Daniel Daneshi

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Daniel Daneshi

Daniel Daneshi

@_generalkaizen

i’m killing the inbox after 55 years. emails have action items buried in the pile of noise. i extract them with @unboxdai also team lead software engineer

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Daniel Daneshi
Daniel Daneshi@_generalkaizen·
6/10 spots left for free yearly Pro subscriptions to unboxd ai, worth $149.99 each, in exchange for your honest feedback. But first, what is unboxd ai? You get 50, 100, maybe 200 emails a day. For each one you need to decide: delete, archive, star, label, reply, unsubscribe, block... That's 7 decisions. Per email. Hundreds of times a day. No wonder your inbox feels like a second job. Unboxd replaces all of that with an AI secretary that reads everything for you, extracts action items, and sorts the rest into 3 simple buckets with sub categories: actions, highlights, and FYIs. No inbox. No triage. No decision fatigue. Think of it this way, presidents don't sit around reading all their emails. Their secretaries do. Unboxd makes that luxury available to more people. Now here's the deal: I'm looking for 10 case study partners willing to use unboxd and shape it with me. 4 have already joined. They're suggesting features, reporting bugs, and shaping the product in real time. When something breaks or needs improvement, I fix it in less than 7 days. You get full Pro access for a year, completely free. No strings, no catch. In return, I want to work closely with you. I want to understand what frustrates you about email, and build Unboxd around your real workflow. The goal is simple: make you so happy with the app that you'd genuinely recommend it to a friend. What I'm looking for: You're a good fit if you don't like reading emails, cleaning up inboxes, and get 20+ emails a day, and you're willing to share candid feedback over the next few months. What you get: A full year of unboxd ai Pro ($149.99 value), direct access to me, features shaped around your actual workflow, and an app that finally makes your email experience 10X easier, faster and better. Right now unboxd is available on Web & iOS. Interested? Drop a comment "interested" and I'll contact you. Website link in the comments.
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Daniel Daneshi
Daniel Daneshi@_generalkaizen·
Learn the alphabet first: - Scarcity → Think Picasso paintings at auction. - Network effects → Think Email, Internet, Telephone, Language, WhatsApp, Uber, Instagram, Credit cards. - Resilience → Survives nukes, hacks, and politicians. - Property rights → No government or entity can seize your asset. Now you speak Bitcoin.
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Michael Saylor
Michael Saylor@saylor·
Learn the language of prosperity. $BTC
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Daniel Daneshi
Daniel Daneshi@_generalkaizen·
do everything, ignore nothing.
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Tony Fadell
Tony Fadell@tfadell·
DO. FAIL. LEARN. Failure isn’t the end. It’s how we get better. And I’ve had my fair share of it over the years. Startups don’t always succeed, but how you talk about the journey matters. Building a startup is hard, harder than hard. The pressure is real. The stakes are real. And when things don’t work out, it’s not easy to talk about. When I see founders sharing their stories with a level of honesty, that stands out to me. The ones who say: Here’s what worked and what didn’t Here’s what we learned along the way Here’s what we’d do differently next time They’re not just closing a chapter, they’re showing how they think. They thank their teams. They appreciate their investors. They reflect on what they’d do differently. There’s humility. There’s clarity. There’s growth. And that’s what builds trust. There’s no shame in the outcome, only in not learning from it. The best founders I know don’t get everything right the first time. But they do take ownership. They do learn fast. And they do come back stronger. That’s who you want to build with. That’s who you want to back. You don’t fail when something doesn’t work. You only fail when you give up, when you don’t learn from the failure, adapt, and then try again. Respect to anyone who’s taken the risk to build something from nothing. And even more respect to those who keep building.
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Eric Jorgenson 📚 ☀️
Eric Jorgenson 📚 ☀️@EricJorgenson·
🚨📕 THE BOOK OF ELON IS NOW LIVE!!! 🎉🚀 This is the book we WISHED @elonmusk would write… “All of Elon's most useful ideas, in his own words.” Learn directly from the world’s greatest entrepreneur, like you’re sitting across from him at dinner. It took FIVE YEARS to make this for you. Because it's built from hundreds and hundreds of Elon's public appearances. I went through 3,000,000+ words to collect the most useful and timeless ideas. The final book is ~50,000 words. Every word is USEFUL. (This is what I do. My first book, The Almanack of Naval Ravikant, is one of the top 100 most highlighted books of all time on Kindle.) Then, I spent $50,000+ on editing and design so it looks and feels beautiful. Then… > Foreword by @naval. > Visuals by @jackbutcher. > Blurb from @mrbeast. > Published by @scribemediaco. > And yes, approval on this idea from Elon himself, thanks to @samteller. I went Maximum Effort to make this an all-timer. We got 10/10 on reviews from early readers, then worked on it for ANOTHER YEAR. Why so much effort? My mission is to create One Million Musks. For a generation to lift our gaze and build, so our grandchildren live in a world beyond our wildest dreams. I’m an independent author. I don’t get an advance. I risk my own time and money to make these books. Then we give away millions of them. Digital versions are free. I believe this book can benefit every human, and if you can’t pay five bucks for it, I