Загрузка видео...

Не удалось загрузить видео

На главную

🚨MAY BRAID SPECIALS🚨 🌸20% off small knotless (midback & buttlength) 🌼$350 small midback boho/$280 smedium midback boho 🌺$275 Smedium buttlength SPECIALS RUNNING ALL MONTH LONG ✨ Summer is near, you KNOW you need your hair done! Book here👉🏾

219,313 просмотров • 1 год назад •via X (Twitter)

Комментарии: 9

Фото профиля Chiane XO
Chiane XO1 год назад

Ok lemme quit playing and get my hair done

Фото профиля Square Deal Recordings & Supplies
Square Deal Recordings & Supplies1 год назад

🌼✨ Add California vibes to your style with our Poppy Embroidered Iron-On Patch! 🌸 Easy to apply and perfect for jackets, bags, or hats. Rep the Golden State today! 🌞 #CaliforniaPoppy #IronOnPatch #DIYFashion

Фото профиля Bible Study is DONE ❤️
Bible Study is DONE ❤️1 год назад

@zoraslovechild What’s the shortest length you grab? I know I’m to bald-headed right now, but I wanna hop on 85 for my vacation braids at the end of July

Фото профиля Grip Skylark 💕✨
Grip Skylark 💕✨1 год назад

@zoraslovechild i’m gonna dm you my # so we can consult!

Фото профиля Manifestation Queen 👸🏽
Manifestation Queen 👸🏽1 год назад

Miss being blessed by you! 🤧

Фото профиля Grip Skylark 💕✨
Grip Skylark 💕✨1 год назад

you know my chair is always open if you make your way back for a visit!

Фото профиля A.
A.1 год назад

fr booked up 🥲

Фото профиля Vonney
Vonney1 год назад

How do you feel about braiding on freshly trimmed hair? I want Large knotless

Фото профиля Thickolas Cage
Thickolas Cage1 год назад

How do we book the boho?? 🥺

Похожие видео

It costs ₦0.00 to help retweet this. Gain rewards by simply sharing this. Together, let us spread the barakah! This could be the reminder that people need, or the reminder that brings people back to Allah [swt] The Prophet (ﷺ)said, “Whoever guides someone to goodness will have a similar reward.” - Sahih Muslim 1893 🌙 Ramadan is near—a month of mercy and blessings. Let’s prepare our hearts through giving. 💖 Are you ready to welcome this blessed month? Preparing for Ramadan isn’t just about stocking up on movies, bookmarking skits, foods, snacks, and sweets 🥰—it’s about getting your heart, soul, and habits in the right place. Here are 8 simple tips to help you ease into the spirit of Ramadan and make the most of this holy month. Remember, small, consistent steps make a big difference! Eight Ways to Prepare For Ramadan: -Fast Voluntarily -Look for Volunteer opportunities [Get involved, strive to be a beacon of change for those in dire need]. Do you know that no matter where you are in the world, no matter how busy your schedule is, you can still volunteer for good causes? Click on [this Link: to join a team of advocates of change, whose goal is to help struggling individuals and families during the blessed month of Ramadan -Recite and Reflect Upon the Qur'an -Follow the Sunnah and Pray Extra Prayers -Repent and Make Dua'h. -Start Giving Charity [no amount is small] -Improve Your Character [cut out gossip, backbiting, etc] -Eat Healthy and Moderately Start today, even if it’s just one tip, and watch how your heart feels more connected and prepared. 💖 ✨ 💡 Don’t forget to share this post, also tag your mutuals, family and friends and encourage them to share. May Allah allow us all to reach Ramadan and benefit from its countless blessings, Ameen. 💕

𝑰𝒅𝒓𝒊𝒔 𝑨. 𝑶𝒏𝒊 PhD

26,397 просмотров • 1 год назад

🚨ANNOUNCEMENT! New Partnership + AI Coaching Offer from Anyman Fitness and Spren 🚨 I have a big announcement to make… For the last 18 months I’ve been working quietly behind the scenes on a BIG project… You may have seen me post about the iOS app “Spren” - a groundbreaking app that tests your body fat % using just your iPhone. The app has been 3rd party tested and is as accurate as a DEXA scan. If you’re into fitness, you know how wild that statement is. A DEXA scan is the gold standard for body fat testing (and they cost $200+ to get one). The Spren CEO (Jason Moore) reached out to me in 2023 and he had a proposal. He wanted to create an AI based coaching offer for people who tested their body fat % with Spren and were unhappy with the results. But he didn’t want it to be generic like Chat GPT. He wanted to model the AI after a coach with extensive experience working with the general public. For the last 18 months, we have been working behind the scenes building this offer, and it just got released to the public. The AI has been fully trained on my coaching strategies, teachings, preferences, and mindset/motivational style. Here’s how it works: • Send a text message to 734-499-1101 • If you’re outside of the US, send the text via What’s App • You’ll be sent a link to learn everything the AI can do for you • You get unlimited scans on the Spren iOS body fat testing app ($70 value) • You get a customized nutrition plan for your goals, and “AI me” will guide you on your journey You connect the app to your macro tracker and wearable. Every few weeks, you scan your body fat % again, and “I” will make adjustments as needed for you to make swift and rapid progress. The best part? I don’t take breaks. I’m always here for you. The “style” is all me… You need reminders to get your butt off the couch and go to the gym? I got you. You need done-for-you meal plans that hit your macros/calories exactly? I got you. You need recipe ideas? Workouts when traveling? Exercise substitutions? Supplementation questions? Or you just want to shoot the breeze? (Lol) I got you! I’m here, 24/7, in your back pocket. I’m thrilled to have a shared vision with Spren on this. To learn more about this new, cutting-edge offer, send a text to 734-499-1101 and check it out!

Jason Helmes

15,819 просмотров • 1 год назад

🚨This Post is Long But it's A Good Guide for 6 - 7 figures of Passive Income from Crypto. Ignore at your own risk🚨 You all know I made 6 figs+ from the Trojan Solana trading bot- and still making $sol daily. rugs.fun's referral system has the same 'spider web' passive income mechanism for their referral rewards AND MORE BECAUSE OF THE BONUS $SOL GIVEN. Sign up here for rugsdotfun: ☝🏼 The biggest reason I made so much with Trojan sol trading bot is because I was early to the application & it got high use. You can access Trojan on Solana trading bot here too: It is good. People wanted to use it. They saw my link 1st so they signed up. 🚨THAT SAME OPPORTUNITY IS HERE WITH rugs.fun 🚨 So the referral system for rugs.fun is the same with ADDED BONUS $SOL from the more active people you refer. Example: 🕸️ Spider web layer 1: I refer you (player A) --> I get a % of player A's volume + 0.25 sol when Player A hits level 20 + Player A gets a bonus mystery crate. 🕸️Spider web layer 2: Player A refers Player B --> Player A gets a % + I get a small % of Player B's volume --> Player A gets 0.25 $sol when Player B reaches level 20 + Player B gets a bonus crate of Solana. 🕸️ Spider Web Layer 3: Player B refers Player C --> Player B gets a % + 0.25 $sol when Player C hits level 20 --> Player A gets a % and I get a % of their player volume + bonus sol & crates at level 20. See, similar to Trojan- more free $Sol. I actually am about to claim a couple of $Sol from 1st weeks referral rewards and from using my method ✨ I just went on a crazy crate run from it (info in quote tweet- ask me any questions if you have them) But the screen record reached 5 minutes long, & couldn't save it 😭 Opened crates on 4 accounts for 5 sol total. Not bad for 4 minutes. But I uploaded 1 that I didn't fair as well after clearing memory space on my phone so you see how I open crates all day from playing multiple accounts after my referral link 😊 And it doesn't harm the platform- I have to spend sol to advance in levels still 🤝 (please don't patch it rugs.fun 😂) Try RugsDotFun here: It's a money printer in more ways than 1.

