Joined March 2007
16 Photos and videos
Epsilon retweeted
HOW STUDENTS ARE USING GEMINI TO PREDICT EXAM TOPICS (Up to 40–50% ACCURACY) Not cheating.
Not guessing.
Only pattern analysis. Copy these 7 prompts to predict any exam. BOOKMARK or LOSE A Thread↴
35
41
118
14,453
Epsilon retweeted
80 AI tools to finish months of work in minutes. 1. Research - ChatGPT - Copilot - Gemini - Abacus - Perplexity 2. Image - Fotor - Dalle 3 - Stability AI - Midjourney - Microsoft Designer 3. CopyWriting - Rytr - Copy AI - Writesonic - Adcreative AI 4. Writing - Jasper - HIX AI - Jenny AI - Textblaze - Quillbot 5. Website - 10Web - Durable - Framer - Style AI 6. Video - Klap - Opus - Eightify - InVideo - HeyGen - Runway - ImgCreator AI - Morphstudio .xyz 7. Meeting - Tldv - Otter - Noty AI - Fireflies 8. SEO - VidIQ - Seona AI - BlogSEO - Keywrds ai 9. Chatbot - Droxy - Chatbase - Mutual info - Chatsimple 10. Presentation - Decktopus - Slides AI - Gamma AI - Designs AI - Beautiful AI 11. Automation - Make - Zapier - Xembly - Bardeen 12. Prompts - FlowGPT - Alicent AI - PromptBox - Promptbase - Snack Prompt 13. UI/UX - Figma - Uizard - UiMagic - Photoshop 14. Design - Canva - Flair AI - Designify - Clipdrop - Autodraw - Magician design 15. Logo Generator - Looka - Designs AI - Brandmark - Stockimg AI - Namecheap 16. Audio - Lovo ai - Eleven labs - Songburst AI - Adobe Podcast 17. Productivity - Merlin - Tinywow - Notion AI - Adobe Sensei - Personal AI 18. Social media management - Tapilo - Typefully - Hypefury - TweetHunter Follow me for more.
173
962
3,064
221,011
Epsilon retweeted
STOP TELLING CHATGPT “CHECK MY GRAMMAR AND WRITING.” Bad prompt = Bad result. Use these prompts and you’ll see the difference:
115
3,537
23,729
2,977,698
Epsilon retweeted
BREAKING: Don't copy and paste answers from ChatGPT. ChatGPT writing is easily detectable. Use these prompts instead and see the magic:
17
210
1,038
344,686
Epsilon retweeted
You're negotiating your salary. They ask: "What are your expectations?" You throw out a number. Silence. Interview ends. Offer is $15K less than you're worth. Say this instead:
246
508
19,530
8,727,136
Epsilon retweeted
It's happening. AI is enabling creatives everywhere. 🤯 Creators are dropping mind blowing videos with Kling, Hailuo, Veo… 10 wild examples👇 1. Be any superhero...

253
70
662
524,680
4 Dec 2025
I earned a statement of accomplishment on DataCamp for completing Introduction to Python! datacamp.com/completed/state… #datacamp