want to personally gift it to you. Because I know it is useful. Useful how? You may be seeking purpose, a mission worthy of your life’s effort. You may have a clear purpose and seek the tools for success. You will find both in this book. Get the benefits of Elon’s entire life of hard-won lessons in a five-hour, easy read. (I checked, it’s a 5th-grade reading level.) You’ll feel personally mentored by the greatest entrepreneur in history. Click below to buy it now on Amazon, Audible, or directly from me. Amazon: amzn.to/47avSuh Audible: lnkd.in/gi_7HrFP Me: lnkd.in/gS2xWUWH If you’re not sure it’s worth $4.99 yet, just start reading the free version. PLEASE take 6 seconds to Like, Bookmark, and Repost. Even better: send this to your friends, team, or Group Chats! I guarantee this book will improve their lives. Spread the word! Every little thing helps. Your support spreads good ideas around the world, helping people and making the future better for everyone. Thank you! Forward. Together.
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Alex Hormozi
Alex Hormozi@AlexHormozi·
Successful creators write 100 posts to find 10 that work. Unsuccessful ones write 10 posts and wonder why none work. Quantity creates quality. Volume negates luck. You're not doing enough.
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Daniel Daneshi
Daniel Daneshi@_generalkaizen·
@IcyCortex IR's foreign policy is the main reason for this war. Pahlavi having a meaningful influence on the start of the war is not quite accurate. I wouldn't look outside for Iran's misery.
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Amir Afianian
Amir Afianian@IcyCortex·
#پهلوی، حداقل محمدرضاشون، نامش در زباله‌دان تاریخ کنار #مجاهدین و رجوی‌ها قرار خواهد گرفت. آدمی با ضریب هوشی پایین، که چون خودش عرضه و توانی نداشت، دست به دامن یک حکومت محکوم به نسل‌کشی شد که کشورش رو به آتیش بکشه تا خودش بشه پادشاه خاکستر‌ها.
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Daniel Daneshi
Daniel Daneshi@_generalkaizen·
What I find hardest, and what would make the biggest difference, is the highest-impact habit I haven't cracked yet. It's simple to describe but very hard to execute: staying focused on a course of action for an extended period of time (say 24 months) without being distracted and losing momentum in the absence of feedback.
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Marc Andreessen 🇺🇸
My big conclusion from this week: Introspection causes emotional disorders.
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Daniel Daneshi
Daniel Daneshi@_generalkaizen·
It's a great alternative to UG or GmbH for startups, because it's shareholder-friendly (easy to manage shares for co-founders, investors, or give employee stock options) and you don't need to deal with separate legal entities across the EU, plus it's easy and fast to set up. But for small businesses (profit less than €60–80k), the Einzelunternehmen makes more sense financially and overhead-wise.
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Marcel van Oost
Marcel van Oost@oost_marcel·
🚨𝘽𝙍𝙀𝘼𝙆𝙄𝙉𝙂: European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen unveiled EU–INC, a new framework that lets you launch a company in 48 hours for under €100 Starting a company across the EU today = 27 legal systems, 60+ company structures 🤯 That might be about to change… The European Commission just introduced 𝗘𝗨 𝗜𝗻𝗰., a new optional corporate framework designed to make Europe actually function like one market. Here’s what stands out: → Set up a company in 48 hours → Cost: < €100 → Fully online, no minimum capital → One single framework across all EU countries → Easier share transfers & fundraising → EU-wide employee stock options (huge for talent) Especially the EU-wide stock option plans, taxed only when employees actually sell (instead of when granted) is huge. This makes it far easier for startups to attract and retain top talent, finally putting Europe closer to the US playbook. Source/More info: ec.europa.eu/commission/pre… In short: This is Europe trying to compete with the simplicity of a Delaware C-Corp 🇺🇸 And honestly… it’s long overdue. For years, European founders had 2 choices: 1. Stay local and deal with fragmentation 2. Move to the US to scale 𝗘𝗨 𝗜𝗻𝗰. is trying to remove that trade-off. If executed well, this could be one of the most important structural changes for European startups in decades. What do you think?
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Garry Tan
Garry Tan@garrytan·
I want the machines to make a world without scarcity for all humans
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Marc Andreessen 🇺🇸
It is 100% true that great men and women of the past were not sitting around moaning about their feelings. I regret nothing.
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Daniel Daneshi
Daniel Daneshi@_generalkaizen·
@paulg you still reading emails?! I don’t. simply decide what topics or who can show up in your inbox. btw, it’s one of your old ideas to turn emails into a smart todo list that you can teach.
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Daniel Daneshi
Daniel Daneshi@_generalkaizen·
@saylor nothing ever happens unless someone pursues a vision fanatically.
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Michael Saylor
Michael Saylor@saylor·
Strategy has acquired 22,337 BTC for ~$1.57 billion at ~$70,194 per bitcoin. As of 3/15/2026, we hodl 761,068 $BTC acquired for ~$57.61 billion at ~$75,696 per bitcoin. $MSTR $STRC strategy.com/press/strategy…
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Daniel Daneshi
Daniel Daneshi@_generalkaizen·
“people who dwell in the past get stuck in the past” couldn’t agree more. also never been a fan of therapy myself because it makes you focus on the past and what’s wrong with your past, instead of focusing on what’s right with you and your possibilities, potential and future.
David Senra@davidsenra