JUST G | The Blockchain Gods | Unc Profit Szn 💰

15,431 просмотров • 1 год назад

#ฟรีนเบค #FreenBecky #srchafreen #beckysangels 🌟 Bangkok Pride Awards 2026 🌟 🗓️ Voting Ends: April 30, 2026 🗓️ Award Ceremony: May 28, 2026 🚨 CALL TO ACTION: LET'S REPAY THEIR HARD WORK! 🚨 Guys, through the recently quoted post from the Uranus2324 crew, we know the absolute blood, sweat, and tears FreenBecky poured into this film. Becky pushed her body to the absolute limit for those dangerous diving scenes, even collapsing from exhaustion and being rushed to the hospital during their PR tour. And Freen? She carried the weight of a 20kg+ spacesuit all day long and stepped up without hesitation to handle the media entirely on her own, speaking on Becky's behalf too, so she could rest and recover. They fought through brutal conditions, exhaustion, and physical pain to deliver this incredible film to us. Now, it is OUR turn to fight for them! ⚔️ Uranus2324 is nominated at the Bangkok Pride Awards 2026, and we absolutely cannot let their immense dedication go unrewarded. 🔥 OUR MISSION: 1️⃣ Vote with everything you have: ✅ Maximize your free votes using ALL your email accounts. ✅ 20 tickets per account. 2️⃣ Utilize all resources: If you have the time but need more voting accounts, message us immediately. We have them ready for you! 3️⃣ Do not slow down: The deadline is approaching. With only 13 days left, we need to maintain our pace. Let's give it OUR ALL because they deserve it!!! 🏆✨ ============= Watch guideline video to know how to vote: 🏁Rules: 1⃣ Free vote 📌Link: ✅20 votes per 1 account ✅Can vote 1 time with max 20 votes 2⃣ Paid vote: 📌Link: 💳Credit Card, Wechat, Alipay, Shopee Pay 🪙30 votes = 20 baht (Cheapest) 🪙100 votes = 100 baht 🪙700 votes = 500 baht ‼️Please focus on free vote first - with WikiFreenBecky TH 🇹🇭 & FreenBecky_Data数据组

FreenBecky_RankingVN🇻🇳

24,181 просмотров • 2 месяцев назад

The book "Excellent Advice for Living" is so good I read it in one sitting. The book is a collection of maxims Kevin Kelly wrote to his adult children. Each maxim contains a bit of wisdom he wish he'd known earlier. 79 maxims that resonated the most (I added #57 selfishly) 1. Choose to believe that the entire universe is conspiring behind your back to make you a success. 2. Mastering the view through the eyes of others will unlock many doors. 3. If you can avoid seeking the approval of others your power is limitless. 4. The reward for good work is more work. 5. Don’t be the best. Be the only. 6. The urgent is a tyrant. The important should be your king. 7. Find smart people who will disagree with you. 8. The main thing is to keep the main thing the main thing. 9. The most counterintuitive truth of the universe is that the more you give to others the more you'll get. 10. Life gets better as you replace transactions with relationships. 11. Courtesy costs nothing. 12. Life lessons will be presented to you in the order they are needed. 13. Cultivate an allergy to average. 14. If you repeated what you did today 365 more times would you be where you want to be next year? 15. If you're alive that means you still have lessons to learn. 16. Master something. Through mastery of one thing you'll command a viewpoint to steadily find where your bliss is. 17. Trust is earned in drops and lost in buckets. 18. First, always ask for what you want. Works in relationships, business, life. 19. If nobody else does what you do you won't need a resume. 20. How to apologize: quickly, specifically, sincerely. 21. The best way to advise people is to find out what they really want to do and then advise them to do it. 22. It is certain that 99% of the stuff you are anxious about won't happen. 23. What is important is not what happened to you but what you did about what happened to you. 24. Your golden ticket is being able to see things from other people's point of view. 25. Pay attention to who you are around when you feel best. Be with them more often. 26. To get your message across follow this formula: simplify, simplify, simplify, then exaggerate. 27. You will thrive more when you promote what you love rather than bash what you hate. 28. To be interesting just tell your own story with uncommon honesty. 29. When you truly think for yourself your conclusions will not be predictable. 30. Don’t measure your life with someone else’s ruler. 31. For maximum results focus on your biggest opportunities, not your biggest problems. 32. Pay attention to what you pay attention to. 33. Do more of what looks like work to others but is play for you. 34. Don't bother fighting the old just build the new. 35. Don't compare your inside to someone else's outside. 36. When you're stuck explain your problem to others. 37. Most stories are improved significantly if you delete the first page. Start with the action. 38. A long game will compound small gains that will be able to overcome even big mistakes. 39. Constantly search for overlapping areas of agreement and dwell there. 40. It is your destiny to work on things that only you can do. 41. Make stuff that is good for people to have. 42. You'll get 10 times better results by elevating good behavior rather than punishing bad behavior. 43. Life is not a straight line for anyone. 44. Aim for tasks that you never want to stop doing. 45. Regularly scheduled sabbaths, sabbaticals, vacations, breaks, aimless walks, and time off are essential for top performance of any kind. 46. Don't mistake a clear view of the future for a short distance. 47. Efficiency is highly overrated 48. Greatness is incompatible with optimizing in the short term. 49. The greatest teacher is called "doing." 50. Figure out what time of day you are most productive and protect that time period. 51. You are much better off delivering unwelcome news to someone yourself directly. 52. Don't ever work for someone you don't want to become. 53. Take one simple thing — almost anything — but take it extremely seriously as if it is the only thing in the world 54. Be frugal in all things except in your passions. 55. About 99% of the time the right time is right now. 56. Finite games are played to win or lose. Infinite games are played to keep the game going. Seek out infinite games because they yield unlimited rewards. 57. To be remarkable, read books. 58. Be a good ancestor. Do something a future generation will thank you for. 59. Bad things can happen fast but almost all good things happen slowly. 60. To transcend the influence of your heroes copy them shamelessly like a student until you get them out of your system. That is the way of all masters. 61. Don't worry how or where you begin. As long as you keep moving, your success will arrive far from where you start. 62. It is much easier to change how you think by changing your behavior, than it is to change your behavior by changing how you think. Act out the change you seek. 63. If you meet a jerk, ignore them. If you meet jerks everywhere every day, look deeper into yourself 64. Writing down one thing you are grateful each day is the cheapest possible therapy ever. 65. Ignore what others may be thinking of you because they aren't thinking of you. 66. Passion, persistence, belief, and ingenuity are required to invent new things. Qualities the poor and young often have in abundance. Stay hungry. 67. Calm is contagious. 68. When crises strike don't waste them. No problems, no progress. 69. Your purpose is to discover your purpose. This is not a paradox. This is the way. 70. Your passions should fit you exactly but your purpose in life should exceed you. 71. Fear makes people do stupid things. 72. When someone is nasty, hateful, or mean toward you treat their behavior like an affliction or illness they have. That makes it easier to have empathy toward them which can soften the conflict. 73. You don't need more time because you already have all the time you will ever get; you need more focus. 74. Compliment people behind their back. It'll come back to you. 75. Expand your mind by thinking with your feet on a walk or with your hand in a notebook. Think outside your brain. 76. Gratitude will unlock all other virtues. 77. You choose to be lucky by believing that any setbacks are just temporary. 78. It is useful to organize your thoughts with someone you trust and admire. 79. Over the long term the future is decided by optimists. To be an optimist you don't have to ignore the multitude of problems we create; you just imagine how much our ability to solve problems improves.

David Senra

89,389 просмотров • 5 месяцев назад

Tiago Forte has pioneered the concept of a Second Brain. As the author of two books, he's learned that quantity and quality aren't opposing forces. Here's what else he's taught me about writing: 1. The brain is for having ideas, not storing them. Write stuff down. 2. If you really want to learn something, don't just consume information. Create something about it. 3. Note-taking is a form of time-travel. You don’t just take notes to remember ideas. You also take notes to remember experiences. Reading your notes takes you back to a different state of consciousness. Note-taking is a rebellion against the entropy of memory. 4. Save only the best notes: Don't hoard information. Save only the top 5-10% of your ideas. That way, you can trust that everything in your note-taking system is high-quality. 5. Tiago’s dad is an artist who taught him an important lesson: the energy to create art can dissipate in small, invisible ways if you let it. Set up a structure where you have the peace of mind and the bandwidth to do art. 6. The ultimate goal of note-taking is to improve your ideas. Too many people treat note-taking as an end in itself. But the goal of note-taking isn’t to save information. It’s to have ideas you wouldn’t have had otherwise. To be smarter, faster, and more creative. 7. Link notes together. Organize your ideas by topic, not by source. As you browse your note-taking system, consider the serendipity you want to create for your future self. For example, if you read two books about a topic, link those notes together. 8. In school, we’re taught to research before we write. Do the opposite. Compile notes over time. Then, once you have an idea, start writing immediately — right when you have an epiphany. Start researching after you've written a draft. 9. Create evergreen notes. Like a good investment, the benefits of your note-taking system should compound in value. Save ideas that will stay relevant for many years. Read the classics, skip the news. 10. Tiago publicly tested every idea in his book. For most, the internet is a blackhole of distraction. But it can instead be used as a place to do low-stakes experiments before you go all in. 11. The more expensive the location for a writer's retreat, the more it forces you to be productive. 12. "Be regular and orderly in your life, so that you may be violent and original in your work." — Gustave Flaubert, one of Tiago's favorite quotes. 13. The less formal and “official” a software program feels, the better Tiago writes. And he believes some of the best turns of phrase come out in messaging apps with friends. Stuck on something? Close the word doc and text a friend about it. 14. Every time you compress an idea, you make it more accessible. But you also lose context, depth, and nuance. 15. The ultimate test of how well you understand something is how clearly you can explain it in writing — clear writers are clear thinkers. 16. Twitter can help too. Stuck on a paragraph while writing your book? Well, send a tweet about it. If the idea resonates, bring it into your book. 17. Too many choices can cloud our creative process. The key to making progress is knowing when to take in new information and when to shut off all sources of distraction. Divergence and Convergence. 18. Anything you might want to accomplish—executing a project at work, getting a new job, learning a new skill, starting a business—requires finding and putting to use the right information. 19. Instead of working in “Heavy Lifts,” you can work in “Slow Burns.” Taking notes makes you less dependent on those long blocks of creative time you need when you have to complete creative projects in a single sitting. 20. Tiago: “If I could leave you with one last bit of advice, it is to chase what excites you.” 21. A bonus: “Run after your obsessions with everything you have. Just be sure to take notes along the way.” I've shared the full conversation with Tiago Forte here. If you'd rather listen on YouTube, Spotify, or Apple, check out the replies below.

