Joined March 2023
250 Photos and videos
Xiang Jemin retweeted
this is f*cking gold How to build your first AI agent (Full guide) if I had this a year ago, I would've shipped my first agent in a day instead of 2 weeks in the right hands, this changes everything:
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Xiang Jemin retweeted
Jun 13
Google owns one of the most powerful learning tools in the world. It’s free. It’s been available for months. Yet 95% of people still use it the wrong way. Here are 8 NotebookLM use cases that can save you hours of time. 🔖 Bookmark this — you’ll thank yourself later.
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Xiang Jemin retweeted
NotebookLM PDFs Just Became Unfair. It makes reading long documents a waste of time. Here are 7 prompts to extract value in minutes 👇🧵
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Xiang Jemin retweeted
an all-time bet on yourself
JUST IN: SpaceX officially opens at $1,960,000,000,000.00 in market cap.
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Xiang Jemin retweeted
Replying to @EndWokeness
Sounds like the UN?…….America, you better pay attention!…….you tube, nothing has changed!
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Xiang Jemin retweeted
Wendt is clearly a stock to watch from Muruguppa group if someone has patience for the next few years. D: invested and biased.
Murugappa Group is quietly tightening its grip on Wendt (India). 🔥 Via CUMI, they’ve now secured sole promoter control in Wendt (India) German JV partner Wendt GmbH fully exited its 37.5% stake via OFS in May 2025. Deal at discounted floor of ₹6,500/Share (₹487 Cr total offer size). New structure in place with CUMI as sole promoter (37.5% holding). What's interesting after the acquisition ? Debt-free balance sheet Cleaner ownership structure Strong push into new products & exports Focus on customer additions & market expansion The First Few Quarters under a single-promoter structure could be worth tracking closely.
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Xiang Jemin retweeted
Our guide on how to use Claude AI for Investing is now free for all readers for a limited time. $SPCX With @MikeFritzell of Asian Century Stocks. Our most bookmarked piece ever. ai-supremacy.com/p/how-to-us…
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Xiang Jemin retweeted
Just incredible interest in @MikeFritzell's piece on how to use Claude for Equity Research and Investing. He goes into quite a lot of depth. 🎓
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Xiang Jemin retweeted
How to get ahead of 90% of people
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Xiang Jemin retweeted
I have seen this soap do absolutely wondrous things for people's skin. ◇ Eczema ◇ Dandruff ◇ Fungal infections ◇ Acne ◇ Dry skin etc. All of the ingredients have antifungal / antibacterial / exfoliating / skin regenerating properties. Doesn't smell fantastic but if you have persistent skin issues it would be at the top of my list.
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Xiang Jemin retweeted
A Chicago philosopher wrote one book in 1940 proving that 95% of the books you have read in your life, you didn't actually read, and Charlie Munger has been telling people to read it for 50 years. His name was Mortimer Adler. He spent 40 years at the University of Chicago, ran the editorial board of the Encyclopædia Britannica, and built his entire career on one uncomfortable observation about the people around him. Most adults who called themselves well-read had not actually read a book in the real sense even once. They had run their eyes over the pages, registered the words, formed a vague impression, and put it back on the shelf. The book had passed through them without ever entering them. In 1940 he wrote How to Read a Book. It has stayed in print for 86 years. Charlie Munger recommends it. Naval Ravikant recommends it. Fareed Zakaria recommends it. Every serious thinker who builds a career on absorbing information eventually finds their way to this book, and the reason is that Adler had isolated something nobody else was naming clearly. There are four levels of reading. Almost everyone is stuck on the second one. The fourth level is so different from what most people call reading that you have probably never done it in your entire life. Level one is elementary. You learn it as a child. You decode the letters into words and the words into sentences. You finish the sentence and understand roughly what it said. This is reading the way a 7-year-old reads, and almost every adult on earth has stopped developing past this point in some quiet way. Level two is inspectional. This is skimming. You move through a book quickly to figure out what it is broadly about. You read the back cover, scan the table of contents, glance at a few paragraphs, and form an opinion. Most adults who claim to have read 50 books a year are actually doing this. They are inspecting books, not reading them. They walk away with a vague sense of the argument and almost none of the evidence that supports it. Level three is analytical. This is the level Adler said most people have never properly experienced. You take one book and you wrestle with it for as long as it takes. You identify the question the author is trying to answer. You map their argument from front to back. You write your disagreements in the margins. You force yourself to articulate, in your own words, what the author is claiming and why. The point is not to finish the book. The point is to argue with it as if the author were sitting across the table from you. Most people never do this once in their life, because it is exhausting and slow and feels nothing like the reading they were taught as children. Level four is the one almost nobody knows exists. Adler called it syntopical reading. The word means "across topics," and the technique is something closer to running a small private research lab in your own head. You pick a single question that actually matters to you. How does power corrupt people. Why do civilizations collapse. What makes a marriage last. How does a person change their own mind. Then you assemble five or