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@arvidkahl

Arvid Kahl

@arvidkahl

820 Tweets
17,922 Following
186,142 Followers

Building https://t.co/od97B0HVrk and https://t.co/666FnyVVE0 in Public. Raising all the boats with kindness. 🎙️ https://t.co/6w69DZmi8H · ✍️ https://t.co/lpnor5rsTW

Date ↓ Tweet ❤️ 🔄 💬 👁 📝
Jan 04 And just to be clear, I’m talking about LLMs. I’ve heard this countless of times: “I was always afraid to ask questions because veteran <xyz> would yell at me for being an idiot. And then, I discovered ChatGPT.” 24/7 deep any-topic guidance without an ego. 201 1 8 7.6k 264 .
Jan 04 This is what happens when you develop a technology that answers all user questions without judgement instead of laughing at them or calling their thoughts off-topic. 8k 285 189 384.2k 165 .
Jan 03 If you run Claude Code on a non-trivial codebase and use it for bugfixes, here's what works best for me: - If a customer reported the bug, paste the report/convo verbatim - Tell Claude Code to reproduce the error state before fixing it - Then, explain it - Then, have it fix it 188 3 34 12.4k 278 .
Jan 03 We have gone far beyond vibe coding. If agentic systems are getting good enough for experts like Gergely to drastically change their toolchain, we're heading into a world where there is no question of "if" anymore. 520 27 27 71.8k 215 .
Jan 02 The #1 streamer on Twitch is an AI. Grok is undressing people all over the place, and the bots in the comments wage war. The internet is just machines talking to machines. This is the core thesis of the Dead Internet theory. So, am I contributing? https://t.co/snxDFJ09H7 18 0 9 7.5k 276 .
Jan 01 I find the wave of grown adults asking Grok to create non-consensual "variations" of (mostly) women's photos in public quite disturbing. It seems to be some people's first interaction with the concept of consent. It's equally strange to see the AI system still creating these images in the wild. Can't believe that this is just the beginning. These tools willget much better, faster, and even less constrained over time. It already takes just seconds per image. In the past, the act of photoshopping this took a real person hours. Now it's a single inference pass. That's quite a difference. Anyone who followed the artists-vs-AI conversation likely understands that this is likely a watershed moment for the public perception of AI systems when it comes to ownership of likeness, public distribution of these "generative results", and who is facilitating this at scale. I give it one week for the EU to regulate this into oblivion. 21 0 8 8k 936 .
Jan 01 Pretty big feature. 34 0 6 6.6k 19 .
Dec 29 AI agentic coding splits developers into two camps: those who believe software must be correct, and those who think it will always consist of overlapping compromises. And they battle it out on social media, assuming that they're talking about the same thing. "AI is great at this." "No, it's just hype." "Did you even try." "Didn't work for me." But a no-side-effect single-purpose C library isn't just a different beast that a business-problem-solving web application, it's a completely different lifeform. Arguing that engineering principles should be applied equally to both is not just short-sighted; it's impractical. Every single step from ideation to implementation has wildly different requirements. So next time you see someone dismissing AI coding tools as useless, ask what they're building. And when someone swears it's a 10x productivity boost, ask the same question. The answer will tell you everything. If you're building a cryptographic library, you need provable correctness. If you're building a dashboard that shows podcast mentions to a PR agency, you need it working by Tuesday. Both are valid. Both require skill. But only one of them benefits enormously from an AI that can scaffold CRUD operations faster than you can type the model names. We're having a context collapse here, and people are too entrenched to realize they're talking about completely different things. 197 22 63 15.3k 1.4k .
Dec 29 It's getting harder and harder to spot clear signs of AI-generated content. A significant change is afoot. 33 2 12 5.3k 107 .
Dec 28 Just reading through the install/usage docs of this excites me. It's amazing to see the tooling surrounding an already spectacular toolchain. These efforts of fighting against lossy compaction are quite a step forward. Can't wait to see this built into future version of cc. 37 1 2 9.8k 276 .
