Svoboda
155 posts

Svoboda
@SvobodaBlog
The following tweets, taken at their face value, may seem very startling to a modern audience; those who cannot face such startling should not read this feed.

@BorutRoncevic @m_bostjan @jciglerkralj spostovani, razumen tale umik prehranskih smernic. ni pa potrebno pretiravanje z dokazovanjem - vrtenjem odojka. npr., da pri nekaterih otrocih povzroca travme. moja hci je jokala. zame popolnoma nesprejemljivo, da je otok zalosten - vzrok pa prasicek s katerim se bo nekdo mastil

Hungarian lawmakers today passed a constitutional amendment that would ban Viktor Orbán from returning to power. politico.eu/article/hungar…

BREAKING British PM announces ban on social media for under-16s

Dozens walk out as Google boss Pichai addresses Stanford graduates bbc.in/4oun1Lq





This weekend, @Astra__AI surpassed 10 million registered users. It all started with a simple message from @klemenselakovic: "Want to build Astra AI?" Three years later... 10 million registered users. 194 countries. One of the fastest-growing startups in Europe. 0€ in VC funding. Bootstrapped from Slovenia. 🇸🇮 What still blows my mind is how we got here. No big launch, no investors, no safety net. Just a small team shipping relentlessly, week after week, while everyone said bootstrapping at this scale was impossible. We're building the best AI tutoring product, accessible to anyone, anywhere in the world. Next stop: 100M.

Ena polovica SDSa me reposta, druga pa blokira. Dejte se mal poenotit pls.

in nature if a monkey hoarded 1 trillion bananas the other monkeys would beat that monkey to death and take his bananas

Jeruzalem

.!

bro immigrated from Mexico and took a $28/hr contract welding job in 2015. didn't even know what SpaceX was. they gave him $10,000 in stock and let him buy more through payroll deductions. that stake is now worth $880,000. and he's one of 4,400 employees who became millionaires on Friday. welders. technicians. cafeteria staff.

Europe keeps trying to make it easier to start companies. But starting a company was never the hard part. The hard part is: > raising capital > hiring exceptional people > competing on compensation > selling globally > navigating regulation I can register a company in a day. Can I build the next $100B company here?