86
Epsilon retweeted

1,316
5,386
72,654
11,330,317
Epsilon retweeted
17 Aug 2024
Accurate conclusion (read the whole post)
People need to stop overreacting about Kamala’s plan to reduce food inflation, as if it would lead to communism, mass starvation, and the end of America. I worked in M&A in the food industry. Here’s a step-by-step summary of what would actually happen: 1. The government announces that grocery retailers aren’t allowed to raise prices. 2. Grocery stores, which operate on 1-2% net margins, can’t survive if their suppliers raise prices. So the government announces that food producers (Kraft Heinz, ConAgra, Tyson, Hormel, et. al.) also aren’t allowed to raise prices. 3. Not all grocery stores are created equal. Stores in lower-income areas make less money than those in higher-income areas, as the former disproportionately sell lower-margin prepackaged foods (“center of the store”) instead of higher-margin fresh products like meat (“perimeter of the store”). Because stores in lower-income areas aren’t able to cover overhead (remember, even if their wholesale costs are fixed, their labor, utilities, insurance, and other operating expenses aren’t fixed… yet), grocery chains start to shut them down. Food deserts in rural areas and in low-income urban areas alike become worse. 4. Meanwhile, margins for food producers are also quickly eroding. Their primary costs (ingredients, energy, and labor) aren’t fixed, and their shrinking gross profits leave less cash flow available to cover overhead, maintain facilities, and reinvest in additional production capacity. 5. Grocery chains, which have finite shelf space, start to repurpose their stores (those they didn’t have to shut down, I should say) to sell more non-price-controlled items—everything from nutrition supplements to kitchenware to apparel—and less price-controlled food products. Your local Kroger or Safeway starts to look and feel more like a Walmart. 6. Food producers stop making products with lower margins. Grocery chain start competing with each other to secure inventory. Since they can’t compete by offering stronger prices (remember, producers aren’t allowed to raise prices here, and, even if they could, grocery chains no longer have the gross profit to bear price increases), they compete on things like payment terms. 7. Small grocery chains start to shut down entirely, or get sold to larger chains like Kroger. In addition to not being able to cover fixed costs, a major reason for this is because they can no longer reliably secure delivery of products, due to producers prioritizing sales to larger customers, which are able to leverage their stronger balance sheets to offer superior payment terms. 8. Smaller food producers—which typically sell via distributors, rather than directly to grocery chains—start to go out of business. Because these producers have an additional step their value chains, and because they have lower volumes over which to spread their fixed costs, their cost structure is inherently disadvantaged compared to major food producers. When grocery stores aren’t able to raise prices, cutting product costs becomes all the more important, and deprioritizing purchases from smaller producers is an easy way to do so. 9. As supply chains break down, lines start to form outside grocery stores every morning. Cities assign police officers to patrol store parking lots, and food producers draft contingency plans to assign armed escorts to delivery trucks. 10. The federal government announces a program to issue block grants for states to purchase and operate shuttered grocery stores. The USDA also seizes closed-down production facilities. 11. The government announces that prices for all key food costs—corn, wheat, cattle, energy, etc.—are also now fixed, to stop “profiteers” from gouging the now-government-operated food industry. 12. Shockingly, the government struggles to operate one of the most complex industries on the planet. The entire food supply chain starts imploding. 13. Communism, mass starvation, and the end of America quickly ensue. Hey wait a second
8,551
34,242
135,916
28,477,264
Epsilon retweeted
How we screen tenants: 1. 680 credit score 2. Income 3x the monthly rent 3. Clean background check 4. No open housing court cases 5. Landlord reference 6. Employer reference Anything else you look for?
215
18
437
153,585
Epsilon retweeted
Best resume template!
690
20,926
199,596
40,254,884
Epsilon retweeted
KAMALA HARRIS: “How DARE we say Merry Christmas!” This woman hates everything America stands for.

7,410
19,073
79,737
8,480,150
Epsilon retweeted
Everyone: “Book your flight on a Tuesday at 3 pm, you’ll get the cheapest tickets!” As an airline veteran, this is a B.S. myth. Timing matters, but not in the way you think. If you've ever felt cheated by sudden price hikes, this is what most airlines don’t want you to know:
211
3,812
24,861
8,152,406
Epsilon retweeted
6 May 2024
Replying to @thejohnhenry
It’s wonderful. I’d just add one more thing: Heidi can incorporate, sign a quit claim deed in the LLC name, and rent a part of home back to Linda. This way, the interest and property taxes can be deductible. Linda can put her $480K in a a fund that pays her monthly to pay the “rent” to Heidi.
1
3
310
Epsilon retweeted
Donald Trump to pro-Palestinians: “If you sympathize with jihadists then we don’t want you in our country. I will cancel student visas for Hamas sympathizers on college campuses. Come 2025 we will find you and we will deport you.”

1,952
6,693
34,997
2,383,113
Epsilon retweeted
In 2023, you can only put $6,500 into a Roth IRA. But if you have the right 401(k) plan, you could potentially put an extra $43,500 this year into a Roth IRA. Here's how you do it:
24
77
567
170,110
Epsilon retweeted
5 Nov 2023
Example of Grok vs typical GPT, where Grok has current information, but other doesn’t
Community note
Grok received two segmented prompts. The typical GPT received a single prompt. Smaller chained prompts may result in a large language model providing more consistent answers. promptengineering.org/getting-starte…
7,003
10,718
138,627
41,284,786