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Chamath Palihapitiya
God is in the details.
The bigger picture of Colbert’s cancellation - and that Kimmel and Fallon will soon follow - is that network television is unmoored and decaying quickly.
Watching content, on demand, has completely eroded the cultural habit that linear TV enabled/created. The only thing left keeping linear TV afloat is live sports.
I think you can expect this to have broad and long run consequences. The biggest being what new sense-making mechanisms replace linear TV (news, investigative journalism etc).
The obvious answer is YouTubers and Podcasters but their breadth isn’t broad enough yet. Focusing on this can be a big opportunity.
Shaping narratives online, in the future, will mean shaping future consciousness which ultimately shapes outcomes.
20,33K
Let the stablecoins rip!
More dollar hegemony is net good for the world, not just the US.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent21 tuntia sitten
Blockchain technologies will power the next generation of payments, and the U.S. dollar is coming onchain.
Thanks to President Trump’s visionary leadership, and @SenatorHagerty's important work in Congress, the GENIUS Act will help cement the U.S. dollar as the global reserve currency for generations to come.
131,52K
I agree.
Of the numerous product efforts I’ve been a part of over 25 years in Silicon Valley, building Software Factory has been special and has felt very different.
We’ve pivoted several times (normal), have had a bunch of setbacks (normal) but we’ve also gotten a lot of customer traction very early (abnormal) and I see how to build a network effect for software/code (didn’t think it was possible).
No matter what happens, I’ve really enjoyed the process.
Go out and build something - there’s no better journey to be on.

signüll17.7. klo 05.10
the coolest part of building anything right now isn’t even the thing you're doing necessarily.. it’s the story you get to tell about how you made it.
the tools are absolutely ridiculous. it’s like narrating your way through a magic trick in real time.
“oh i typed some nonsense to something & it replied with code that worked.”
“i pushed a button & a voice spoke back.”
“i sketched a dream & it came to life in 3 seconds.”
in many ways the process has also become the product. the story is also the flex.
134,21K
“2025 was supposed to be the year of agents. so far it’s been the year of letdowns.”
That line kind of says it all.
Everyone’s been let down by agent POCs this year. Stuff that looks cool in a demo but falls apart the second you try to use it reliably in/for production.
I think that’s why so many thousands of people have already signed up for 8090’s Software Factory waitlist. From our experience, after trying so many agent POCs, it hits differently because it’s not trying to be flashy, it just works. It’s built as a system, and not a stunt. And it’s being hardened on many very demanding customers and use cases.
We’re making good progress towards a Sep1 Beta, we decided to start opening the product to a select group of Alpha users starting in August.
We’re asking them to break Software Factory, malign it and generally find what would stop them from relying on it. Let the chaos begin!
Please consider giving it a try:
👉

Indra 🇮🇳6.7. klo 03.53
some intern at mckinsey is probably slopcoating a report on this but let me give you an insider news: most large corps are not happy with the agentic systems & POCs they’ve done this year. 2025 was supposed to be the year of agents. so far it’s been the year of letdowns.
285,1K
The best part of a well lived professional life is the journey.
The second best part of a well lived professional life is the moment before victory.
Everything else is a distraction.

Kyle Porter15.7. klo 21.04
"I love being able to play this game for a living. It's one of the greatest joys of my life, but does it fill the deepest wants and desires of my heart? Absolutely not."
All-time five minutes here from Scottie.
Must watch stuff.
461,19K
Agree with Swami's framing.
That is why 8090's Software Factory centralizes spec driven development to keep engineering and product in sync.
Whether you’re a solo dev, or working in a team, you need a source of truth. Markdown files in hidden directories doesn't cut it.
👉

Swami Sivasubramanian14.7. klo 23.44
Before software engineers even begin writing code, they have to set the stage of the entire development process. This process requires engineers to make complex tradeoffs between requirements, system design, and implementations details. Current IDEs that rely on AI features, like chat and inline coding, can help engineers get the job done quickly on small development tasks. Still, engineers spend much more time on larger projects—even after the initial code is generated—by conducting rigorous testing and creating documentation. This is where today’s AI IDEs can do more to accelerate the development lifecycle—and this is why we built Kiro.
Kiro is an AI IDE that helps you go from prototype to production with spec-driven development and agent hooks. From simple to complex tasks, Kiro works alongside you to turn prompts into detailed specs, then into working code, docs, and test so what you build is exactly what you want and ready to share with your team. After a developer builds the code with Kiro, Kiro’s agent hooks help engineers solve challenging problems and automate tasks like generating documentation and unit tests. Kiro brings structure and mature engineering practices to AI coding, so you can go from concept to application while being in the driver’s seat every step of the way.
Kiro is free during preview, and supports Mac, Windows, and Linux, and most popular programming languages. We're excited for you to try it out and let us know what you think ➡️
115,93K
From the invention of planes until the 1980s (or thereabouts) it was all about protecting the passengers and pilots from the plane itself.
But technology and automation made the planes increasingly and exceptionally safer.
From the 1980s to the early 2000s (until 9/11 really) it was then about protecting the plane and pilots from certain passengers - specifically hijackers.
Now, it’s pretty clear that as passengers are better screened and as the planes have become even more reliable, the only risk that is left is pilot error or sabotage.
We need more supervision/automation that protects the plane and passengers from the pilots.
It’s a narrow failure mode that is unrecoverable but totally avoidable.
196,77K
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