David Perell

101,346 просмотров • 2 лет назад

🚨 EXTREMELY URGENT FOOD APPEAL FOR GAZA 🚨 Childhood in Gaza is not disappearing in one moment. It is fading slowly— with every night a child goes to sleep with an empty stomach, with every family dividing a small plate of rice between too many hands, with every mother pretending she is not hungry so her children can eat. In Gaza today, hunger is no longer a feeling. It is a weight pressing on every home, every tent, every fragile life. Children here no longer dream of toys. They no longer ask for safety. They no longer ask what tomorrow will bring. They ask only one thing: “Will we eat today?” 🍗🍚 One child waited all day for food. Not for a feast. Not for comfort. Just for a small plate of rice and a single piece of chicken. The sun disappeared behind the rubble. The pot stayed empty. And the child went to sleep hungry. 🍗🍚 Chicken and rice are running out. Families across Gaza are collapsing under the weight of hunger. Hunger here is no longer temporary. It is relentless. It follows families from morning to night. Small bodies are growing thinner. Stomachs ache through the darkness. Children cry quietly so their parents will not feel more guilt. Tiny hands reach out— not for sweets, not for gifts, not even for hope. Just for a simple plate of chicken and rice. 🍽️ And yet, in the middle of this overwhelming silence, three voices refused to look away. 🔥 Felix (GoliathFan1952) ✨ William Menaker (Will 🦥 Menaker) 🤍 Eyup Lovely (Eyup Lovely) They did not scroll past. They did not wait for someone else. They used their voices when silence would have been easier. And because of them, real meals reached families who had nothing left. For children in Gaza, a meal is no longer ordinary aid. It is the thin line between: a child crying from hunger all night or falling asleep with food in their stomach. Between a mother collapsing from exhaustion or finding the strength to face one more day. What you gave was more than food. It was dignity. It was mercy. It was one night where hunger loosened its grip on a family. But the need has not stopped. 🚨 Time is running out. Every moment of delay means another empty plate. Another child waiting. Another family losing strength. 👉 Donate now. Because hunger does not wait. 🍗🍚 Because in Gaza, chicken and rice mean survival. If food reaches a family tonight, a child may sleep without pain. If it does not— tomorrow will begin with hunger again.

Muhmmed Project𓂆 🇵🇸

85,727 просмотров • 4 месяцев назад

🚨 THE FILES ARE COMING… BUT WILL THEY REALLY REVEAL THE TRUTH? 👽 Friends… TODAY may go down as a HISTORIC turning point for humanity. President Trump has announced he will seek the release of files related to UFOs, UAPs & extraterrestrial life. This comes after Barack Obama himself publicly stated that ALIENS ARE REAL. Think about that. Two Presidents. Two public acknowledgements. This is NOT a coincidence. As I have told you before – this is all part of a very long, slow and deliberate PLAN. For decades, governments around the world have hidden the truth about UFOs/UAPs & non-human intelligence. I know this first-hand. Yet at the same time, the public has been slowly GROOMED — through films, television, literature & carefully controlled releases — to psychologically prepare humanity for what is coming. Why hide the truth while preparing us to accept it? Because there is an agreed DEADLINE for disclosure…one NOT fully in their control. They have been desperately trying to delay it — drip-feeding crumbs of truth while keeping the real, explosive reality hidden. I truly hope President Trump follows through. But I must speak honestly from my HEART - We have heard this ALL BEFORE. Project Blue Book. Congressional inquiries. Pentagon releases. Carefully selected files — unclassified “evidence” that is always vague, incomplete and heavily REDACTED. For every file they release, I guarantee you there will be at least TEN or TWENTY others that they will continue to keep under wraps. WHY? Because their content will be deemed too sensitive or dangerous to national security. And because the truth would change EVERYTHING. But I do not need their files to know the truth. I KNOW that UFOs/UAPs and aliens exist — I had my very first encounter with a UAP when I was only a small child! And later in life, I was shown the frozen, broken bodies of beings taken from a crashed craft! I know this is real. And I know many of YOU do too! So tell me — have YOU seen a UFO? Have YOU had an encounter? Because the real truth is NOT in government files. The real truth resides within us. #UFO #UAP #Aliens #Disclosure #Trump

