Adi A

Adi A

This so called "public town square" promotes anything but positivity. Fate loves irony but hates hypocrisy, and the irony is now lost on Twitter. Even Grok reasonably estimates 80% of the posts there have negative sentiments (vile threats, hate speech, racism, tyranny and lies). Free speech is going so well!

Watching this, I can’t help but feel this profoundly personal with deep, quiet anticipation. It’s like those small moments before everything changes—nothing huge, just little acts of preparation that suddenly feel so significant. The calmness, the weight of it all, the way the world seems to slow down. I’m about to become a father, and this—this is exactly how it feels. The mix of excitement, fear, and responsibility. It’s like I’m already in that space, getting ready to protect, to care for som

Just pre-ordered Oppo Find N5 đź‘€ What am I to do with my Find N3 now?

Tetragrammaton: Rory Sutherland

This podcast challenges purely rational problem-solving, highlighting intuition's role in creativity. It emphasizes perception's power in marketing and the limitations of relying solely on data. Experimentation and challenging assumptions are key to innovation.

"Vibe coding" isn’t a formally defined term in programming, but it’s a casual phrase that’s popped up in developer communities, especially on platforms like X and Reddit. It generally refers to a laid-back, intuitive, or mood-driven approach to writing code. Instead of following strict planning, rigid methodologies, or over-optimizing early on, vibe coding is about going with the flow—letting the creative energy or "vibe" guide the process. It’s often tied to: Exploratory coding: Hacking somethi

Blind Spots and Boundaries: Thriving Amid Chaos

Workplace tension thrives when flaws go unseen. Fixing the culture proves elusive, yet subtle efforts—offering a brief check-in or fostering small teamwork—yield surprising calm amid the storm, outpacing chaos with minimal force and proving modest actions ripple further than expected.

Industry: Season 1

Recently started watching Industry, and what I think about the show is how brutally effective it is at dissecting modern capitalism’s soul-crushing machinery. Harper’s reckless ambition, Yasmin’s hollow privilege, and Hari’s tragic unraveling aren’t just character arcs—they’re indictments of a system that commodifies youth and ethics. The show’s frenetic energy and unflinching gaze mirror the dehumanizing grind of finance culture, asking: What does "merit" even mean in a world this broken? It’s

Manus AI could disrupt industries by automating complex tasks—coding, research, even drug discovery—slashing timelines and costs. It threatens jobs, boosts efficiency, and may redefine tech, healthcare, and business ops, driving a revolution where AI have the potential to reshape work by 2030.

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