ten or twenty books from different authors, different centuries, different traditions, all of them taking a swing at the same question. You do not read any of them cover to cover. You move between them. You find the chapter in book three that addresses the same question as the chapter in book seven. You force those two authors to argue with each other inside your own head. The book stops being the unit of reading. The question becomes the unit. And the authors become voices in a conversation you are now hosting. This is the level where reading stops being consumption and starts being construction. You are no longer absorbing what someone else thinks. You are building a position of your own out of the friction between people who disagreed. Adler argued that this is the only level of reading where you stop being a passive receiver of other people's ideas and start being someone who can produce ideas of their own. The reason Charlie Munger has been recommending this book for 50 years is that this is exactly how Munger has always thought. He calls it building a latticework of mental models. The technique he is describing is just syntopical reading applied for a lifetime. You take the strongest insight from psychology, the strongest insight from biology, the strongest insight from economics, and you stack them against the same problem until something new falls out the bottom. The reason most people never reach level four is not that it is intellectually difficult. It is that it is logistically uncomfortable. It requires you to keep multiple books open at once. It requires you to take notes that nobody is going to grade. It requires you to abandon the goal of finishing books and replace it with the goal of answering questions. This is also why AI just changed everything Adler was teaching. NotebookLM, Claude, and tools like them let you do syntopical reading at a speed that would have looked like magic to a Chicago philosopher in 1940. You upload 10 books on the same question. You ask the AI to surface every place those authors agree and every place they contradict each other. The technique Adler said almost nobody on earth had reached can now be run on a Sunday afternoon by anyone with a laptop and one good question. The technique was always the unlock. The bottleneck used to be time. The bottleneck is now curiosity. Most people will keep reading the way they always have. A book at a time. Eyes over the pages. No question driving it. No other authors in the room. Adler called that level two for a reason. You are not behind on your reading list. You are behind on the level you are reading at.
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Xiang Jemin retweeted
Time is the currency of life. Money is not. 🔑 🔑
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A Paki pig donating to this rag. Wow. Not surprising.
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Xiang Jemin retweeted
An amazing must read book — *The Greatest Books of Ancient India* by Dr. @PradeepChakravarthy & Dr. R. Thiagarajan 14 foundational texts of ancient India — on statecraft, science, maths, arts, medicine & more — made easy and very accessible for all ages 👍
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Xiang Jemin retweeted
Kamath Associates (Zerodha founders) Loaded Up NITCO As Well In Apr 2025 Via two aggressive back-to-back open market bulk deals: 8.12 lakh shares at ₹120 7 lakh shares at ₹131 Heavy-Hitter Line-Up Now Backing The NITCO Sanjay Dangi Mathew Cyriac Kamath Associates Interesting institutional-quality conviction emerging around the company. 🔥
Sanjay Dangi - Man behind Authum Investment & Infrastructure A fund not widely known. NITCO was drowning in debt. Quietly acquired 97% of NITCO's outstanding debt Then converted ₹1,037 Crore of debt into equity, 49.3% stake in NITCO. NITCO stock moved from ₹26 to ₹126 within a year
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Xiang Jemin retweeted
May 27
This is the result of the barium sulphate heat rejecting paints I keep posting about. Please, do this for slums. Paint those flimsy roofs, tops of autos, any sky facing surface to radiate heat into deep space and cool the surface and the space under it. Heck you could put the paint on wide brimmed hats to keep your heads cool in the day. Save lives.
"लोग AC पर 20-30 हजार खर्च कर रहे हैं... ये भाईसाहब ने छत पर जो किया, उससे 15 डिग्री ठंडक फ्री में!😱
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Xiang Jemin retweeted
1/5 I'm a cardiologist. Here's why I recommend men take 5 mg of tadalafil — Cialis — every single day. Not for ED. Not for performance. I take it for the same reason every serious longevity physician I respect does: to protect my cardiovascular system, my brain perfusion, and my endothelial health at the most fundamental level. This drug — famous for all the wrong reasons — has quietly become one of the most powerful tools in preventive cardiology. And the data is now too strong for me to keep quiet about it.
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Xiang Jemin retweeted
"लोग AC पर 20-30 हजार खर्च कर रहे हैं... ये भाईसाहब ने छत पर जो किया, उससे 15 डिग्री ठंडक फ्री में!😱
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Xiang Jemin retweeted
Globalists want these 3rd world scammers to make more profit, import people who don’t eat meat and love living in shitty conditions. They are also pro Israel scabs.
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Xiang Jemin retweeted
May 26
Promoters putting their money where their mouth is. 👇 Websol Energy System Ltd. ($WEBELSOLAR) just disclosed a solid insider equity consolidation: • The Transaction: Websol Green Projects converted 1,21,00,000 warrants into equity shares. • The Shift: Acquirer's individual stake jumps from 5.09% to 7.74%. • Consolidated Position: Total Promoter PAC holding reaches 29.72% of voting capital. Why this matters to investors: Warrant conversion means clearing up future equity overhang and replacing it with direct skin in the game. It’s a strong vote of confidence from management on their execution path. 📊 #RenewableEnergy #NSE #BSE #ValueInvesting
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