Dec 28 We'll see a shift that's significantly bigger than the "mobile-first" responsive design wave or the SPA page boom, but this time, under the hood. Things like expecting TOON or MCP support will become framework-level defaults. And we'll design for human and agentic users alike. 34 2 13 6.5k 279 .
Dec 28 https://t.co/yLXkbrITVi 36 2 6 6.9k 23 .
Dec 27 I am so close to a really running a “Rewrite this Elixir project into functional Laravel. Make no mistakes.” And I have a feeling that it might actually work. 41 0 13 7.2k 159 .
Dec 27 Embrace agentic coding or don't. Up to you. But don't complain about "not seeing results" or "not getting it" without putting in the effort to learn a new skill. Some people spend 2 years trying to fry the perfect egg. You might want to spend more than 15min with Claude Code. 312 14 51 18.2k 278 .
Dec 27 This is why you MUST try to figure out agentic coding now. If you can’t use it for your for-profit work, create a side project that is majorly built using agents. Get a feeling for the loop, the models, and proper prompt technique. It’s either that or becoming obsolete. 1.8k 103 100 143.7k 273 .
Dec 26 I'm a big fan of Rob Pike and his work. Why again is he raging against a thank-you email from software founders that was constructed and sent using a software tool? Also, to deepen the subtweet: is this how we talk to each other now on social media? 23 0 16 10.4k 251 .
Dec 26 As someone who was born in East Germany, where there was ONE kind of car, ONE kind of pocket calculator, really ONE kind of anything, this rubs me the wrong way. The GDR had to come up with nonsensical slogans like "overtake without catching up" to account for a reality in which it was behind in technological and social advancement. Now, long after that system crumbled, I find myself as a technologist, and the pride in having locked yourself into a single technical choice (with significant hurdles to innovation) sounds hollow to me. 34 1 8 7.4k 540 .
Dec 26 The fine https://t.co/9riNyvYZc5 has this wonderful visualization of how Claude's Max pricing at $200 is absolutely worth it. https://t.co/OcWzDYDciE 83 1 11 10.6k 149 .
Dec 26 Cloudinary is worth $2bil and is effectively ImageMagick-as-a-service. LaunchDarkly? If-statements. These services are never just "literally" doing anything. It's the "aaS" in SaaS that makes these things so valuable. They figured out all the little hard things along the way. 92 5 18 16.9k 278 .
Dec 26 And if you have any disdain for vibe-coders, ask yourself why you don't mind people being beginners and amateurs in other fields. This is an embrace-or-be-left-behind situation. 96 1 5 11.6k 178 .
Dec 26 Claude Code is a significant step towards allowing the person who has the challenge to also implement the solution. I say this as a developer, seeing most of my profession being compressed into a toolchain. I know I'll always be useful. I know what good code and architecture look like. That alone is a craft worth honing. But seeing non-technical people build things that genuinely help them without being gouged by dev agencies is wonderful. 1.1k 54 71 405.7k 446 .
Dec 26 If this kind of prompt looks stupid to you, consider that this is the simplified version of “in all places of where we need to change the padding to make it look uniform, change p-4 to p-8” and all of a sudden, it becomes a powerful tool. 34 0 19 6.3k 238 .
Dec 25 So many things boil down to taste and idiosyncratic preferences. In a large enough market, almost anything will find a customer. 37 0 8 6.7k 130 .
Dec 23 If you run production loads on these models, you’ll understand. Prompts needed to get things working reliably take a lot of work, and they’re not easily migrated between models. Model versions are dependency risks, and they expire quickly. 45 0 7 7.9k 240 .
Dec 22 All I want For Christmas is product-market-fit. 189 11 41 8.7k 47 .
Dec 22 If you're not using your SaaS's blog to teach your ideal user how to pitch a budget for your tool to the purchaser within their company, you're missing out on one of the most impactful ways of doing content marketing. Just saying. 100 2 27 6.9k 230 .
