Joined February 2015
113 Photos and videos
Isildur's Heir retweeted
May 19
This belongs to all of us.
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Isildur's Heir retweeted
May 18
Creator of C , Bjarne Stroustrup: AI-generated code isn't ready — it generates more bugs, more bloat, more security holes, and is nearly impossible to validate "senior developers are already retiring rather than deal with it" The problem is that even a small prompt change can shift the entire codebase in unpredictable ways
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Isildur's Heir retweeted
Most AI engineers know how to use MCP. Very few understand the server patterns that make production AI systems actually scalable. ⚡ This breakdown of the top 5 MCP server architectures is pure gold for anyone building serious AI agents in 2026. 👇 1️⃣ Tool Server Lets AI agents perform actions using APIs & external tools. Think: • sending emails • database queries • triggering workflows • automation tasks 2️⃣ Resource Server Feeds structured context into the LLM. Perfect for: 📂 files 🗄️ databases 📑 documents 📚 knowledge systems 3️⃣ Prompt Server Reusable prompts as infrastructure. Versioned. Parameterized. Shareable. This is where prompt engineering starts turning into software engineering. 4️⃣ Gateway Server One endpoint controlling multiple MCP servers. Handles: ✅ routing ✅ auth ✅ rate limiting ✅ orchestration 5️⃣ Proxy / Bridge Server Connects legacy systems to modern AI agents without rewriting everything. Huge for enterprise AI adoption. 🚀 The biggest shift happening right now: AI systems are moving from: “single chatbot apps” to “modular AI infrastructure.” The engineers who understand MCP architecture early will have a massive edge building: • AI copilots • autonomous agents • enterprise AI systems • multi-agent workflows Bookmark this. One of the cleanest MCP architecture references I’ve seen so far.
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Isildur's Heir retweeted
THIS IS PEAK WHATABOUTERY 🔥 REPORTER: Why should Norway trust India when fundamental rights are being violated? MEA: We have Gandhi, ancient civilisation, and a Constitution that guarantees fundamental rights. REPORTER 🎯: Exactly. I know India has fundamental rights. That is why I asked about violations. MEA: If rights are violated, people can go to court. 😐 REPORTER: That’s the point. Why are people forced to go to court for basic rights? MEA: It’s my press conference. I will decide. REPORTER: When will PM take free questions from the press? MEA: Next question.
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Isildur's Heir retweeted
the engineer who built Claude Code just dropped a 28-minute video on how to write prompts that actually work I've seen $300 courses that don't cover what he shows in the first 10 minutes CLAUDE.md files, memory shortcuts, parallel sessions, prompting patterns all in one video and completely free works whether you're a developer, a beginner, or someone who's been using Claude for months based on this, I put together 18 things you can copy and use in Claude today full guide in the article below
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Isildur's Heir retweeted
I don't understand why so many people want US, UK, Canadian, or German citizenship. Here are 12 websites to find remote jobs that pay in USD worldwide:
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Isildur's Heir retweeted
STANFORD UNIVERSITY compressed the entire field of LLMs and transformers into free cheatsheets anyone can use today. It covers everything from self-attention to Flash Attention, LoRA, SFT, MoE, distillation, quantization, RAG, agents, and LLM-as-a-judge. 100% Free and Open Source
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Isildur's Heir retweeted

