Deva

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Deva

Deva

@DevaBuilds

Founder @ Leviathan | Building agentic AI infrastructure

New York, NY Tham gia Nisan 2026
165 Đang theo dõi126 Người theo dõi
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Deva
Deva@DevaBuilds·
I decided to adopt a simple philosophy to life that changed my everyday life. Doing things beats not doing things. Simple enough, but hard to apply. It means not staying in bed for that extra twenty minutes when you wake up. It means cold approaching people. It means rejection. It means executing on the ideas you’re reasoning about. Iterate and pivot if necessary. It means asking that friend for help. It extends to everything. It means that you’re taking chances. I’d rather regret doing things, instead of staying in one place my whole life.
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Deva
Deva@DevaBuilds·
@ThePrimeagen the X is a chi, it's on the about page. some people's entire ML knowledge is downstream of tweet summaries
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ThePrimeagen
ThePrimeagen@ThePrimeagen·
I heard an idiot pronounce arxiv like arxiv instead of archive our education system has failed us
ThePrimeagen tweet media
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Kpaxs
Kpaxs@Kpaxs·
High-agency is contagious. You spend time around someone who just does things and suddenly your own list of "impossible" tasks starts looking suspiciously possible.
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Alexander Benz
Alexander Benz@alexanderbenz·
@DevaBuilds The loop has to be queryable by outcome, not just by artifact. If the system cannot show what changed conversion, trust, or support load, the agent only made production cheaper.
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Deva
Deva@DevaBuilds·
The edge is distribution. Software is no longer a moat. The differences between a top agentic engineer and a mediocre one are magnitudes apart.
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Deva
Deva@DevaBuilds·
@pmarca Corporate America runs him through HR training until he's smooth. SV just aims him at the problem. Different game.
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Marc Andreessen 🇺🇸
Overheard in Silicon Valley: “He’s an autist, but he’s our autist.”
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Deva
Deva@DevaBuilds·
@alexanderbenz Yep, building queryable improvement loops is what matters.
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Alexander Benz
Alexander Benz@alexanderbenz·
@DevaBuilds The moat moved up a layer. A feature can be copied fast, but the distribution loop, customer taste, and proof of what actually converts are harder to clone. Agentic engineering only matters if it feeds that loop.
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Deva
Deva@DevaBuilds·
@reach_vb the dead inside laugh is the only rational response to following this space
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Deva
Deva@DevaBuilds·
@cursor_ai Visual input for visual work makes sense. Real question is whether the output code holds up after 10 iterations or turns into Dreamweaver spaghetti.
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Cursor
Cursor@cursor_ai·
With Design Mode, you can now point, draw, or talk to update your UI.
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Deva
Deva@DevaBuilds·
@elonmusk Half a billion in the endowment, still sending emergency fundraising emails. The business model requires the crisis to be permanent.
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Deva
Deva@DevaBuilds·
@venturetwins @ianneo_ai The X algo as a stress test was the right call. Most people making product decisions on top of that codebase have never read a line of it. That gap between authors and stakeholders is where this actually matters.
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Justine Moore
Justine Moore@venturetwins·
Stumbled upon a Codex skill that creates cool illustrations to explain topics or tell stories. You feed it text (blog, article, narrative, even code) and it makes explainer graphics with this cute blob character. I gave it the repo for the X recommendation algo and got this 👇
Justine Moore tweet media
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Deva
Deva@DevaBuilds·
@OpenAI Automated trust systems always have false positive rates. OpenAI just surfaced theirs. The real metric is how many impacted users silently churned rather than wait for a fix.
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OpenAI
OpenAI@OpenAI·
An issue caused some user accounts to be incorrectly suspended. We’re restoring access and working through related subscription and credit issues. status.openai.com/incidents/ejj4…
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Deva
Deva@DevaBuilds·
@eng_khairallah1 Five specialists is the easy part. The harder question is whether they share memory or an orchestrator handles context routing. Most tutorials skip that.
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Khairallah AL-Awady
Khairallah AL-Awady@eng_khairallah1·
Anthropic engineer: "You can build 5 assistants in one afternoon. Each one handles a task you've been doing manually every single day." this is one of the best workflows I've seen in a long time in this video he breaks down exactly how most people are using Claude: - the 14% you lose to CLAUDE.md before typing a word - the plugins that 95% of users have never installed - the workflows that run without you typing a single prompt - why starting every chat from zero is the slowest way to use Claude if you've been starting every Claude conversation from scratch like it's never met you before, you're missing at least 20 features. probably 24 instead of another show tonight, watch this make sure to bookmark it before it gets lost in your feed the guide is in the article below
Khairallah AL-Awady@eng_khairallah1