Uri Geller

40,165 просмотров • 4 месяцев назад

Just in $AMD Anush "Speed is the moat"|ROCm🎙️ In the race to define the future of AI, what's the one advantage that truly lasts? It's not proprietary tech, argues Anush Elangovan Elangovan, VP of AI Software at AMD , but the sustainable speed of innovation. He explains why AMD is rejecting the "walled garden" model for its open source ROCm stack, betting that an open community flywheel is the key to victory. Listen to understand how this open strategy is designed to out-innovate closed systems by empowering developers to solve everything from frontier-model challenges to the mundane, everyday problems that define the "last mile" of AI. AMD ROCm Software: Part 1 Transcript [00:00:00] Andrew Zigler: Joining me is Anush Elangovan, VP of AI software at AMD. And when people talk about AI compute, the conversation often stops at hardware specs, but it's more than just physical chips that win the game. It's also the software ecosystems supporting them. [00:00:18] Andrew Zigler: The prevailing strategy in the industry has been to build something like a walled garden. You know, something closed, proprietary locks, developers in. But AMD is betting on an entirely different play, open source acceleration, and with rock, their open source AI software stack. AMD is building not just hardware parity, but an innovation flywheel that's powered by the community with interoperability and the freedom to scale without all of that pesky lockin. [00:00:48] Andrew Zigler: And in this world, speed is your moat and how fast you can innovate while your platform remains open, flexible, and standardize across all of its applications. That's what we're gonna explore [00:01:00] today. So Anush, I'm really excited to have you here. Welcome to Dev Interrupted. [00:01:04] Anush Elangovan: Thanks for having me. Uh, super excited to chat about it. [00:01:07] Andrew Zigler: Amazing. Well, let's go ahead and dive right in with kind of what I laid it out with in the beginning, the idea of the moat and it being about speed. I wanna unpack that a bit because that came from you when you and I first spoke. And I, and I want to know, you know, how do you define speed inside of AMD beyond just things like hardware, benchmarks. [00:01:27] Anush Elangovan: Yeah, that's a very good question. So when we typically talk about speed, everyone's like, Hey, hardware benchmark specs, right? Like, uh, memory bandwidth or, or flops. And that is one important part of it, uh, AMD does very well. With that, we do have, a, a very good history of executing on that axis. [00:01:47] Anush Elangovan: But when I say speed is the moat, it is about, uh, how we prepare, how we build the muscle to run the race for a long time and run it fast. And it is [00:02:00] not about a single point in time that you've, you've beat some you know, benchmark and, and you declare victory. It's about building the ability to consistently develop and deliver. [00:02:13] Anush Elangovan: Both hardware and software innovation at scale and do it fast, right? Like, you know, we we're increasingly getting to a point where models come out and they're, uh, you know, a year or two ago it was like, Hey, they work on AMD on day zero, which is great, but now they are performing on AMD the day it releases, right? [00:02:32] Anush Elangovan: So, what does it take to Prefetch where the industry is going? Be prepared to intercept. At that point is what you know, I, I refer to as you know, the, the speed factor in, in creating this mode, right? And the mode is just shed all things that hold you back and run as fast as you can. [00:02:53] Anush Elangovan: Uh, because the pace of innovation that is, uh, being seen in, in AI [00:03:00] industries is just. Amazing. Right? And it's like, it's transformational at at how you generate electricity. It's transformational as at how you build data centers. It's transformational at how you deploy compute, networking. It's transformational at what kind of use cases you, you know, uh, use AI for. [00:03:17] Anush Elangovan: Uh, and for that, you need to be prepared to, see what comes tomorrow and be prepared to run the race tomorrow. [00:03:23] Andrew Zigler: Yeah, it's a really great perspective because it highlights that it's not just like a checkpoint that you run through. I like how you called out, like it's not just hitting that benchmark or being the best in class at that moment, in that snapshot, it's about having a. The throughput and about having that dedication to the idea and continuing to deliver on it. [00:03:43] Andrew Zigler: It's not just crossing the threshold, but it's also being the engine. And that's what, that's what protects a business. That is the moat, because the moat is that innovation layer, the faster and more, uh, future forward. That you can work and think, [00:04:00] you know, the better. Uh, we, we talk a lot about like future forward work styles. [00:04:04] Andrew Zigler: Like what are the things I could be doing right now today that are gonna be like, way more useful tomorrow? Let, let's abandon those, workflows that are older and that kind of like, that translates into. An advantage when you work that way. You know, what kind of things have you learned working with, uh, like across all spectrums of people who would use ROCm, right? [00:04:23] Andrew Zigler: You have like the developers, but then you also have the enterprises and you have this large span of adoptees, right? So what is the, what does that look like that you learn? [00:04:32] Anush Elangovan: Yeah, so, so the way I look at it is there are gonna be pockets of different, uh, you know, cadences, right? Like, so people who are deploying in enterprises, for example, right? The validation and how long it takes for them to deploy an LLM that's secure. It's, with guardrails, et cetera, maybe longer. [00:04:52] Anush Elangovan: but you still have to go through the process and you have to be prepared to like, walk that walk to deploy an enterprises. That doesn't mean it's [00:05:00] not fast, that's as fast as you can do for that industry, right? And if you are deploying AI in healthcare, right, it's, it's got its own, uh, cycle. [00:05:07] Anush Elangovan: but in each one of these, you want to see how, like, go down to the essence of what is it that you actually have to do. And, you know, I, I, I like how you framed it. It's like it's, you shed your prior assumptions of how things are done, right. And, and you kind of build up from a, uh, first principles, uh, approach to say, this is how I could use AI to unlock, whatever I'm doing. [00:05:33] Anush Elangovan: And, and, some of it, you know, it's good to really step back and look at. Just question every part of it, right? Like right now you're getting chat GPT and, Gemini competing for like, math, olympiads and, and, uh, college, uh, reasoning, uh, tests. Right? And, and those are like that, that is amazing and increasingly like complex tasks that they're trying to do. [00:05:58] Anush Elangovan: But there may also be like. [00:06:00] More mundane things that AI could, could get applied to. Right? And, and so when we think about shedding old ways, you wanna shed it not just in like the tip of the spear. It's like, you know, I'm gonna see what's the frontier model. It's also, it could be something as simple as. [00:06:18] Anush Elangovan: How do you choose a, a movie, uh, you know, like a recommendation system, right? Or, or, uh, an automated, uh, flight, uh, rebooking system. So the moment, you know, your flight is late, uh, right now it's a notification, right? It's like, oh, you got a text message saying your flight's late. And I got that like three times this week. [00:06:38] Anush Elangovan: But anyway, uh, and, and, and, and, I was just like, okay, so if I were to rethink this. All this MCPs that we have that should be hooked up into an MCP that says, your flight's delayed. Here are your options. If you want, you know, these are the paid options. Yeah. Here are the free options. This will get you back into your you know, Toronto airport [00:07:00] tonight. [00:07:00] Anush Elangovan: Or if you stay, here's a hotel plus this, plus this, plus. It's just like, go ahead is all I should say. Versus now I'm like, okay, can someone, you know, can I call a travel agent? Can I do this? Can I go online and log into And you know, so we gotta fundamentally rethink even those like small, nuances of, things that we do that can be automated out and AI is really, really good at doing something like this, right? Maybe I just explained an AI startup idea right now. Somebody should just start that. [00:07:29] Andrew Zigler: I think you did. Yeah, you definitely did. Someone, one of our listeners is definitely going to lift that off of you. I, I, I, you know, I hate being on the receiving end of those. You feel a little helpless and then you have to like, follow the whole flow. So I know what you mean. Like I, I like how you called out that the build and this like. [00:07:45] Andrew Zigler: Where speed is your moat and the innovation layer is protecting you, is what makes you better than your competitors. How you scale that and you bring that to market. So by understanding the problems that you're solving, uh, throwing away those older assumptions, but also [00:08:00] recognizing that like. We're building every single day, new things and new ways of using stuff that we're still figuring out the implications of. [00:08:08] Andrew Zigler: And so when you have a lot of velocity and you're introducing a lot of new ideas, and maybe you have that workflow now that automatically rebook your flight off of your late flight text message, and uh, I know I would certainly use it, but you know, what kind of philosophies guide the way that y'all think about building this ecosystem to manage that stability while letting folks. [00:08:29] Andrew Zigler: Play with the speed and the assumptions and the airplane re bookings. [00:08:34] Anush Elangovan: so, so I think, you know, we need to peel one layer down, right? and the philosophy is, Hey, we, we just discovered electricity, right? And you know what we're gonna do? We are gonna make motors, uh, or dynamos, right? Like engines. Uh, sure. We don't know if it's gonna be a Ferrari that you're gonna make, or it's a a a a dump truck. [00:08:57] Anush Elangovan: That's good for doing this. But let's [00:09:00] let, which is also required, right? You need a dump truck. You need a garbage truck. And, [00:09:04] Andrew Zigler: Yeah. You need the [00:09:04] Anush Elangovan: course you need, uh, a Ferrari for a midlife crisis, right? So, [00:09:09] Andrew Zigler: precisely. [00:09:10] Anush Elangovan: But, but my, uh, point is what do we build next? And, uh, and this is what I meant by like, okay, let's, let's take those baby steps to build the. [00:09:20] Anush Elangovan: Infrastructure that's required that we know we'll have to use, right? So, so if I just discovered electricity, okay, great. Now one, how do I save this electricity and how do I use it? So there's battery technology, so you need to do something like that, right? Like so. But then you also want to make it into an actionable thing. [00:09:37] Anush Elangovan: You want to make it for like automobiles, or you wanna use it for, you know, powering, uh, entire cities. So it is that transformational. So, uh, AI is that transformational. So, if you distill down, it'll, it'll come down to how do we think about, what we can do with this this fundamental technology that, We may not be aware of what it [00:10:00] is gonna unlock next, but at least you know the next step is clear, right? It's like a dense fog, you know, it's gonna be like, it, it's the right path. You see the light, but it's kind of like out there and, and the steps you're taking are concrete and you're like, okay, this is good. [00:10:16] Anush Elangovan: I, this is better than where I was or where we were. So we are moving forward. So you can build with the. Intuition from what you see in the short term and a tactical view, but towards what you think the future is gonna be. [00:10:28] Andrew Zigler: Right. You almost like we're all in this like fog of war, right? And like you said, you're reaching out and you're trying to step through it. You could think of it too, as like you're in the dark and your hands are up in front of you and you know that. You're, you're not gonna run your face into a wall because your hands are out in front of you, but you're not gonna maybe do much better than that. [00:10:45] Andrew Zigler: So that's kind of like, I think the eco, the, the industry, the world that we find ourselves in, uh, and we all have to, then this becomes the power of an ecosystem, of a group of people working together to create that layer of, [00:11:00] uh, of establishing the [00:11:01] Anush Elangovan: exactly. And I, I, I just, instead of, you know, saying fog of war I describe it as like, you're in this. Beautiful valley with like a morning, uh, fog that's in. You can smell the flowers. You, you hear the birds. You are like, okay, it's, we are in like, uh, utopian paradise and yes, I just need to like, continue the walk, right? [00:11:24] Anush Elangovan: and then move forward with that, conviction that you're in the right spot. [00:11:27] Andrew Zigler: Yeah. So let's talk about that ecosystem world. This nice, I love how you describe it, this grassy side of a hill in the morning that's covered in some mist and maybe we can't see 30 feet in one direction, but it sure is a beautiful hill and it smells nice. And so we're all here. And why is, in that world, why is. [00:11:44] Andrew Zigler: You know, open source, their strategic advantage that y'all are going for in the AI hardware market. And, and then how does like ROCm turn that into wins for people within that ecosystem? [00:11:56] Anush Elangovan: you know, the, the way we look at it is this, is kind of like how I view [00:12:00] AI and the ecosystem, right? But, but it is for everyone to enjoy. Uh, and so we do want to make sure that. You know, it is, uh, beneficial for everyone. [00:12:09] Anush Elangovan: The ecosystem can come in and, and innovate. It's an open innovation engine. and uh, it is very different from, you know, having a walled garden with, Hey, only I know how to do this and I'm gonna do it and throw it over the fence and you can use it or keep walking, right? So we'd like to be good citizens that way, but also. [00:12:30] Anush Elangovan: Uh, it is self-fulfilling in a way, right? Like it, the, the pace at which we innovate with open source is unmatched. Like, you know, our serving engines are like VLLM and, and sg l. Those things, uh, those frameworks are like super, super aggressive in terms of how fast they come out with features and how fast they can you know, get performant models out. [00:12:52] Anush Elangovan: And that compared with what, uh, you'd get from, you know, the likes of like T-R-T-L-L-M or something is always lagging, right? Because you [00:13:00] just can't keep up with you know, 200 commits a week just on one particular model to get that model really performant [00:13:06] Andrew Zigler: And, and, and in that world where, you know, everyone can enjoy the winds of this, what kind of customer stories or innovation stories have really stood out to you and excite you about building and creating this place for developers? [00:13:19] Anush Elangovan: Yeah. So I think the parts that are super exciting for me are when when we get to see a customer that is first skeptical. Then they start a little like, okay, fine, we'll give you a chance. Uh, we do a simple, uh, POC and then they're like, huh, this seems to work. Yeah, we told you it works. [00:13:42] Anush Elangovan: You don't have to change one line of code. Really? Yes, no need to change one line of code. Okay, let's try a production workload. So then they try it. Oh, you're more performant than the competition. Yes. We're more performant than, than the competition. So how much does it cost? And we're like, oh, it's your TCO is better with, uh, [00:14:00] AMD. [00:14:00] Anush Elangovan: So again, they're like, wow, okay, good. So now how do we deploy at scale? And then we go deploy it at scale. And when they give a thumbs up on that and they say, this is good, right? That's when you know, you, you see it go full circle from like, oh, we, we've never heard about AMD to like actually deploy to tens of thousands of GPUs In the order of a few months, right? It, it, it really is fascinating to see and very exciting and invigorating to [00:14:28] Andrew Zigler: Yeah. At like a great exposure to a lot of interesting problems. And, and then people using the infrastructure, the, the technology available to solve those problems. Really specific problems by the way, that's often why they're bringing their data and AI to it, uh, is because it is really specific and important for them. [00:14:45] Andrew Zigler: And there's a, a lot I think that other engineering orgs can learn and even emulate from AMD's success and, and having this open source ecosystem and it causing this acceleration within. You [00:15:00] know, uh, customers and enterprises that use and adopt the tools and, and, and that creates an advantage. And that goes back to why we're talking and like the real thesis of our conversation today. [00:15:10] Andrew Zigler: So how do you think engineering leaders that are listening to this and obviously tapping into this great success AMD has from an open source flywheel, how do you think other, other folks building in the same space can foster that open, first, that open source oriented culture in order to, you know, accelerate their innovation goals? [00:15:29] Anush Elangovan: Yeah, that's a very good question. So the startup that um, was acquired by AMD we, we built, I mean, we started off doing iot stuff and you know, smart ring and all that, right? But in the, the end of like, uh, and not the end, the last six years of the company was building ML compilers. [00:15:47] Anush Elangovan: And ml, ML compilers are like super, uh, complicated, sophisticated, advanced algorithms, dah, dah, dah. but it was all open source, right? So our VCs were like, wait, what do you mean your core [00:16:00] IP is open source? And um, the speed is the moat applied even then, right? It was just like, yes, if you have an idea that. [00:16:08] Anush Elangovan: Because someone saw this idea that you are, they're gonna be able to catch up, then you probably have the wrong idea anyway. But if they are, you know, you execute and they're gonna catch up, that you should assume they're gonna catch up. Right? So you gotta move forward. So keeping it open source is super important. [00:16:25] Anush Elangovan: But also to your question on like, you know, the learnings from an AMD standpoint, right? If there are, hard problems, I'd say dig in and work through it, right? Like there's no way but through it, right? That should be the simple mentality. And more, uh, frequently than not. you'll see that you'll just make it through in a, in, in good form. [00:16:52] Anush Elangovan: But if you doubt it and you're like, oh, I don't know if I should commit, if I'm, I, you know, what should just commit to do the right thing [00:17:00] every step, right? Every step, and just keep taking one step in front of the other. And in no time you'll see that you'll be running. Right. And, and yes, the first few steps will be like, yeah, everyone's complaining about your software quality. [00:17:15] Anush Elangovan: Everyone's complaining about this and that, and it doesn't work. And, and a few steps in, you know, you get, you get the hang of all the complaints that are coming in. You get the feedback loop. You're like, okay, what, what are you prioritizing again? One step in front of the other, right? You just keep knocking that out and then you get to a point where you're, it just becomes second nature, right? To do the, to do the right thing. And, and then yes, if someone gives you two options, you'll be like, fine. This is, uh, you know, there's always the resource trade off. There's always a human capital trade off, but what's the right thing to do? of course, I, I'm pragmatic about what we choose, but, but if the right thing for your long-term success is dig in, go first, principles, make it [00:18:00] happen. [00:18:00] Anush Elangovan: Well. Then just go for that. There's, there is no shortcut to [00:18:04] Andrew Zigler: acknowledging, you know, how it aligns with your mission, your core company goals, and what you're looking to achieve. And, and I, I love how you rightfully called out that in the open source world and you know, you have your technology that you've built, what you think is your moat upon, right? [00:18:22] Andrew Zigler: It's your code and, and to open source that, or to just make it where anyone could peer in is, you know. Scary in one regard, but two, it just kind of feels like you're handing away your throne room in some kind of sense, a very direct feeling sense. But the ultimately, you were really right to call out, and this is something I think about all the time, that the real power there is still the speed This the speed. [00:18:42] Andrew Zigler: That was the moat at the beginning of our conversation. It's the speed in combination with your. Very specific domain understanding of what you're building and what you're creating, and your new role as the steward of that world and how people plug into it, which [00:19:00] has frankly, a lot more influence and power than lording over a closed. [00:19:04] Andrew Zigler: You know, repository or an ecosystem, and like you said, like throwing things over the wall. Sure. There, there might be people always on the other side of that wall, but you're not gonna have a great connection with them. You're not gonna be able to really clearly understand them. I, I like your metaphor of the side of the field of the mountain a lot more. [00:19:23] Andrew Zigler: But, but in the, in this world, you know, where. That speed is, is the power and, and open source is just one way that you can harness that speed to get really far ahead and to innovate. , There's other parts of this equation that you can be experimenting with too, and I'd love to pick your brain about them as a software leader and, and, and one of them is about looking forward and kind of understanding that future that we're all building towards and beyond today's models and hardware. [00:19:48] Andrew Zigler: You know, what do you see as the next major bottleneck or opportunity in the AI compute space? As, as you know, enterprises and folks start to get a little more mature about what's available to [00:20:00] them. [00:20:00] Anush Elangovan: Yeah, I think, the bottleneck and opportunity is, uh, what I'd call, call walking the last mile of ai. Right. Uh, and like I I, I gave you an example, uh, previously, but, but it's similar to that. It's like there are cases where Humans have so many, uh, things to do in your day. You know, like the, if we sit down and actually had a customer focus like, okay, these customers lives, I'm gonna save four hours of this customer's life. And if you actually sit down and look at all of that, it'll be. Easily automatable, easily you know, uh, applicable, uh, for ai, right? [00:20:39] Anush Elangovan: Like, but then making it happen is gonna take a little bit, right? It's like maybe it's, uh, paying your utility bill, right? Or something like that, right? Or, or, your healthcare explanation of benefits. Uh, like, I'm sure you get an explanation of benefits, and I'm like, I, I don't even know what that thing is. [00:20:55] Anush Elangovan: It's just like EOB and like. [00:20:57] Andrew Zigler: it's a big, a big old PDF. Yeah, [00:21:00] exactly. [00:21:01] Anush Elangovan: Like, like, I'm like great straight to the, uh, shredder, right? And but that could be, you know, automated with the ai, right? It, it, it'd be like, Hey, the summary of this thing is you went and visited this day. Everything is okay. Everything is paid for, so don't worry, it's not a bill. [00:21:17] Anush Elangovan: That again, the same, uh, thing, but the sense of what that information overload is could be. Digested by ai, uh, accumulated over time and retrieved when you need it. Like, I don't, I actually don't even need to know this EOB right now, unless of course, whenever I need to know it, that maybe, you know, like for some benefits I need to figure out what do, what did I do over the past year and how do I apply it? Source:

