Joined March 2014
105 Photos and videos
AlexanderFridriksson retweeted
After 15 years of investing, we realised that truly exceptional founders have something impossible to fake: deeply unconventional lives. We analysed 15,000 founders using five binary signals to measure this: odd hobbies, early signs of exceptionalism, extreme life choices, unusual geographies, non-linear careers. These sum to give a 0-5 score per founder. Whether someone started coding at 10, speaks five languages, climbed Everest or quit a safe job to live in Chile, the signal was deviation from the mean. Rather than focusing on IQ or EQ, we call this metric the Outlier Quotient, or “OQ”. When forecasting founder success, it turns out that OQ was the single most predictive variable in our entire classification model, trained on ~70 different factors. Our OQ score had zero correlation with having worked at a top-tier company or attending an elite university. The signals most VCs rely on aren’t just noisy, they’re blinding. The best founders don’t signal like everyone else, they don’t think like everyone else, and they certainly don’t build like everyone else. If you want to spot breakout talent before the rest of the market, stop screening for conformity. Back the founders the system was built to filter out.
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AlexanderFridriksson retweeted
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AlexanderFridriksson retweeted
My first interview with @lulumeservey, Founder of Rostra. 0:07 How to Destroy a Terrorist Group 3:01 What Makes a Great Cult Leader 4:42 Unleashing Palmer Luckey 7:34 Why Elon Is Unpredictable 10:41 Demanding a Hardcore Culture After the X Acquisition 13:41 How Napoleon Rallied Troops to Volunteer for a Suicide Mission 18:24 Choosing Who to Alienate 20:59 Picking Someone to Fight For 22:59 Deterrence and Shaping Incentives 25:19 Why Google Had an Activist Problem 29:12 Tyrant Mode: Stopping a Leaky Culture 32:11 Building Loyalty 35:58 Why Visuals Are So Powerful 37:40 Time to Train AlexNet: Jensen Huang and Inventing Metrics 39:36 Why People Root for You 42:15 Recruit Based on the Spirit Not the Letter 43:20 The Three Levels of Story 51:01 Secret Truths and Trusting Yourself 55:25 Cicero’s Impossible Trial 58:11 Offense vs Defense 1:03:44 The Roman Concept of Auctoritas
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AlexanderFridriksson retweeted
A Rust dev just killed Headless Chrome. It's called Obscura. The open-source headless browser purpose-built for AI agents and scrapers at scale. Chrome vs Obscura: - Memory: 200MB → 30MB - Binary: 300MB → 70MB - Page load: 500ms → 85ms - Startup: 2s → Instant - Anti-detect: None → Built-in Single binary. No Node, no Chrome, no dependencies. Stealth mode is brutal: → Per-session fingerprint randomization (GPU, canvas, audio, battery) → 3,520 tracker domains blocked by default → navigator.webdriver masked to match real Chrome → Native function masking so detectors can't sniff it out Drop-in replacement for Puppeteer and Playwright over CDP. Zero code changes. If you run agents or serious scraping at scale, this repo prints money. 100% Opensource.
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AlexanderFridriksson retweeted
Stop telling kids to “make eye contact” or “stand up straight.” Vanessa Van Edwards has three much smarter body language hacks that actually work: 1. Ask them to notice the other person’s eye color — it gives a real reason to look up and connect. 2. Hands first — always approach with your hand out so you clearly signal how you want to be greeted (handshake, high-five, fist bump, or wave). 3. Superhero cape — roll your shoulders back and maximize the space between your ear and shoulder. It instantly makes kids look more confident and credible. She uses these herself on Zoom, in photos, and in real life. Small changes. Big difference. What’s one tiny body language trick you wish someone had taught you earlier?
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AlexanderFridriksson retweeted
If you use GitHub (especially if you pay for it!!) consider doing this *immediately* Settings -> Privacy -> Disallow GitHub to train their models on your code. GitHub opted *everyone* into training. No matter if you pay for the service (like I do). WTH github.com/settings/copilot/…
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AlexanderFridriksson retweeted
This is about to be the new hardest working diagram in tech
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AlexanderFridriksson retweeted
... or sacrifice quality. Or performance. Or maintainability. Or anything that us devs would call "non-functional requirements." The stuff that is invisible on first glance... until it's not, and makes the difference between a product users love, and one they hate
literally anyone can ship quickly if they sacrifice reliability. it’s not in any way impressive.