Dec 22 So, what are people already doing? I've seen people monitor their competitors' changelogs. Have agents run on a daily or weekly basis. Scrape the changelog compared to what they know in the past, summarizing new features, pricing changes, even terms and conditions changes, and reporting that back to you. So you always keep tabs on every single one of your competitors and what changes in their business for you to react to or maybe anticipate. People have been building documentation auto-updaters that scan outdated documentation in the background. Definitely, and this is what I use it for is inbound lead researcher when new trials sign up, I figure out who they are and what they might be interested in to get some customized personal outreach. For SEO content gap finder, it's really cool, particularly if you know who your competitors are, so you can see what they might be missing. Then, if you're into refunds or dispute evidence data collection, you can have an agent go through somebody's database traces and compile a full report to file with their bank if they should choose to file a chargeback. And then there's just the never-ending task of mining for customer success and failure stories on social media, forums, websites, and all over. Anything you can do to stay on top of these conversations and categorize them and look for opportunities is something you can hand with a well-defined prompt to an agent that can just constantly keep manually tracking these things. You could quite literally tell your Claude code to check the front page of 20 different subreddits or Facebook groups one after the other with a 5-minute wait interval in between and see if something new has been highlighted that could be useful for you to focus your attention on. This could be something an agent is doing 24/7 for weeks and will always highlight very interesting things for you to deal with. You might even automate the outreach at that point too using a different agent. It is incredible what you can do. 149 8 4 10.9k 2k .
Dec 22 With Claude Code, it is now possible to have a permanent at-the-very-least-intern-level assistant doing 24/7 research jobs for you and also building the software tooling to act on that data. Admin panels, automated media conversion, building ideal libraries, and monitoring competitors. All that and more. Between MCPs, Cloud for Chrome, and Skills, if you don't have your agentic tool churn through your work backlog all day long, you are quite literally missing out. Because every day, more and more of your competitors will do exactly this. And while a lot of this currently is clunky, haphazard, and DIY, you can be absolutely sure that this will be commoditized within the next six months. 1.7k 100 55 105.4k 697 .
Dec 21 Claude in the browser will break many "API access is for enterprise customers only" services. I tasked it earlier with finding some data in a popular SEO analytics tool and presenting it to me in JSON format. Sure, took forever, but it's now just another automated workflow. So now, when you consider that any browser session might be an agent controlling the browser chrome while a human is watching (or likely doing some other thing), your UI is just yet another API. And it's not really scraping, either. It's a lossy, currently screenshot-based, super-slow version of what it will be in a few years. But it's here today, and it's HIGHLY automatable. People WILL use it to grab more data than they manually could. Parallel sessions. Headless automation beyond Puppeteer. All controlled by agents that never stop. You might really want to start rate-limiting ANY frontend route. Because the zombies are coming. 369 23 39 32.7k 918 .
Dec 21 Tried Google's AI Mode for the first time, and it immediately suggested @levelsio's favorite topics. 🤣 https://t.co/uw2FOZJ2iy 28 0 13 5.5k 126 .
Dec 21 Deleting all incoming emails is technically inbox zero. 58 0 17 10.3k 55 .
Dec 19 I dream of a permanent, exploratory background code-review agent. Just constantly scans for opportunities to improve, fix issues, prevent bugs, strengthen tests, all the time, pre-/mid-/post-commit. It'll play havoc with our understanding of a persistent codebase though. Hm. 78 1 30 8.3k 277 .
Dec 19 Today on the pod, I share how I, a dev who really isn't into marketing, have found a way to still get it done. (Turns out, you can delegate a lot of it to machines, you just have to know what, and how. And what NOT to delegate.) https://t.co/IMy7QU2Qyt 60 1 8 6.7k 254 .