Mike

14,195 просмотров • 7 месяцев назад

This is the biggest thing I've ever done, I hope you spare some time to read through it 🙏 I am pleased to announce that I have found investors and have now raised the funds needed to launch GREENMAN FILM STUDIOS, a video production house focusing on live action content shot in 3D enviornments. ( like the example in the video ) using the top industry standard CGI software mixed with my GreenMan 'lets Macguyver everything' style, we will have the ability to make near-hollywood level CGI content for 1000s of times cheaper than big film studios. we will be making everything from short stories, funny commercials, skits, to full blown action/drama/comedy series in a way and to a level that hasnt been done before. (basically just like everything I do lol) This gives us a unique way to produce content that not only tells amazing stories, but also gives us the ability to make content to market products for small/med/large businesses. To do this, we are also partnering with a startup app that connects advertisers (that want to market their products in a more cost-effective way than buying TV commercials and airtime) to rising stars in the content creator community. - WHAT THIS MEANS FOR CREATORS: if you have been following me for a while you know I hate low effort, low frequency content. what we're planning to create here is not only a movie studio, but a hub to teach creators how create better content, how to network with others to create their own 'indie film studio' (all you need to get started is a person good at writing, one thats good at video, and one sound guy and you have the framework) and once they have honed their skills and are making cool stuff, there are advertisers waiting that suit their style of content. WHAT THIS MEANS FOR ADVERTISERS: do you have a business that makes it hard or too expensive to have professional level advertising made in a authentic and creative way? maybe you own a small energy drink company or you've created an AI helper tool... or even a small mom and pops family run arms dealer, we will give you high quality, super afforable solutions to market your products in a very unique way - if you're sick of low effort one liner type content and know that its not only stupid, cheap, and lame but also an unsustainable way to make a living as a creator... if you are willing to work hard for a very long time getting nothing in return except getting better at your craft until its good enough to earn you a serious living... then this is for you. this project is going to take some time to get off the ground. I am currently looking at premesis's to set up the studio space and talking to a few VFX artists about the various worlds we want to create. If you are someone who really wants to create cool visual content then this is your chance. spend this time finding people that complement your skill set, finding your style and practicing making cool stuff. when the time comes, we can help you elevate that to the next level, ready to entice advertisers. I'll be making a video in the next week explaining everything in more detail with cooler visuals and stuff but for now, thats the announcement. I cant tell you how pumped I am for whats about to come, I cant wait to show you all! (*the footage below is from a short film series called 'Dynamo Dreams')

