electrons & bits ⚡️🤖

Joined March 2016
61 Photos and videos
Megha Jain retweeted
Apr 28
We’re a proud presenting sponsor of this episode of @stepchange_vc! 🔌 @ben8128 and @anayshah deliver a must-listen deep dive on the history of the power grid. At 3:16:32: How vertical integration can help solve the AI demand shock. 🎧 Listen: stepchange.show/grid #aiinfrastructure
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Megha Jain retweeted
All I can say is go star our GitHub repo :D
Delve knows no shame. They allegedly sold another YC company’s (@simdotai) open source tool as a standalone product to companies like Notion and Brex without attribution, violating the Apache license, and then lied about it to the founders of Sim. The founders of Sim (@emkara) are left with nothing while Delve walks away with the money.
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bay st is where it’s at. iykyk
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so cool to see @andrewjrod combine his love for scientific research and his love for @amydeng_ to pursue a cure for this rare tumor ❤️ if you work in neuroendocrinology or have any connection to the community, please DM him!
My girlfriend has a brain tumor. I’m going to cure it myself. 🧵
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ironically, gaming the system in this way is very jain of them. here for it
Students at Stanford are pretending to be Jains so they can spend their meal plan money at Whole Foods instead of the school cafeteria:
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i’ve been reading a lot of technical writing lately and it’s making me wish more things were written this way. put together a framework for writing informational pieces, hopefully this makes things more readable for humans as well as agents crawling the internet 🕸️
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wrote about some thoughts on love, building meaningful friendship and community, and kindness — all consistent themes from my 2025 :’)
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Megha Jain retweeted
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aesthetics, as always, are coming full circle. the look and feel of tech (hardware or software, but esp hardware) will soon begin to resemble the aesthetics of early 2000s cyperpunk/technofuturism
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a little too on the nose
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All this talk about the memory shortage got me thinking about the memories you and I made together. You’re still in my RAM. Hope you’re doing well… tell your mama I miss her cooking
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Megha Jain retweeted
Thrilled to partner with @bscholl and the @boomsupersonic team to leverage their supersonic jet engine technology to power the AI factories of the future! More compute coming soon!
A new product, a new customer, a new financing! Introducing Superpower: a 42MW natural gas turbine optimized for AI datacenters, built on our supersonic technology. Superpower launches with a 1.21GW order from @CrusoeAI Backstory 🧵👇
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Some personal news: I’ve joined @CrusoeAI as a backend engineer on Crusoe Cloud! It's clear that we are at an inflection point in human history: I've always believed that compute and electricity are two sides of the same coin, and this has now become abundantly clear with power availability becoming the main bottleneck in the AI race. I'm beyond stoked to be working at a place that is not only building effective AI cloud infra, but has built the physical infra stack from the ground up, prioritizing energy efficiency from the very beginning. Super excited for this next chapter, and grateful for everyone who helped in the process! Also forever grateful to the amazing team at Crux - in many ways, I feel like I grew up there, and consider myself lucky to have learned from incredibly talented, thoughtful, and driven engineers operators :') If you use Crusoe have thoughts, reach out! DMs are open.
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with all the hyperscaler nuclear deals in the news this year, most people assume a majority of data centers are going BTM (they actually aren’t). there’s still a ton of available generation stranded grid infra being used
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I read a tweet a few years ago about a woman who told herself it was "too late" to go to law school at 32, but realized that in 3 years she could either: a) be 35 and a lawyer or b) be 35 and saying the same words. this changed my brain chemistry. it's not over until it's over.
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you can always tell when a book is written by a journalist/podcaster in the way that it reads: usually like a collection of vignettes or stories, instead of one cohesive argument (with supporting sub-arguments) that builds throughout the book
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of course there are exceptions to this, but I've found that these books are typically harder to follow since there is no one cohesive "thread" throughout, and that they typically lack a satisfactory solution or conclusion to the issues presented earlier
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