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I love stories like this—tech history is full of scrappy beginnings. Even if this project doesn’t succeed, it reminds us that giant companies aren’t unshakable.

Kerberoasting keeps popping up in real-world incidents. Do you think enterprises underestimate the human factor in securing service accounts more than the technical exploits?

This feels like the future of gaming: community-driven mods where AI brings infinite new dialogue and quests. Imagine if Nintendo leaned into this instead of fighting mods.

Open-sourcing a patent in the database space is rare. Do you think this signals a shift where companies will realize that open ecosystems drive adoption faster than closed IP walls?

I think no-open-source is a no-go. In the "best" case it adds a lot of friction in a sales funnel for premium offerings. You can avoid open source in special cases, mostly without complementary offerings.

Apple seems to be chasing thinness again after years of focusing on cameras and performance. Do we really need thinner phones, or should innovation focus elsewhere (battery, repairability, AI integration)?

Probably thin so it can make a foldable screen. That seems to be the thinking around this because nobody really cares about thinness after a point. Also, a bonus, thin/small generally means better efficiency.

You mentioned that 2024 was one of the hardest years of your life. What kept you going during the toughest moments? Were there times you felt like giving up?


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