GreenMan

33,400 просмотров • 1 год назад

🚨 EXPOSED: Tracey Martin GROOMING Teens Under Guise of "EMPOWERMENT – Now Her OWN Daughter's Are The Victims! ~Part 1 BOMBSHELL You came at me in your video, Tracey, calling me "wrong" for exposing Erika Kirk as a groomer who preyed on YOUR OWN DAUGHTER—now her "personal assistant." Newsflash: My research is ROCK SOLID, backed by sources you can't touch. But guess what? I've dug DEEP into YOU now, and it's time to clap back. You're no innocent bystander—you're part of the same twisted pattern. Let's break it down. 🔥 First off, your "business" TLM Coaching and Media (hiding behind @genzawaken on IG) straight-up TARGETS MINORS as young as 16. Your own post brags about expanding to "ALL of Gen Z, ages 16-26" and recruiting them for "life coaching" on communication, boundaries, relationships, mental health, college transitions, and more. Sound familiar? It's the EXACT same playbook I called out Erika for: luring vulnerable, impressionable teens "under your wing" under the guise of empowerment. But we all know what that really means—exploitation. 😡 You get these kids modeling for your brands in RISQUÉ outfits, showing way too much skin to "promote" your stuff. Attached pics show the proof: half-naked poses, barely-there wraps, desert shoots that leave NOTHING to the imagination. This isn't "fashion"—it's predatory. And the pattern? Erika was GROOMED by YOU from a young age (those raunchy old photos of her posing for you say it all). Erika in turn did the same thing to multiple girls, INCLUDING YOUR DAUGHTER. Sick cycle, right? But here's where it gets REALLY twisted: You FORCED your own daughter to model PRACTICALLY NAKED, covered only by a towel or wrap, exposing her in ways no mom should. (See attached—it's horrifying.) And don't get me started on that cruel Nordstrom shoot: Your daughter has a medical condition affecting her hair growth, and you made her pose BALD next to mannequins. She's CLEARLY looking down in clear horror and discomfort. What kind of sadistic "parenting" is that? Mortifying and abusive. 🤮 Oh, and your TLM profile? You make a BIG DEAL about being "33 years friends" with your husband before marriage. 33? That's straight Masonic code—your family's lineage is DEEP in Freemasonry, flashing that number like a gang sign. Subtle, but we see it. Add in the vibes between you and Erika: Your back-and-forth screams more than "friends." Both of you come off as bisexual, with past interactions hinting at a lesbian dynamic. Is that the real bond here? Grooming each other, then the kids? This is PART 1, folks. Tracey wanted smoke by coming after me—now she's getting the full blaze. Stay tuned for PART 2: The DOZEN+ shell LLCs she and her hubby run, their shady real estate deals, her families DEEP military ties, and family lineage back to German "scientists" (psychologists, as Candace Owens hinted). It's all connecting. Tag Candace Owens and RT if you're done with these predators targeting out kids hiding behind "coaching" and "empowerment." Why do they all feel the need to take up childrens causes. Is it because they all really want to save the children? Or could it be that they are all satanic Baal worshipers who sacrifice children for sport. You be the judge. It's time protect the kids and expose these people who prey on them.💥 Special Thanks to MIA, The Best Researcher In The West. FOLLOW Her!
4:38

Sensitive content

🚨 EXPOSED: Tracey Martin GROOMING Teens Under Guise of "EMPOWERMENT – Now Her OWN Daughter's Are The Victims! ~Part 1 BOMBSHELL You came at me in your video, Tracey, calling me "wrong" for exposing Erika Kirk as a groomer who preyed on YOUR OWN DAUGHTER—now her "personal assistant." Newsflash: My research is ROCK SOLID, backed by sources you can't touch. But guess what? I've dug DEEP into YOU now, and it's time to clap back. You're no innocent bystander—you're part of the same twisted pattern. Let's break it down. 🔥 First off, your "business" TLM Coaching and Media (hiding behind @genzawaken on IG) straight-up TARGETS MINORS as young as 16. Your own post brags about expanding to "ALL of Gen Z, ages 16-26" and recruiting them for "life coaching" on communication, boundaries, relationships, mental health, college transitions, and more. Sound familiar? It's the EXACT same playbook I called out Erika for: luring vulnerable, impressionable teens "under your wing" under the guise of empowerment. But we all know what that really means—exploitation. 😡 You get these kids modeling for your brands in RISQUÉ outfits, showing way too much skin to "promote" your stuff. Attached pics show the proof: half-naked poses, barely-there wraps, desert shoots that leave NOTHING to the imagination. This isn't "fashion"—it's predatory. And the pattern? Erika was GROOMED by YOU from a young age (those raunchy old photos of her posing for you say it all). Erika in turn did the same thing to multiple girls, INCLUDING YOUR DAUGHTER. Sick cycle, right? But here's where it gets REALLY twisted: You FORCED your own daughter to model PRACTICALLY NAKED, covered only by a towel or wrap, exposing her in ways no mom should. (See attached—it's horrifying.) And don't get me started on that cruel Nordstrom shoot: Your daughter has a medical condition affecting her hair growth, and you made her pose BALD next to mannequins. She's CLEARLY looking down in clear horror and discomfort. What kind of sadistic "parenting" is that? Mortifying and abusive. 🤮 Oh, and your TLM profile? You make a BIG DEAL about being "33 years friends" with your husband before marriage. 33? That's straight Masonic code—your family's lineage is DEEP in Freemasonry, flashing that number like a gang sign. Subtle, but we see it. Add in the vibes between you and Erika: Your back-and-forth screams more than "friends." Both of you come off as bisexual, with past interactions hinting at a lesbian dynamic. Is that the real bond here? Grooming each other, then the kids? This is PART 1, folks. Tracey wanted smoke by coming after me—now she's getting the full blaze. Stay tuned for PART 2: The DOZEN+ shell LLCs she and her hubby run, their shady real estate deals, her families DEEP military ties, and family lineage back to German "scientists" (psychologists, as Candace Owens hinted). It's all connecting. Tag Candace Owens and RT if you're done with these predators targeting out kids hiding behind "coaching" and "empowerment." Why do they all feel the need to take up childrens causes. Is it because they all really want to save the children? Or could it be that they are all satanic Baal worshipers who sacrifice children for sport. You be the judge. It's time protect the kids and expose these people who prey on them.💥 Special Thanks to MIA, The Best Researcher In The West. FOLLOW Her!