Dec 18 Is there already such a thing as an "external hardware LLM" like we have external hard drives? Instead of having to run/maintain a local model, I want an inference machine that I can just plug in and point my prompts at. Single GPU, maybe a few in parallel. Who's building this? https://t.co/snA0TH8PN6 3.1k 151 637 402.7k 304 .
Dec 15 I have a https://t.co/AztoMRdZhH document in my codebase, which describes every single UI screen and workflow inside Podscan. I use it to help Claude Code make sense of the product and generate docs for it. It’s the result of recording a 1h walkthrough. Explained every single button, had the AI condense it into a full document. But how do I keep up with changes? New features, adjusted screens. Well, it turns out if you task Claude Code with checking the file change date of that .md file, go through every line in there, check if that component has been changed in a git commit since the last time we updated it, and then update the doc, you can automate most of this. Tried that earlier today, and was blown away. It caught buttons being moved, adjusted changed workflows, and added features that I had forgotten I implemented. Now, it’s a Claude command I can run once a week. That platform doc is the distilled knowledge of my product that even I don’t have without checking things out. And it makes AI agents SO effective (if you add it to your prompts for reference). 580 28 49 47.4k 1.1k .
Dec 15 Ha! In our founder community here, this happens very often. Outside of it, almost never. Consider that when it comes to who you market to! (And what you talk about.) 34 0 11 5.3k 168 .
Dec 13 This is my experience too. Every day, I have to test my assumptions that a certain thing isn’t possible yet. Still true? Image generation AI that passes my quality guardrails literally came into being last week. Coding agent? Like 2 months ago. We’re accelerating so hard. 52 3 9 8.9k 274 .
Dec 13 In this episode, I break down why vibe-coded solutions fall apart the moment real customers show up, why "comprehension debt" is the hidden killer of AI-built projects, and how we might need to shift our messaging to make the invisible 20% of our work visible to buyers who now think they could build everything themselves. 31 1 10 5.9k 323 .
Dec 12 It's easy to vibe code a project, but incredibly hard to vibe code a business. Your customers buy your last 20% (and AI can't build that yet.) In fact, software is all that AI is great at. The business part? Still VERY shaky. Here's why that matters: https://t.co/4N0psvnEKl 31 0 8 8.6k 276 .
Dec 12 I feel like I’m watching a body-switching movie with early-2000s PHP and current React. 17 0 4 6.1k 87 .
Dec 12 Great example of what matters in a world where AI tooling can create anything you tell them to: taste. Tastemaking happens through experience. Look at these three images and observe what you think when judging them. Your revealed preferences come from a lifetime of taste. 20 0 9 8.1k 274 .
Dec 11 Every new frontier model seems to have somewhere between 3 days and two weeks of leading these charts. Never in my life have I ever seen anything improve this quickly. And no ancestor of mine ever has, either. Confounding! 49 2 15 6.3k 224 .
Dec 11 Whether you consider this an inspiration or a massive self-own is directly correlated with whether you have ever personally experienced this kind of over-identification with work and the resulting burnout. 53 1 17 8.2k 205 .
Dec 10 This is my favorite account on Twitter. 26 0 6 11.8k 39 .
Dec 10 Blackhat 404. 20 0 1 5.8k 13 .
Dec 09 Ah yes, humanity's brightest minds have been hard at work. https://t.co/BlzpRz4CzI 46 0 7 7k 82 .
Dec 08 🤣 13 0 0 5.4k 1 .
Dec 08 Super hyped to see Podscan's API power one of many data streams for this sponsor-tracking project! Sponsorships are still the most aligned monetization strategy for creators. Don't sleep on sponsoring, as a maker, marketer, or brand. I bet Sponsorshipped will help you there. 15 1 2 5.2k 277 .
Dec 08 I think I have just found the new home for my per-podcast and per-podcast-episode embedding for Podscan's 4mil shows and 45mil fully transcribed episodes :D 47 3 7 9.8k 156 .