Great men of history had little to no introspection. The personality that builds empires is not the same personality that sits around quietly questioning itself. @pmarca and I discuss what we both noticed but no one talks about: David: You don't have any levels of introspection? Marc: Yes, zero. As little as possible. David: Why? Marc: Move forward. Go! I found people who dwell in the past get stuck in the past. It's a real problem and it's a problem at work and it's a problem at home. David: So I've read 400 biographies of history’s greatest entrepreneurs and someone asked me what the most surprising thing I’ve learned from this was [and I answered] they have little or zero introspection. Sam Walton didn't wake up thinking about his internal self. He just woke up and was like: I like building Walmart. I'm going to keep building Walmart. I'm going to make more Walmarts. And he just kept doing it over and over again. Marc: If you go back 400 years ago it never would've occurred to anybody to be introspective. All of the modern conceptions around introspection and therapy, and all the things that kind of result from that are, a kind of a manufacture of the 1910s, 1920s. Great men of history didn't sit around doing this stuff. The individual runs and does all these things and builds things and builds empires and builds companies and builds technology. And then this kind of this kind of guilt based whammy kind of showed up from Europe. A lot of it from Vienna in 1910, 1920s, Freud and all that entire movement. And kind of turned all that inward and basically said, okay, now we need to basically second guess the individual. We need to criticize the individual. The individual needs to self criticize. The individual needs to feel guilt, needs to look backwards, needs to dwell in the past. It never resonated with me.

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Startup Archive
Startup Archive@StartupArchive_·
Sam Altman on how to build a “Facebook-sized company” “The best companies all have great products. Unfortunately, the current fashion in Silicon Valley I think has gotten a little bit too far away from this—it’s too much about growth hacking and sales and marketing machines and everything else. And that does work for a while. You can get away for a pretty long while with executing really well to grow a mediocre product. But you don’t usually create a Facebook-sized company by doing that.” Sam shares a simple heuristic for assessing whether or not a product is great: “If I think about all of the most successful internet mobile startups—and this is true for enterprise and consumer apps—I heard about them because they were so good that one of my friends spontaneously told me about it. They were not being incentivized to; they didn’t market to me; they didn’t advertise to me. It was just someone I trusted said, ‘you gotta try this new thing, it’s amazing.’” Video source: @ycombinator (2018)
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David Senra
David Senra@davidsenra·
Marc Andreessen. a16z & Netscape. Tomorrow. March 15, 2026. Available everywhere you get podcasts. @pmarca @a16z
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Daniel Daneshi
Daniel Daneshi@_generalkaizen·
noted: build for yourself. keep the cost low. you only need a 1000 true fans.
David Senra@davidsenra

.@jasonfried said it perfectly: "Your only competition is your costs." Keep costs low, keep the team small, make stuff you want to use. You don't need the whole world. You just need enough of a small world.

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Michael Saylor
Michael Saylor@saylor·
@BorisJohnson Bitcoin is not a Ponzi scheme. A Ponzi requires a central operator promising returns and paying early investors with funds from later ones. Bitcoin has no issuer, no promoter, and no guaranteed return—just an open, decentralized monetary network driven by code and market demand.
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