Project Constitution

79,933 просмотров • 4 месяцев назад

Dear Friend, I wrote this book for you. For the past year, I have labored to create a product that will help you learn and master SQL. I have been there. I have felt the frustration of trying to learn SQL and not knowing where to begin. I have lived through the struggle of setting up a platform to run SQL queries. Most platforms require sign-ups and logins that create a headache for learners. I also know the challenge of finding proper SQL exercises that mirror the real-world experience of a data analyst. Yes, I have been in your shoes. That’s why I created SQL Essentials for Data Analysis: A 50-Day Hands-on Challenge Book (Go From Beginner to Pro). Yes, to give you a clear, practical path from beginner to confident SQL user. ✅Why SQL Still Matters You may be wondering if SQL still matters in 2025. The answer: it has never mattered more. SQL is the lingua franca of data. Data still lives in databases, and the only language it truly understands is SQL. Think about it, even in Python, SQL is there. You’ve probably heard about the powerful pandas library. Guess what? It also has some SQL. And don’t get me started on BigQuery, Tableau, Power BI, and Databricks; the answer is the same: they all rely on SQL. SQL is the big shadow that hovers over everything data. This is why learning SQL is a must for data analysts, engineers, scientists, and anyone working with data. SQL connects everything: exploration, extraction, transformation, modeling, validation, and reporting. ✅Why I Wrote This Book Dear friend, I wanted to create a resource that gives you everything you need to learn SQL for data analysis. Quite often, resources are scattered across different places. You might learn theory in one place, search for datasets in another, and hunt for questions somewhere else. More often than not, the only place you can tackle SQL challenges is online. But online platforms usually focus on syntax and don’t reflect the messiness of real-world data. I wrote this book to give you the best of both worlds: theory and practice. I don’t want you to be worrying about where to find resources. I want you to focus only on learning SQL. If you are new to SQL or need a refresher on the fundamentals, Part 1 of the book has you covered. If you are looking for practice, Part 2 is 49 days of hands-on SQL challenges designed to mirror real-world tasks. Each day in the book is designed to feel like a mini project, rather than isolated exercises. Take Day 15: Standardize Climbers Data, for example: On this day, you’re not just writing a single query; you’re working with a dataset from start to finish. By combining these tasks, you experience a full data preprocessing workflow, just like a real project. You get to practice loading, transforming, cleaning, and validating data, all in one challenge. This approach makes every day a hands-on project, not just an isolated query. You’re learning how SQL is used in real-world scenarios, not just memorizing syntax. By the end of each day, you’ve solved a problem that feels meaningful and practical: yes, something that mirrors data analysts’ and engineers’ work in real life. In this book I use SQLite. I chose SQLite because it’s simple, lightweight, and runs on any system without complicated setups or cloud accounts. You don’t need to worry about complex configurations. SQLite allows you to focus entirely on learning SQL concepts, queries, and logic without distractions. You will just have to import it. I also structured the book for use in Jupyter or Google Colab notebooks. These are playgrounds for data analysts, engineers, and scientists. These environments are interactive and flexible. They let you run queries, visualize results, and experiment in real time. Using notebooks ensures that you can practice SQL while documenting your work and learning at your own pace, all in one place. No need for sign-ups. ✅Why 50 Days? I chose 50 days intentionally. Learning SQL isn’t a sprint; it’s a habit. You can’t truly master a language by cramming a few queries in one sitting. 50 days creates a commitment. You attach yourself to a goal, a tangible outcome. Every day is a small win, a step forward, and by the end of the journey, you’ve transformed your understanding of SQL. By spreading the learning over 50 days, you build momentum, consistency, and confidence. Think of it like training for a marathon. You don’t run 26 miles on the first day. You run a little each day, gradually building strength, endurance, and skill. By the end of the 50 days, you’ll have tackled a wide range of SQL tasks: from simple filtering to window functions, date operations, joins, and performance tuning. You’ll have not just learned SQL but truly internalized it. The goal isn’t to overwhelm you. It’s to give you a structured, achievable path that fits into your daily routine, so learning SQL becomes natural, steady, and rewarding. Even if you don’t finish within 50 days, the 50-day structure gives you a rhythm, a habit, and a sense of accomplishment. The kind of outcome that sticks long after the book is finished. In summary, I wrote the book to address these pain points: 🔶Not knowing where to start: The book gives you a clear roadmap that guides you day by day. 🔶Too much theory, not enough practice: Reading about SQL is not the same as doing SQL. This book includes hands-on challenges that mirror real-world scenarios, so you’re not just memorizing commands; you’re learning to think like a data analyst. 🔶Complex setup: Many learners get stuck setting up databases or configuring environments. You will not worry about complex setups; everything runs in SQLite3 inside Jupyter Notebook, so you start immediately. 🔶Disconnected learning: The challenges mirror real-world analytics problems. Every day here is like a mini project, giving you the experience of exploring, cleaning, transforming, and analyzing data ✅What I ask of You I wrote this book for you because I want you to succeed, but books alone don’t create mastery; your effort does. I have provided the tools. All I ask is that you show up every day. Even if it’s just 20–30 minutes, take the challenge seriously. Tackle the problems, experiment with your queries, make mistakes, and fix them. That’s how real learning happens. I also ask that you trust the process. The book is designed to guide you from beginner to confident SQL user, step by step. Some days will feel "easy" and others "hard." Stay the course, and by the end, you’ll see how all the pieces fit together. Finally, I ask that you bring curiosity and persistence. SQL is a language of logic and structure, but it’s also a language of insight. The more you explore, the more patterns you’ll discover, and the more confident you’ll become in solving real-world problems. Don’t be scared to experiment. If you commit to this, I promise you’ll finish 50 days with more than just knowledge. You’ll have the skills, confidence, and habit of thinking like a data analyst. To make starting even easier, as a subscriber to this newsletter, I’m giving you an exclusive 35% launch discount. You can grab your copy today and start the 50-day journey at a reduced price. Grab SQL Essentials for Data Analysis here: I can’t wait to hear about your progress, the insights you uncover, and the confidence you gain along the way. If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to me or post them in the comments section. Let’s start this journey together: one challenge, one query, one day at a time. Warmly, Benjamin PS. Please repost.