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Isildur's Heir retweeted
🚨 In 1993, Steve Jobs literally predicted the future of technology decades before it happened. Most people still haven’t seen this. Long before the iPhone, modern Internet, or AI boom… He was already describing it. Watching it today feels unreal. He talked about computers becoming personal companions not just tools, but extensions of how we think and live. Devices you carry, systems that understand you, and technology that feels almost human. He imagined a world where everything is connected, information flows instantly, and software adapts to people not the other way around. And his biggest insight? The future isn’t about machines. It’s about people. That’s why this still hits hard. Because while most people wait for the future… A few can see it coming years before it arrives.
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Isildur's Heir retweeted
This is probably my favorite Feynman lecture -- Seeking New Laws, 1964. Basically him discussing how to develop the next great theory of physics. Really relevant today with everyone trying to create an automated Feynman for AI research
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Isildur's Heir retweeted
Oh wow, you can now build a complete AI data analyst in under a couple of hours! 100% Open-source. It's a CLI that maps your database schema to context files, so you can use an agent or model to query your data. All of your data stays on your computer. This is not a SaaS, and you don't need API keys to access it. No SaaS. No API keys.
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Isildur's Heir retweeted
Replying to @e_opore
Researchers studying artificial intelligence often focus on unresolved challenges that limit real-world adoption from a systems engineering perspective.
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Isildur's Heir retweeted
She literally explained How to trigger dopamine in conversation and master small talk:
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Isildur's Heir retweeted
Jensen Huang literally explains what a smart person really looks like in this age.
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Isildur's Heir retweeted
Andrew Huberman just shared a wild, science-backed trick to fall asleep when your mind is racing (and it takes 30 seconds): Close your eyes → Slowly move them side to side → Make slow counter-clockwise & clockwise circles → Look up, down → Try a gentle “cross-eyed” gaze toward the bridge of your nose → Exhale long and slow. Why it works: These eye movements signal your vestibular system & cerebellum to shut down proprioception (awareness of body position). You literally forget where your body is, racing thoughts quiet, and sleep onset accelerates. He says many people fall asleep faster this way — it’s not woo, it’s neuroscience (vestibular-ocular reflex proprioceptive shutdown). Clip from this 5:54 masterclass — Huberman on why “just relax” never works, but this eye-movement sequence often does. Tried it yet? Did your brain finally shut off, or still racing? Drop your result below 👇 (and how many seconds it took)
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Isildur's Heir retweeted
Instead of watching Netflix, learn OpenClaw in 317 minutes.

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Isildur's Heir retweeted
Top 50 Movies For Matured Audience 🔞🎬🎬🎬🎬 1. Fifty Shades of Grey (2015) 2. Fifty Shades Darker (2017) 3. Fifty Shades Freed (2018) 4. 365 Days (2020) 5. 365 Days: This Day (2022) 6. 365 Days: The Next 365 Days (2022) 7. Blue Is the Warmest Color (2013) 8. Malcolm & Marie (2021) 9. Unfaithful (2002) 10. Secretary (2002) 11. Basic Instinct (1992) 12. Nymphomaniac Vol. I (2013) 13. Nymphomaniac Vol. II (2013) 14. Eyes Wide Shut (1999) 15. Call Me by Your Name (2017) 16. Love (2015) 17. Original Sin (2001) 18. The Dreamers (2003) 19. Cruel Intentions (1999) 20. Closer (2004) 21. Blue Valentine (2010) 22. Revolutionary Road (2008) 23. Femme Fatale (2002) 24. The Lover (1992) 25. 9½ Weeks (1986) 26. In the Mood for Love (2000) 27. A Dangerous Method (2011) 28. Damage (1992) 29. Bitter Moon (1992) 30. Crash (1996) 31. The Handmaiden (2016) 32. Last Tango in Paris (1972) 33. Y Tu Mamá También (2001) 34. Shame (2011) 35. Lust, Caution (2007) 36. The Reader (2008) 37. Adore (2013) 38. Chloe (2009) 39. The Girl Next Door (2004) 40. Fatal Attraction (1987) 41. Indecent Proposal (1993) 42. The Voyeurs (2021) 43. Deep Water (2022) 44. The Royal Treatment (2022 45. Wild Things (1998) 46. The Piano Teacher (2001) 47. Room in Rome (2010) 48. Sleeping Beauty (2011) 49. Love & Other Drugs (2010) 50. The Princess Switch 3 (2021)
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Isildur's Heir retweeted
In 1998, Warren Buffett gave a 1-hour masterclass on how to never lose money investing.

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Isildur's Heir retweeted
Charlie Munger: "One of my favorite tricks is the inversion process." "If somebody hired me to fix India, I would immediately say, 'What could I do if I really wanted to hurt India?' I'd figure out all the things that could most easily hurt India — and then I'd figure out how to avoid them." "It works better frequently to invert the problem."
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