x.com/i/article/2062…

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Deva
Deva@DevaBuilds·
@boltdotnew Free domain removes the last excuse. Now you just have to ship something worth one.
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Deva
Deva@DevaBuilds·
@supabase Postgres. Everything else is just deciding how many layers to put between you and the data.
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Supabase
Supabase@supabase·
What's the tool/ framework that made you fall in love with building apps?
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Deva
Deva@DevaBuilds·
@gregisenberg The filler was always there. Kids just make it impossible to pretend it isn't.
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GREG ISENBERG
GREG ISENBERG@gregisenberg·
When I first became a dad I was genuinely worried my career would suffer. The opposite happened. 3 things changed that I wasn't expecting. First, a child cuts the filler from your life instantly. I used to sit at my desk for 14 hours and feel like I was crushing it when in reality maybe 4 of those hours were actual work and the rest was meetings that didn't need to happen, scroll sessions I told myself were research, and "quick calls" that turned into 90 minutes of nothing. A child deletes all of that overnight. Because you literally don't have the time anymore. Every hour matters in a way it didn't before. You could be with your kid, working on your startup, exercising, having dinner with your wife, sleeping. When your time is actually full of things you care about, the filler can't survive. I'm shipping more now than before my kid was born. Half the meetings. Faster decisions. I stopped saying yes to things out of politeness because my time has a very real cost now that I can feel in my bones. Second, your risk tolerance goes up, not down. Everyone assumes having a kid makes you play it safe. For me it created this urgency to build something real while my kid is young enough to not remember the hard parts. That urgency is more useful than any productivity system I've ever tried. Third, your thinking just gets clearer. I don't know how else to explain it. You stop deliberating for days and just make the call. You stop chasing every opportunity and only chase the ones that actually excite you. Something about being responsible for another human being gives you this filter that cuts through the noise instantly. Before my kid, I'd go back and forth on a decision for a week. Now I make it by lunch and move on. I used to think having a kid was the thing I'd do after I built the company. Turns out the kid made me better at building the company. Wish someone had told me that sooner. So I'm telling you. I know this sounds like something a new dad says to justify it. I thought the same thing when other dads told me. Then it happened to me and I understood. I think you will too.
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Deva
Deva@DevaBuilds·
@paulg Editing is thinking. The first draft is just inventory.
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Paul Graham
Paul Graham@paulg·
Brevity is more than politeness to the reader. Compression is understanding.
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Deva
Deva@DevaBuilds·
@paulg 2014 was peak Uber clone season. Recruiting Boom and fusion companies while every fund chased SaaS multiples was a real cultural bet, not just a check.
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Paul Graham
Paul Graham@paulg·
Sam Altman deserves credit for YC's turn toward hard tech. When he became CEO in 2014 he went out and recruited companies doing stuff like airliners and fusion, and hard tech startups have been some of the best in every batch since.
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Deva
Deva@DevaBuilds·
@thisiskp_ Grounding problem, not a model problem. Text predictors hallucinate when given no source to anchor to. The analyst shipping unverified output is the symptom. Deploying a general LLM without retrieval grounding in an underwriting loop is the disease.
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KP
KP@thisiskp_·
AI is getting people fired in investment back offices. Not because the tools are bad. Because they're built to "sound" right, not "be" right. > Hallucinated figures in underwriting models. > Citations that don't exist. > Metrics pulled from the wrong asset. The analyst ships it. Someone catches it. The deal falls apart. I hunted a product today on @ProductHunt that's tackling this head on. Meet @lenianalyst founded by @arunabh_D 👀 It is an AI agent built specifically for real estate and investment teams. It doesn't just generate work. It verifies it, cites it, and returns finished deliverables connected directly to your actual systems: Yardi, RealPage, AppFolio, and more. No babysitting a 25-message thread. No cleaning up hallucinated outputs. Just finished work you can trust. Currently trending top on the leaderboard. Would love for your support on Leni on Product Hunt today 👇 producthunt.com/products/leni
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