Benjamin Bennett Alexander

16,646 просмотров • 8 месяцев назад

The most epic 13 minute AI rant I've heard in 2026 PS: My parent's heard this when I was playing it in the car and thought Jason ✨👾SaaStr.Ai✨ Lemkin went OFF like Stephen A Smith does on first take PPS: Full transcript below [17:00] Harry Stebbings: I I just wanted to ask Jason, if the people that we want are fundamentally different, the developers that we used to hire, we don't because AI writes the code for us. The marketers we don't want, the sales people we don't want—who who do we want genuinely? Like what is the attractive profile? Because your Anthropic’s and your OpenAIs are hiring, so so what are the people that we want in the companies of the future? [17:18] Jason Lemkin: Look, I know it sounds trite, but but the answer is simple. It's just the expression each year changes. We want folks that are genuinely AI fluent. It's pretty simple. Now you know, maybe last year we called them prompt engineers, right? That used to be a job. I don't know if you remember that actually used to be the hottest job on planet earth. Now no one needs a prompt engineer because it's pretty easy to prompt all these tools. That job died. Okay. Um and now we need go-to-market engineers. Um I think that job's going to die. We need—everyone needs so many forward deployed engineers. Like you can't hire enough forward deployed engineers. But uh you know um but Palantir just announced in whatever their their big their big event—they've gotten their deployment times down over 90% with forward deployed engineers. So that may become—so the this wave of disruption for the titles and the specificity, it's also exhaustingly accelerating. But it's really simple. You meet anyone for any role—sales, marketing, engineering, product, QA—they're they're either they're either they can't keep all of the ways they use AI to accelerate their job from spewing out of their mouth, or they're staring at you. It's there's nowhere in the middle. Like, and the person that comes in and says—it's it's it sounds Captain Obvious—but like, you know, you just had the whatever from Lovable, the the marketing head that was super popular on the show, right? She's just spewing AI-native insights into Lovable, right? It's not that complicated. You hire her, Elena, or whatever it is. You just hire her. It doesn't matter whether she's still in college or a junior or a senior or a middler, a left or right. And honestly, if you interview people, I would say of all even of the best startups I've invested in, maybe 30% of the management team meets this standard at best. 30%. Maybe less. And of the interviews I do in general, it's single-digit percents. It's just and in in that sense, it's the same as ever. Like you either lower the bar in hiring or you hire someone that's actually great. And someone that's actually great is so far ahead of you in how to apply to to employ the efficiencies of AI in their role, your jaw falls on the table. The difference is we used to need warm bodies. That's what's changing. We used to need warm bodies to answer the call, to do QA, to do code review, to to get the blue pixel to go from the upper left to the lower right. You laugh, but you need you literally needed to brute force this with humans. With AI, every day that goes by, the AI—you do not need brute force human beings on your team. And that's another reason they're shrinking. Why are all these new companies so efficient? They're just not brute forcing things with humans. They're just not. They're choosing not to. And so these team—all the brute forcers out there—everyone talks about how bloated teams got in 2021. I don't agree with that. I think they got as big as they needed to be when growth was high and you needed humans to do everything. All you look at these teams that that doubled—well if growth continued at 60% like the rate in early 2021 for 5 years or can help me do the math and every single thing a software company did required a human. You were understaffed by your 2021 headcount. You'd be sitting here in 2026. You every office in SoMa would be triple packed and you there wouldn't be enough humans to staff your company. It's just the world changed. [20:33] Harry Stebbings: Jason, you live on the bleeding edge. I think me and Rory see that and I think the world sees that when they hear you every week in terms of how you run SaaS. For all of the CEOs and execs who listen to the show, what would you advise them in terms of determining whether someone is AI fluent when they meet them for jobs, for talent? [20:51] Jason Lemkin: Here's I realized I was just asked this. I just did a review with a super fast startup growing just crossing 100 million and I was asked this question. And one of my favorite executives, I thought his answer was pretty dated and because he gave me an answer that was about 6 months old. The answer 6 months old is: "I look for folks in my team, I look for you know at what tools they play with." Okay, that was a great answer in like summer of 2025. Okay, I tried Lovable last week. Okay, the answer in 2026 is: "What commercial AI tool have you brought into your organization this month?" That's the test. Anyone that is on the bleeding edge that you would want to hire—now there are so many great products in the market. Okay, there is no excuse in any role to have not brought one tool a month into your organization. Okay, there—now there's going to be better and better tools and better and better products as the year goes on. What's the one you did? And you will see folks with their deer in the headlights to this question. What what sales tool? What marketing tool? What product tool? What engineering tool? What did you bring in? Why did you pick it? How does it working? Because if you're at remotely at the cutting edge, you're all over this. You're looking for the next agentic tools that will radically improve how you do business. This is—you think everyone thinks SaaS is at the bleeding edge, right? You know, you know, all we do is we're just looking for the tools and trying them. Okay? Okay, we're one year ahead of everybody else because we did the simplest thing in the world. Like we tried the tools early and we trained them. We trained them for a month. Okay, I'll give you—want hear a horrible example from this week? Super hot AI company valued at 6 billion. Okay, I'm not going to name it. Um, this week yesterday told us we had to quadruple what we spent on their product. Okay, their agent told us, right? And why did this happen? Okay. Well, at this $6 billion company, no one had trained the agent on its pricing properly. No one had tested it. They said, "Well, well, we've been in beta." And we said, "Well, when did the beta launch? A year ago." Okay, these are people asleep at at the wheel. You want somebody who the instant this comes up, they exactly know what the issue is. And "Hey, when I was at Lovable Replit, we trained the agent. This is how we did it. I brought in this tool. I brought in this tool that that Rory invested in last week. It solved all these issues." That's what you want to hear. And if they haven't brought in a tool in the last 30 days, at least deeply evaluated it. I don't really care whether they bought it, but gone so far down the funnel they can tell you—pick whatever tool: Fixie, Regie, GC, AIGC—I don't care how you went through it, you looked at it, you can tell me the eight ways it would improve the productivity of your business and three you didn't. Just don't hire that person because they're going to run your company to the ground. This is the job today. The job today is not to screw around on ChatGPT and to be a prompt engineer. The job today is to bring the best AI and agentic products into your organization and leverage all the hard work that the engineers have done building those products. That's your job. You don't have to screw around. You don't have to be a prompt engineer anymore. You have to be an agent deployment expert. A—this is the new job we're making up today. An Agentic Deployment Expert. That's your job from C-level to junior. Agentic Deployment Expert. Don't hire anybody else. You're going to regret it. They're going to stare at the camera. He's good. Stare at the camera. He's honorable. We could probably just I could slip away, get a coffee, and come back. No. And I I sound exasperated, Rory. And I—but the reason I am is I can just see I can see my best companies doing it. And I can see some companies I've invested in not doing it. And I want to cry. I just want to cry when they have no ADs on their team. I just—like you're flushing your years of your life down the toilet by not approaching your how you're building this company this way. [24:33] Rory: Yes. And at the risk of being positive, it's worth pointing out two things he didn't say. Well, something implicit why he said—Jason didn't do the only hire, you know, he didn't commit the um employment law, I think it's a civil penalty of saying only employ people below X who get the new new thing because he implicitly said anyone can do it provided you're willing to learn. And I think that's the big aha that's one of the positive statements to make here right? Look and I think it applies—I'm always wary of being "Hey, coming across, hey this this is the things that you all have to do." I think it applies to everyone including investors right? I mean I will say I have found that unless you're willing to invest the time learning these tools you actually shouldn't be investing in them. One of my partners Andy had this expression: "You know, if you decide you want to stop learning new things you probably should retire within 6 to 12 months and never write another check again." Maybe that's down to 3 to 6 months at this stage, right? And I think, you know, it's— [25:27] Harry Stebbings: Yeah, I actually I actually had a meeting with mine and Jason's biggest investor the other day and I—pretend he's not here—I said I think he's the most equipped investor for this generation of investing because I don't think anyone quite sits at the bleeding edge like he does on the investor side. [25:42] Harry Stebbings: Why in terms of using the equip stuff? Yeah. Yeah. In terms of using the stuff, understanding understanding bottlenecks, constraints. For sure. [25:51] Jason Lemkin: But can I just add one point? We can just cuz it's so important if it helps people. Okay, we are—and thank you Harry. We're going through these phases. Okay, and when AI started to blow up for real for us, uh call it early 2024, right? Maybe late '23, I wasn't equipped. It was too technical. I wasn't going to go in and figure out—I wasn't smart enough to figure out how to deal with a massively hallucinating LLM API and turn that and turn that into something magical. Kudos to investors and others that that got it in early '23, '22. I mean I remember I—I guess it was maybe SaaStr Annual '23. I was with David Sacks and I did a Q&A and I said, "How you thinking about AI at Craft?" He's like, "Well we're all in. We want 80% of '23 of investments to be AI." I'm like, "Great but like show me the show me the great ones in market." He's like, "They're all prototypes. We're all they're all they're all proof of concepts but we're all in anyway." That's where you kind of had to be in '23 if you weren't investing at like the LLM level. Okay, I wasn't smart enough. Then we went through this weird-ass prompt engineer era where like you you could torture these products to do something good, right? But you had to torture them. You had to like craft these crazy things that made no sense. Now we are in the era where mere ordinarily smart generalists can make these tools do magical things. And literally I go to these meetings and people be like, "I don't know how to like this is so scary. I don't know how to do this." And we show them our backends. Do you know how to do a workflow generator? Do you know how to do a a decision tree? Like we've been building these since software in the '90s. Okay, if you—I can show you all of our agents. The how they work is novel. They do have to be trained. You can't be lazy and have these agents work. But honestly, the the UI, the UX, the way we interact with them, it's just software. And so my point is: Pick yourself off the ground. This is your time now. If you felt lost in AI era, if you felt like you're behind, you don't understand what all these people are saying on X and Twitter and their Claude and and their and talking about all the 4.6 point Nano point and it's over—like you just it's not your world. This is your time. This is your time for the generalist that knows how to use software tools really really well. And I—this is my last point but it's so important. If ever in your recent life—and this is why you could be all you need to be is young at heart to Rory's point—if in the last three to five years you have successfully deployed a piece of enterprise software of any sort you yourself, not some agency you hired, but if you have deployed it, you can deploy any agentic tool. Any. And you can become the hero in your company and you can become the hero in your functional area. But I watch folks—I'm literally helping a company now that they're adding hundreds of sales folks this year with a new pre-IPO COO—he's not hasn't brought in a single tool, totally scared of it. Okay, it's not that hard. Did you use SalesLoft? Did you use Outreach? Did you use HubSpot? Do you know these tools? If you can deploy these tools, you can deploy a world-changing AI agent. And so this is the time for people like the folks that that were shut out of the AI revolution right now. The generalist folks that are not that know how to deploy software that don't even know how to build software. Like vibe coding for me was folks who knew how to build software, but you didn't have to be an engineer. Now, you just need to know how to deploy software to win with AI agents. That's all you need to know. So many people have these skills and they're petrified of AI. "How did you do that? How did you deploy an AI BDR?" Well, we bought a piece of software, we figured out how it worked for a day, we set it up in an afternoon, and then and then we did spend 30 months training it, which you didn't do with this old software because in the old days, we just had to manually upload all the data, right? And there was no training. The the only non-intuitive part is training these things. And it's it's it's just work. So that's why when I see folks on the management team not doing this, there's no excuse. You do not need to be technical to win with AI agents in Q2 of '26. You do not need to be even 1% technical. Not at all. So it's your time. Or you're going to get laid off. Or you're going to get laid off because you're not going to matter.

Arjun Mahadevan (Mr. LLC 🇺🇸)

37,411 просмотров • 3 месяцев назад

🚨NEW EPISODE🚨 with Anthony Anthony Scaramucci: “Expect failure. If you're taking exogenous risk expect that your ass is going to get kicked. And don't be a baby about it & play the victim. When they fired me from the White House, I got torched by everybody. Did I care? No, I faced the music & never played the victim. So you got to have that mentality if you're going to take risk, if you're not comfortable with that, then don't do it.” An absolutely action packed hour with Anthony Scaramucci of career & investment advice on The Master Investor Podcast this week. We covered his more punchy early trading days taking huge short term risks; his evolution to a more careful long term investor focusing on mega trends; why he is a major believer in blockchain & specifically Bitcoin; why he owns & will hold SpaceX for the long term; his belief we will face deflation not inflation in a few years; his tips for young investors; & compelling career advice from someone who has taken big risks, had major lows, & now bigger highs. KNOW YOURSELF: “So first thing I would say to your viewers & listeners is self-awareness. Know who you are & know if you have the ability to take on the pain & the uncertainty of entrepreneurship because entrepreneurs jump off the cliff & they're trying to build the plane as they're descending to earth. You have to be able to do that.” PAY YOURSELF: “What I've been doing since the age of 17 is I've been buying stocks every month. And it could be the SP500, it could be Berkshire Hathaway, it could be Amazon. If you just take that discipline & you buy every month irrespective of where markets are & you sit back and wait five or 10 years, I think you'll be rewarded.” SPACEX & ELON MUSK: “When I have a win like SpaceX, my attitude is I'm not going to bet against Elon Musk. It's almost as if Thomas Edison got together with Henry Ford & John Rockefeller & made Elon Musk in a laboratory. He's got vision, execution skills, he's an engineer, & he's just not somebody I want to bet against. So SpaceX, I get it, I understand how expensive it is, I understand the revenues versus the market capitalization, but I believe this guy could catch up.” BITCOIN: “If you're an investor, you can't just flip off Bitcoin, you have to do the homework. And I submit to people that do the homework, nine out of 10 of them will probably own a little bit of Bitcoin. I've done the homework & I'm a believer in it. I do believe that it could trade to half of the market cap of gold, which is sort of a 10x from here over the next decade.” Timestamps: 0:00 Intro 3:35 Servant Leadership 6:30 Focus on very long term 12:37 Fear deflation more than inflation 15:57 SpaceX – long term holder 20:28 The case for blockchain & $BTC 28:12 $BTC still under-owned 31:46 Inflation vs innovation 37:31 Wall St vs Washington 40:31 Lessons from President Trump 45:26 UK too hard on itself 47:59 Take risk, expect failure

Wilfred Frost

75,035 просмотров • 15 дней назад