitonair·
Damian Lillard, Clyde Drexler, or LaMarcus Aldridge isn’t available: name any Portland Trailblazers player.
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Ty Lawson
Ty Lawson@TyLawson3·
From my observation the whole country except the state Oklahoma wants the spurs to beat the foul baiting Thunder lmao 😂😂😂… am I wrong?!?
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Zeb Hermann
Zeb Hermann@zeb_hermann·
@AndrewDBailey Adam Silver is a coward (and the worst commissioner in pro sports history). He will do nothing
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Andy Bailey
Andy Bailey@AndrewDBailey·
I genuinely believe this is one of the more important national conversations the NBA and NBA media have had in recent years. People hate watching this. The best team in the league and the two-time MVP doing it so much may finally force the league's hand (hopefully, for more than a few weeks this time).
Tom Haberstroh@tomhaberstroh

✅ NEW @YahooSports: Over the weekend, SGA fell on shot attempts more than Brunson, Harden, Mitchell and Wemby combined. Why does he do it so often? Probably because it works. I tracked how often he gets a foul call when he falls compared to his peers: sports.yahoo.com/nba/article/wh…

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Mac
Mac@DraftMac·
Mock Draft 1.0 - Figured I’d get one out before all the withdrawals -what I’d do in the GM seat of each team -no trades (next will include, I foresee a decent amount of them, someone probably moves up for Mikel in this scenario, spurs/okc probably won’t make all these picks etc)
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Mavs Pls
Mavs Pls@stocksreaves·
For Okorie, players u21 with a usg% ≥ 20 and fewer than 20% of their FGs assisted. Sorted by BPM.
Mavs Pls tweet media
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Zeb Hermann
Zeb Hermann@zeb_hermann·
@draymottishaw I don't like Acuff much (small, no D) but having him at 24 is wild
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Dray Mottishaw
Dray Mottishaw@draymottishaw·
This is what we have going for a 2026 NBA draft board right now. At the end of the day, you just gotta have fun with it, and that's exactly what I'm doing. We'll update it and make it prettier later.
Dray Mottishaw tweet mediaDray Mottishaw tweet media
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Alex Tabarrok
Alex Tabarrok@ATabarrok·
Few people understand: Health insurance companies make most of their profit by paying claims, not by denying them.
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David Cramer
David Cramer@zeeg·
the oauth+sso flow on Vercel is legit good everyone should take inspiration from this (including Sentry)
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Zeb Hermann รีทวีตแล้ว
staysaasy
staysaasy@staysaasy·
> the product is having issues > engineering: we’ve called a sev. we’re swarming to fix. we’re running a retro so it never happens again. > the company is having an issue with a new internal process > the company: shut up. no it’s not. stop complaining. you’re immature. adults are speaking.
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Adi Polak
Adi Polak@AdiPolak·
60–80% of Anthropic projects start without a PRD. Just Slack, context, fast pushback. No heavy docs. Makes me wonder if “good process” is just slow feedback in disguise.
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Lee Robinson
Lee Robinson@leerob·
Life update... daughter #2 has arrived 🌸🌹
Lee Robinson tweet media
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Saffron Huang
Saffron Huang@saffronhuang·
Here's a plausible positive scenario that doesn't require many further AI advancements. I wanted to clearly paint the path "from here to there" instead of hand-waving so it starts out negative but ends positive (I swear): A recession leads to slowed hiring and a breakdown of the early-career ladder. The political window opens for industrial policy on AI: governments encourage firms to launch apprenticeship programs to bridge the training gap between junior and senior white-collar roles, instilling discernment and judgment of AI outputs. Programs help reshuffle people with clerical jobs into education (especially elementary and middle school 1-1 tutoring) or nursing (and given AI tools to upskill into providing clinical care). Those with a risk-taking or strategic bent become entrepreneurs and executives overseeing AI agents. Industrial policy is important, but AI also helps to decrease regulatory and compliance burdens on construction; this sector expands, and the built environment starts improving (e.g. high speed rail becomes more possible). Later on, material abundance (robot manufacturing) means that goods are cheap and easier to manufacture domestically. Most people's spending is therefore on human-led services, today's luxuries. For example, high quality education: schooling in many places (including the US) has historically been low quality for most, with many knock-on effects. 1-1 personal attention by human teachers (for younger students) + AI personalized tutoring (for older students) bridges this gap. Everyone is healthy: cheap AI triaging of medical issues lowers the barrier to preventative as well as life-saving care. Entrepreneurship is enabled by easy access to AI agents. The bar for customer service is raised all-round (high-end retail and hospitality services, like what you see in Japan). Everyone works 3-4 days a week. Baumol's cost disease is a feature not a bug: the relative expense of human services stops being a budget problem and starts being a labor market solution. That is where the jobs are, and they're jobs worth having.
Ethan Mollick@emollick

The AI labs have actually done a bad job explaining what the future they are building towards will actually look like for most of us. Even “Machines of Loving Grace” has very few well-articulated visions of what Anthropic hopes life will be like if they succeed at their goals.

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