Dec 08 You are absolutely right! 58 1 26 9.1k 25 .
Dec 08 I am realizing that the crypto and web3 aficionados are getting more and more excited about prediction markets. Good times. That field will likely be grift-free and totally legit. 27 0 7 6.4k 181 .
Dec 07 Ragebaiting millions of people with content that is clearly meant to enrage just to get X creator payouts may seem stupid, but out of all the ways of nerd engagement bait, it’s my favorite kind. And the least harmful. 43 1 11 18.3k 217 .
Dec 06 Hey look the “it’s not gambling” prediction market apps have invented their own version of insider trading. 28 1 5 12.8k 107 .
Dec 06 A $4.26/day "heist" with over 400 hacked servers. This is as wild as it is sad. Very intriguing read! 110 3 7 41.3k 102 .
Dec 06 My Black Friday deal will expire in a few days. If you want all my books and courses in one neat package for $25, you might want to check out https://t.co/WWLKdTriZm ;) 18 2 1 13.2k 169 .
Dec 06 🤣 Stellar use case for AI. Some executive somewhere is foaming at the mouth for joy at this idea. 17 0 5 9.6k 98 .
Dec 05 As a SaaS founder, I might be extremely biased here, but I really like the idea of an open-source license that lets anyone self-host software and prevents them from becoming a competitor right away. You know, like ALL other closed-source licences ever. 219 5 23 35.3k 253 .
Dec 05 I wonder what the realization will look like in a couple years' time, when people figure out that all the juniors that they didn't train are now the seniors that they're trying to hire. We're going to have to find a solution for this very soon, or we'll be paying for it dearly. 31 0 6 5.4k 279 .
Dec 05 Since several people asked for my 3-wide-screen setup, here it is. Toying with the idea of adding another one. The Mac Studio can handle it, and I do need a little bit more space for more Claude Code :P (Good thing 90s Star Trek is 4:3, would need its own screen if 16:9.) https://t.co/TdmVFZYAfC 109 1 30 13.7k 298 .
Dec 05 I got like 3 of these and they’re amazing to run a software business from. Overkill for most other things, but incredible for keeping every important thing visible at the same time. 78 0 33 36.8k 181 .
Dec 04 Trying to wrap my head around this. Fizzy is open source, as in "source fully available." Openly. You know, like "open" "source." Licensed under terms that allow you to run it for free, but not monetize it. Now, people say, this is no true "open-source" Scotsman. Have I misunderstood what OSS was all my life? Just as anyone is free to open- or closed-source their code, they can add any license to their work. And just because the most permissive (MIT) or most restrictive "allowed" "open-source" licenses (AGPL) permit monetizing that software, doesn't mean that only "free" (as in lunch) software can be "open-source." If the source is open, it's open-source. Right? Right!? 221 8 60 42.2k 684 .
Dec 03 If you want to be a full-time founder, you really should aim at becoming a part-time founder first. Juggling your paid work and your aspirational work will give you insights into priorities and trade offs that fully committing immediately will never allow for. 247 7 59 12.2k 261 .
Dec 02 This is really cool, and I’d love for you to try it out. My persona is much better than me at remembering exactly where I already talked about something. And it really has my vibe. Give it a whirl and then let me know how it felt to talk to “me.” 51 2 8 17.5k 248 .
Dec 01 I don’t get it. Otherwise smart people proclaim the end of SaaS because AI takes over the software part. Software-as-a-Service was never about the software and always about the service. AI changes nothing about the business reasons to buy instead of build. And yes, you can built much faster with AI assistance. But professional software never had an implementation problem. People figure these things out every day. The hard part is the spec, the requirements, understanding what this will cost to run and maintain, not just to build. That’s what the -as-a-service part does. It outsources the headache of everything but the cost to build. 665 52 147 62.6k 647 .
