Loading video...

Video Failed to Load

Go Home

MalaysianSunBearFreestyle.MP4

192,817 views • 2 years ago •via X (Twitter)

10 Comments

VITAL $IGNZ AKA VICTOR PA$COW's profile picture
VITAL $IGNZ AKA VICTOR PA$COW2 years ago

“I never seen a bear with the neck of a velociraptor If I had to put that suit on for work , I’d be exhausted after” BARS‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️

フーリ (FOOLY URAMESHI) 🤙🏽's profile picture
フーリ (FOOLY URAMESHI) 🤙🏽2 years ago

"Malaysian sun bears are notoriously fire retardant"

0piates's profile picture
0piates2 years ago

my iphone has four 4k cameras

malibu*tony.'s profile picture
malibu*tony.2 years ago

real bears keep real honey around em

S.'s profile picture
S.2 years ago

@_gunmetalsoul U slid with the moncler jacket look like man in a bear suit

Lukie's profile picture
Lukie2 years ago

Why u zoom in on his cheeks bro

bb belt nato's profile picture
bb belt nato2 years ago

His BBL deflated

free medium 2-topping pizza's profile picture
free medium 2-topping pizza2 years ago

RXK already has such an impact on the rap game

narco reus's profile picture
narco reus2 years ago

there go another certified nate classic

Bugsy Optics 📸's profile picture
Bugsy Optics 📸2 years ago

This on streaming?

Related Videos

Kelsey Hightower has one of the most inspiring stories in tech: he went from a technician installing DSL modems, through self-directed study and very hard work, to one of the very few Distinguished Engineer at Google whom Satya Nadella personally persuaded to join Microsoft. Timestamps: 00:00 Intro 03:34 Kelsey’s first job at McDonald’s 05:04 His non-traditional path into tech 11:45 Landing his first tech job with an A+ certification 15:33 His entrepreneurial years 19:45 Joining Google as a data center technician 27:48 Learning automation at a Rackspace spinoff 33:26 Moving into financial services 50:00 Building a reputation through open source 53:55 From configuration management to containers 1:08:20 The rise of Kubernetes 1:25:05 Why he almost joined NASA instead of Google 1:29:20 Defining DevRel at Google 1:38:20 Demonstrating impact at Google 1:41:20 Microsoft's offer 1:55:20 Learning how to slow down 2:06:39 Advising and investing 2:15:03 A people-first view of GenAI 2:24:27 Using AI with guardrails 2:28:26 Matching AI to the task 2:36:06 Staying relevant in the AI era Brought to you by outstanding teams building products I love: • Antithesis: verify your system’s correctness without human review or traditional integration tests – and avoid bugs or outages. • Sentry: application monitoring software considered “not bad” by millions of developers • Buildkite: CI software built to absorb whatever your coding agents throw at the build queue. OpenAI, Anthropic, Uber and others are customers: Three interesting learnings from Kelsey: 1. Side hustles and doing your own thing teach you business like no IC job can. Before becoming a software engineer at Google, Kelsey was a manager for his comedian friend, operated a computer store, and did IT contracting. These gigs taught him logistics, planning, and about money. All this helped him be far more effective at talking with executives and acting as an executive sponsor inside Google. 2. Can you explain what your startup does without mentioning AI? When Kelsey researches startups seeking his advice, he challenges founders to not say “AI” once. This means that they must explain the actual value their company creates. One unexpected benefit of this is that it often reveals there are easier, cheaper ways to achieve a goal than with AI. 3. It’s very rare to get an extra zero put on your compensation figure – but it happened. Kelsey was a successful, well-paid Google engineer when Microsoft made him an offer that 10x’d his salary (!!). When Kelsey told Google he was planning to take the offer, it matched the offer, proving that his market value had massively increased. It shows that being well paid doesn’t necessarily mean you’re being paid at the correct market rate.

Gergely Orosz

59,738 views • 8 days ago