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AlexanderFridriksson retweeted
Mar 22
you're probably underestimating how crazy things are
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AlexanderFridriksson retweeted
Sage observation from @karrisaarinen (CEO of Linear) It now makes SO MUCH sense why I see a bunch of eng teams rebuilt a SaaS vendor in-house with AI, brag about and feel good They are doing side quests... and they don't even know it. And they are not helping their co win!!
Replying to @thdxr
yeah it is but everything in moderation. Internally we always talked about main quest and side quests. Everyone should focus on the main quest, and moderately or not all on side quests. Both quest lines feel productive but only one of them advances the main mission of the company.
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AlexanderFridriksson retweeted
incredibly bullish on the future of tech AI in London. just to name a few: • OpenAI just announced (last week) that London will become its largest research hub outside San Francisco • Anthropic kicked off a 100 person hiring spree across London and Dublin in 2025 • xAI set up shop in London in early 2025, based in X's former Piccadilly office, led by former DeepMind researcher Toby Pohlen • Microsoft hired 24 researchers from Google DeepMind for its London AI hub • Google DeepMind announced its first automated research lab in the UK (opening 2026), focused on discovering new materials using AI and robotics • Perplexity committed £80M to expand London offices • Groq is opening its first UK data centre in London • Cursor chose London as its European HQ
Is it just me or has everyone all of a sudden decide London is the new tech mecca
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AlexanderFridriksson retweeted
This is a monumental release: Concurrent Writes are finally here. When we started Turso more than a year ago, we asked a large number of people what is the thing that SQLite lacked but they wanted to see the most. The result was overwhelming: Concurrent Writes. It is not an easy feature to build: the whole database needs to be able to support MVCC (Multi-Version Concurrency Control). But it possible and doable because we have a full rewrite from a blank slate, and a great and reliable foundation of deterministic testing with both @AntithesisHQ and our own simulator. MVCC is now no longer experimental and will enter a short beta period (which we do for all features) before we call it GA. But that's not the only AMAZING thing in this release: SQLite is known to be a very permissive database. Types are suggestions. Turso now not only support STRICT tables, but comes with a type system including the ability to create your own types with the CREATE TYPE statement. Turso is SQLite reimagined for the age of AI. And it is hard to think of something more important and more overwhelmingly victorious than types. For the full changelog and goodies, see the post below!
Turso 0.5.0 is now out! ⚡ Concurrent writes is now beta 🔍 Full-text search with Tantivy 🔒 STRICT mode stable user-defined types Big thanks to the 50 people who contributed over 3,000 commits into this release! turso.tech/blog/turso-0.5.0
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AlexanderFridriksson retweeted
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As someone who has lived in 8 countries and multiple cities, I can confirm this advice absolutely works!
Social circles are quickly disintegrating because no one wants to do the hosting and organizing anymore Taking on that role is the secret hack to having tons of friends, all it requires is for you to be more stubborn than other people are flaky
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AlexanderFridriksson retweeted
no one’s gonna believe me but becoming a good speaker is really easy just record yourself for 10 minutes every day, first thing in the morning. don’t send it to anyone, just force yourself to watch it later. you’ll notice every possible flaw you can imagine.
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AlexanderFridriksson retweeted
this is a really good
AI eliminated the natural barrier to entry that let OSS projects trust by default. People told me to do something rather than just complain. So I did. Introducing Vouch: explicit trust management for open source. Trusted people vouch for others. github.com/mitchellh/vouch The idea is simple: Unvouched users can't contribute to your projects. Very bad users can be explicitly "denounced", effectively blocked. Users are vouched or denounced by contributors via GitHub issue or discussion comments or via the CLI. Integration into GitHub is as simple as adopting the published GitHub actions. Done. Additionally, the system itself is generic to forges and not tied to GitHub in any way. Who and how someone is vouched or denounced is up to the project. I'm not the value police for the world. Decide for yourself what works for your project and your community. All of the data is stored in a single flat text file in your own repository that can be easily parsed by standard POSIX tools or mainstream languages with zero dependencies. My hope is that eventually projects can form a web of trust so that projects with shared values can share their vouch lists with each other (automatically) so vouching or denouncing a person in one project has ripple effects through to other projects. The idea is based on the already successful system used by @badlogicgames in Pi. Thank you Mario. Ghostty will be integrating this imminently.
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AlexanderFridriksson retweeted
Anthropic have just buried OpenAI and ChatGPT with this ad lmfao There’s no coming back from that
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AlexanderFridriksson retweeted
I'm reminded of this:
Smart people are willing to look stupid for years to get what they want.
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AlexanderFridriksson retweeted
Frieren Season 2 is currently ranked as the #1 anime on MyAnimeList with a score of 9.32! 😱 The 2nd position is also held by Frieren Season 1!
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