Dec 01 Even if you're against vibecoding, AI-assisted coding, and want only organic, hand-crafted free-range code... do not ignore these stories. Claude Code might not write code as well as you do, but it can interface with data and build impactful tools in seconds rather than days. 41 0 9 5.3k 277 .
Dec 01 A lot of hopeful early-stage founders dismiss this very important insight about customer psychology, particularly when it comes to enterprise and previously "in-house" focused buyers. You really, really have to offer much more than what they could possibly build in-house. Your moat is not just time and money; your moat has to be something that they could not replicate even if they wanted to. And it has always been like this with a lot of people. But the capacity to get 80% there for almost anything people want to build will make this much more of a visible problem compared to years past. 172 15 40 32k 596 .
Nov 30 Rule of thumb for any established business: they know what converts. And who they want to reach. If you don’t like their approach to pricing, you’re actively being repelled. They don’t want you to use their service. It’s intentional. You’re their Non-Ideal Customer Profile. 1.1k 25 135 87.2k 278 .
Nov 30 If you’re building complex software, this is a great way to allow agents more insight. I did this for Podscan, too. I recorded myself going through the app, page by page, every component, and had Claude turn the transcript into a knowledge document. Loads with each prompt. 128 5 15 22.2k 275 .
Nov 29 Pretty much all I know about entrepreneurship in a $25 package. 43 2 4 9.1k 63 .
Nov 29 $10k MRR after 3 years is so meaningful. It means that it wasn’t just some flash in the pan, some hype that quickly ballooned and deflated. It was work. That struggle makes this number incredibly significant. Non-founders will never get that. 293 3 37 41.7k 245 .
Nov 28 This is the way 11 0 2 5.2k 15 .
Nov 28 This is my AI cost plummeting after implementing the practices I talk about in today's podcast episode. Same exact throughput. Massive dip in $. None of these are hacks or secrets. But they're non-obvious, and took me far too long to understand. https://t.co/MSRhvELgDg https://t.co/qFN5RTveFc 252 12 25 30.9k 296 .
Nov 27 For this year's Black Friday, I'm slashing the price of my already discounted Bootstrapper's Bundle by 50%. It contains all my books as eBooks + audiobooks as well as full access to the (still very effective) Twitter course. For $25. Limited time. Link below! https://t.co/b6iUymjyTx 54 5 15 36.7k 285 .
Nov 26 This is what most successful SaaS businesses you never even heard of look like. https://t.co/82W38ZQk7P 63 2 25 5.4k 103 .
Nov 26 Guess who just passed their driving test at 40. https://t.co/RbKsLTerhF 781 3 145 25.8k 71 .
Nov 25 The one pictured above is clearly not related to Podscan’s Vue/Inertia frontend. As much as I love jQuery, I am not using it. I wonder how I can restrict error tracking just on that script. Any ideas? 16 0 1 5.6k 205 .
Nov 25 I really love having @Sentry track my fronted JavaScript errors. It’s really solid at helping me find issues quickly. The annoying part is that it ALSO tracks all browser extensions and user script errors people run in their browser. Any way to filter these out? https://t.co/QzTM6rPDsR 221 3 18 48.6k 288 .
Nov 24 I agree with a lot of this! 8 1 6 7.5k 27 .
Nov 24 Claude Opus/Sonnet/Haiku released v4.5, and it seems to be a very good one. - Preserves thinking blocks - Context awareness - Significantly cheaper - Code execution containers - The tool search tool (lol) Between all these updates and all these models, OpenAI, Grok, Anthropic, and all the others, I am so excited to see the competitive pressure. Any improvement quickly makes it into competing offerings. https://t.co/YumJ4xFoG0 53 1 12 9.4k 432 .
Nov 24 Cool cool cool. https://t.co/JruGL2z0a3 83 2 19 15k 39 .
Nov 24 X releases a hoot of a broken feature that has less reliable data than a random number generator. People take all these locations for granted without second guessing concepts like shared account access, global teams, VPNs, and their impact on the data. Priceless. 36 5 14 11.7k 266 .
