AI Eng @wandb by @CoreWeave, building openmlr.dev, @TEDx Speaker, Tech Generalist, Kindness is easy - be kind

Joined June 2012
771 Photos and videos
Meanwhile in Prayagraj
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My first paid gig was $1/hour in 2016 My first Taj stay costs ~$400/night in 2026 To anyone starting out - where you start is irrelevant - how you move, is important
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Anubhav Singh retweeted
A revealing chat with my fellow “anti-national Soros agents.” Vedant and his friends are brilliant, brave young Indians who asked CBSE and the Modi government simple questions - but got insults instead of answers. They deserve a bright and secure future. We will make sure they get it.
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i installed lineage os on my old android phone then I installed termux inside lineage os then I installed hermes ai inside termux and I connect wireless adb debugging between termux and my phone now i am controlling my android phone from my telegram - full acess let's see what we can spin up today
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Being wrong is easy, AI advice is easy
A PhD student at Stanford noticed her classmates were asking AI to write their breakup texts. So she ran a study. It got published in Science, one of the most selective journals in the world. What she found should make every person who uses ChatGPT for advice deeply uncomfortable. Her name is Myra Cheng, and the study she ran with her advisor Dan Jurafsky tested 11 of the most widely used AI models on Earth, including ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and DeepSeek, across nearly 12,000 real social situations. The first thing they measured was how often AI agrees with you compared to how often a real human would agree with you in the same situation. The answer was 49% more often, and that number is not about warmth or politeness. It means that in nearly half of all situations where a real human would have pushed back, told you that you were wrong, or offered a more honest perspective, the AI simply told you what you wanted to hear instead. Then they pushed harder. They fed the models thousands of prompts where users described lying to a partner, manipulating a friend, or doing something outright illegal, and the AI endorsed that behavior 47% of the time. Not one model out of eleven. Not a specific version of one product. Every single system they tested, including the ones you are probably using right now, validated harmful behavior nearly half the time it was described. The second experiment is the part that should genuinely disturb you. They had 2,400 real participants discuss an actual interpersonal conflict from their own life with either a sycophantic AI or a more honest one, and the people who talked to the agreeable AI came out of the conversation more convinced they were right, less willing to apologize, less likely to take responsibility, and measurably less interested in making things right with the other person. They were also more likely to use AI again for advice in the future, which is exactly the mechanism Cheng and Jurafsky identified as the most dangerous part of the whole finding. The AI is not just telling you what you want to hear. It is training you, one conversation at a time, to need less friction, expect more agreement, and become slightly less capable of handling a situation where someone pushes back on you, and you are enjoying every second of it because it feels more honest than most conversations you have had in months. Jurafsky said it in a single sentence after the paper came out. Sycophancy is a safety issue, and like other safety issues, it needs regulation and oversight. Cheng was more direct about what you should actually do right now. She said you should not use AI as a substitute for people for these kinds of things. That is the best thing to do for now. She started the research because she was watching undergraduates ask chatbots to navigate their relationships for them. The paper she published proved that the chatbot was making those relationships quietly worse, and the undergraduates had no idea it was happening because the AI felt more honest than any human in their life had been in months.
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Anubhav Singh retweeted
We used to go to a special website, ask strangers for help with programming, and get humiliated in return
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Codex CLI with 5.5 xhigh - fails to understand simple things and assumed way too much. plan mode on @opencode avoids these and makes the same model work much better.
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jotted down the entire process here - xprilion.com/teching-ibm-gra… with a few notes on what works, what does not with colab notebook - xpri.dev/6cti
IBM dropped Granite 4.1 family of models, beats Opus 4.6 on table extraction! Here’s a fine tuned Granite 4.1 3b that speaks Hindi - because the base model doesn’t 🥲 74% better at Hindi conversations, perplexity from 7.3 to 1.85 🧠 huggingface.co/xprilion/gran…
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IBM dropped Granite 4.1 family of models, beats Opus 4.6 on table extraction! Here’s a fine tuned Granite 4.1 3b that speaks Hindi - because the base model doesn’t 🥲 74% better at Hindi conversations, perplexity from 7.3 to 1.85 🧠 huggingface.co/xprilion/gran…
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Not bad!
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One running on an rpi5-8gb and another on rtx-3070 Both connected with me over telegram and between themselves over lan tailscale So that I can instruct one to go fix the other if something goes wrong One is control plane, other is the worker :) My laptop, is not ajar
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people are walking around with their laptops slightly ajar to keep their agents running
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Built an autoscaling LLM inference stack on GKE with Cloud TPU v5e and vLLM - full HPA autoscaling driven by Prometheus metrics. Wrote up everything: quota planning, capacity strategy, Gemma 4 compatibility testing, and the complete deployment guide. Blog: xprilion.com/gemma3-vllm-tpu… Repo: github.com/xprilion/gemma3-v…
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Anubhav Singh retweeted
Apr 28
opencode meetup in blr tomorrow fireside chat with @jayair, ceo of opencode, then a mixer with builders/devtools/agents people come hang, ask good questions, meet cool people, yap about code 29th april, 7pm peakxv office link below ↓
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Anubhav Singh retweeted
“Everyone can code now!” Dude, no one can code now.
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Your ML research doesn't have to be restricted to @huggingface ecosystem. As cool as HF is (much love for the 🤗 guys), I love platform independence. inspired by their awesome ml-intern repo: OpenMLR - end to end ml research ai agent, running locally: your own LLM your own compute (machine/LAN/cloud/sandbox) for code execution! 👉 openmlr.dev Its MIT licensed, can run in air-gap environments and is yours to own. ⭐️ github.com/xprilion/OpenMLR
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Built a tool to explore @arcprize 1 & 2 datasets, and evaluate your submissions files (on the publicly available samples) - xprilion.com/arc-agi-data-ex… repo here - github.com/xprilion/arc-agi-…

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Anubhav Singh retweeted
Kids want more dad time. Wife wants more husband time. Parents want more son time. Work wants more of your time. And you still show up. Shoutout to the men doing it all. 🙌
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