Memphis Crane (@memcsrane) 's Twitter Profile
Memphis Crane

@memcsrane

Some people make your life better by walking into it, while other people will make your life better by walking out of it.

ID: 465834304

calendar_today16-01-2012 19:51:33

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@levelsio (@levelsio) 's Twitter Profile Photo

One of the most important things I've ever read was this by Sahil Lavingia "The market you’re in will determine most of your growth" It sounds basic but it's not You think how much you work on your product and how great you make it work is what will make your revenue go up But usually

One of the most important things I've ever read was this by <a href="/shl/">Sahil Lavingia</a> 

"The market you’re in will determine most of your growth"

It sounds basic but it's not

You think how much you work on your product and how great you make it work is what will make your revenue go up

But usually
Deedy (@deedydas) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Huge computer science result: A Tsinghua professor JUST discovered the fastest shortest path algorithm for graphs in 40yrs. This improves on Turing award winner Tarjan’s O(m + nlogn) with Dijkstra’s, something every Computer Science student learns in college.

Huge computer science result:

A Tsinghua professor JUST discovered the fastest shortest path algorithm for graphs in 40yrs.

This improves on Turing award winner Tarjan’s O(m + nlogn) with Dijkstra’s, something every Computer Science student learns in college.
Ajith (@ajith_io) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I pivoted. After launching my text-to-animated-video generator, user feedback led me to rethink the direction. not the tech, but the perspective. Now, I’m launching a new product in 2 days: A text-to-motion-graphics generator where anyone can turn text and images into motion

Joscha Bach (@plinz) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I don’t think that scientists can serve ideology, because the criterion for what’s true in an ideology is not scientific. Academics who submit to the tyranny of political opinion in their work have betrayed the scientific project, and must change beliefs with political fashions

Aaron Levie (@levie) 's Twitter Profile Photo

While fascinating, the idea of AI generating every UI on the fly is probably less likely than people think. The benefits of hyper customization likely won’t outweigh having to re-learn an app each time you use it or the risks of things breaking in unexpected ways.

matt palmer (@mattppal) 's Twitter Profile Photo

agents are just "llm + loop + tools" I spent time breaking down a web-enabled coding agent and realized most of the complexity is optional here's what I learned 👇

agents are just "llm + loop + tools"

I spent time breaking down a web-enabled coding agent and realized most of the complexity is optional

here's what I learned 👇
Garry Tan (@garrytan) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The 5th grade dads at our school got together for pizza and vibe coding last night We made: A custom version of Heads Up the Game A camping site registration tool for the annual class camping trip A photo location check in game A piano practice video app (you upload videos of

Andrej Karpathy (@karpathy) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I'm noticing that due to (I think?) a lot of benchmarkmaxxing on long horizon tasks, LLMs are becoming a little too agentic by default, a little beyond my average use case. For example in coding, the models now tend to reason for a fairly long time, they have an inclination to

Haider. (@slow_developer) 's Twitter Profile Photo

sam altman was right when he said: "people are growing emotionally overreliant on AI" this is such a concerning situation. it's maddening to think about how far things have gone, to the point where loneliness leads someone to have a romantic relationship with an AI

sam altman was right when he said:
"people are growing emotionally overreliant on AI"

this is such a concerning situation.

it's maddening to think about how far things have gone,

to the point where loneliness leads someone to have a romantic relationship with an AI
Aaron Levie (@levie) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Core vs. context is a critical concept to think through when figuring out what people will rebuild themselves with AI. Companies bring in “core” functions that differentiate them. This is what their core product or service is, how they sell to customers, things that drive their

Core vs. context is a critical concept to think through when figuring out what people will rebuild themselves with AI. 

Companies bring in “core” functions that differentiate them. This is what their core product or service is, how they sell to customers, things that drive their
NIK (@ns123abc) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Ex-OpenAI researcher (now at META) explains how scaling laws can never fail because it’s a reflection of the data structure “what really failed is the data” OpenAI has a skill issue.

NIK (@ns123abc) 's Twitter Profile Photo

NEWS: AGI labs have started poaching talent from quant firms offering competitive pay and benefits > Entry-level quants are eligible for base salaries of as much as $300,000 > Wall Street is attempting to hit back against the poaching attempts LMAO ITS HAPPENING

NEWS: AGI labs have started poaching talent from quant firms offering competitive pay and benefits

&gt; Entry-level quants are eligible for base salaries of as much as $300,000
&gt; Wall Street is attempting to hit back against the poaching attempts

LMAO 
ITS HAPPENING
Avi Chawla (@_avichawla) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Build human-like memory for your Agents (open-source)! Every agentic and RAG system struggles with real-time knowledge updates and fast data retrieval. Zep solves these issues with its continuously evolving and temporally-aware Knowledge Graph. Like humans, Zep organizes an

Haider. (@slow_developer) 's Twitter Profile Photo

curious why Google has ruled tech for the last 20 years? it's because they have advantages others lack; they have their own: - TPUs - data centers - leading research lab - and a strong consumer reach so it's safe to say they will dominate in the long run