Nov 23 I learned about OpenAI's service tiers much too late. By default, all req's are priced at standard rates. And they don't go out of their way to show their "flex" pricing, which is 50% of that. Realistically, flex workloads get the same results at +50% execution time. Worth it! 29 1 5 7k 279 .
Nov 22 Sometimes, as both a founder and a European, I am ashamed of these priorities. I’ve encountered them back home before. And now, from a distance, they look even more ridiculous. https://t.co/ssER9HUNB6 33 1 7 5.7k 201 .
Nov 22 Blows my mind. These models are de-slopifying at an alarmingly amazing rate. 41 2 10 8.7k 78 .
Nov 22 “Hey. I notice you and I are both on X. We should like totally connect.” 28 1 5 7.5k 74 .
Nov 21 When I invent a time machine, the first thing I'll do is go back like 15 years and offer a historical IP-to-geolocation service. If the "Date joined" location starts working in the next few days, you'll know I have succeeded. 13 0 4 5.6k 226 .
Nov 21 Since I'm getting some good (and varied) feedback on my latest podcast episode, here's the whole thing. So, do YOU love coding? Or do you love what your code does for you? And if so, does it truly matter for you to have written it? Here's my journey: https://t.co/xUqk4PTvOF 16 2 6 5.5k 276 .
Nov 21 Seems to be a common sentiment to find out that you THOUGHT you loved programming, but what you actually love is HAVING programmed. And as much as I value artisanal code and human-crafted software, I think we're allowed to step away from this purism. https://t.co/BxJd0U3hFs 18 2 11 14k 276 .
Nov 21 Have customer live chat they said. It will be fun they said. https://t.co/rlMBcApcLc 47 0 9 5.4k 86 .
Nov 20 It’s not AI slop that has turned social media into an antisocial hellscape. It’s PEOPLE willingly and intentionally producing and posting AI slop that have done that. Unlike a world where AI is in control, this has been done by real humans, one AI slop post at a time. 67 2 29 5.1k 272 .
Nov 19 Sane from my perspective. If all you know is AI slop videos and spam email copy, then you’re missing out on the incredible heavy lifting it can do in the shadows. If you’ve ever seen an AI analyze podcasts, detect speakers, find sponsor segments, analyze sentiment, and do all of that in seconds for an hour-long show, at scale, tensing thousands of times a day, you’ll have a different opinion. Cause that’s what’s powering Podscan‘s incredibly deep insight into millions of shows. 26 0 7 7.1k 484 .
Nov 19 Big signal for SEO. And hopefully, no pay-to-cancel subscriptions 🤣 25 0 10 6.5k 67 .
Nov 19 The whole .unwrap() business feels like something a static analysis tool should have caught. Right? 17 0 8 5.1k 100 .
Nov 19 So why again don’t modern laptops come with mobile internet? 197 5 78 25.1k 60 .
Nov 19 It was not DNS! It was a file size limit that helped memory usage on a very hot path component. And a database query creating duplicate result rows. https://t.co/5mfelSmVF2 18 0 4 6k 174 .
Nov 18 I bet, this time, it was not DNS. 46 0 15 11.9k 33 .
Nov 18 Big opportunity here: figure out what ChatGPT does NOT suggest and build an experience around that for people who actively want to avoid what Pieter calls ChatGPT tourists. Anti-AI curation is the new curation. 54 0 15 12.6k 211 .
Nov 18 Sometimes, Podscan Ideas picks up rather... huge ideas. Of course the opportunity here is not to literally build a reactor. But there IS a community of experts, enthusiasts, critics, and media observers around this topic. And they require insights, updates, tools, and more... 21 0 4 5.5k 278 .
Nov 18 🤣 18 0 3 8.1k 1 .
Nov 18 Now THAT is a funny email to peruse at this very moment in time. https://t.co/oKFnoYCpLN 36 0 11 5.5k 88 .
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