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Strong CodeIgniter vibes in how the API is presented, which I'm not a fan of.

Unclear how the benchmark was setup but with php-fpm and opcache preload many hundreds of requests per second is my experience with Symfony.


To me they look like shit. I'm sure gen Z and Alpha will love it.

I'll be interested in seeing a review on specialized sites. The 20 hours of battery life is impressive.


20 hours is low in this category. The Sony XM6s are 30h, the Bose QCs are ~24h. Sennheisers can do 40-50h. All with ANC on, the numbers are slightly higher with ANC off.

I don’t know that it should be a generation specific thing. I’m a millennial, and I like their look.

For me its the first product that caused a sensation of instant repulsion. Which made me think I'm falling outside the target audience.

Strongly assume most tech marketing is focusing on the newer generations of impresionables.


It looks to have near identical design to the initial iteration from 5-6 years ago ¯\_(ツ)_/¯.

At AU$999 here in Australia, I'm not so sure they will.

Wired headphones and earbuds seem to be having a moment as well.


All colors? As a Gen X graybeard I think they simultaneously look like Completely Generic Cans and Macaroons On Your Head.

Their button animations almost "crash" Firefox mobile. As soon as I reach them the entire page scrolls at single digit FPS.

Maybe it's a little bit of that, and a bit of boosting monthly average users and token average usage.

Anthropic should be IPOing this year and higher usage stats I'm sure will help.


Indeed startups have different incentives to MSFT/Google

If you can point me at someone that would fund such projects (not VCs), would be happy to apply. Projects like NLNet aren't keen on funding larger scope projects. At least if you do not have the thought leader influencer clout.

What are your ideas for this?

Decentralized platform, with traceable decisions, mixing direct web of trust, delegated, and community moderated content labeling. Content servers with pay to post submissions, to allow sustainable hosting and hosting delegated moderation.

If collaborative blogging wasn't dying, this would be a cool way to write contributor articles and then share them with an editor. Though I don't know how you would pull out single articles instead of a whole backup.

I don't know who to trust in this article. Aside from the reporter.

Person A with high praise of their startup, is an investor. Company B that would like to further use this service, is quoted though an executive as if written by an LLM.

Coca-cola is trialing the service but has no information to share. Alongside the other testimonials this doesn't say much about reality. (Does WSJ do advertorials?)

Also, good luck trying to predict real people.

What's funny, is seeing these young adult entepreneurs dress up like 40 year old tech bros. Will turtlenecks be the next style to circle back in the scene?


Using predictions of past events as the benchmark where the LLMs have already been trained on the results seems quite flawed to me

Atlassian pretending they can pivot into AI, is the most "Hello fellow kids" corporate moment this year.

Their services are barely usable with extreme bloat and lag. With such strong engineering practices, they are poised to make fools of themselves. Can't wait.


They started nagging every user in Jira to use their AI, now. It’s like straight out of the Microsoft “Dear god please please use our AI product!” playbook.

I’m honestly not sure what you even use AI for in Jira. Maybe there’s a purpose, but 90% of us are just moving tickets across the most expensive kanban board that money can… rent.


The video concept is great, and how I often have been thinking that personal digital assistants would make sense.

Basing this concept on what we have today with LLMs is a call for chaos, unreliability and slop communication; at best.


Hi Willem.

I think the info you're getting from LLMs is misguiding you. And having LLMs write your content is not going to help. Even if you see other adults around you do that recklessly.

Cold emails have not been the recommended marketing approach for a long time. And if the emails were further composed by LLMs (even if you did the research on those leads) does not help

I've worked for, with, and run a boutique consulting company. Hundreds of clients managed is not the norm, it's far below that, in the tens, for the happy path.

I think you're building a model, for ideas that might be reinforced by a LLM, but niche in practice.

I appreciate the entrepreneurial spirit, and I'd recommend applying to YCombinator, if you're old enough for their program.


> I appreciate the entrepreneurial spirit, and I'd recommend applying to YCombinator, if you're old enough for their program.

Genuine question, I think I am fairly young too but I don't understand the point of applying to Y-combinator/VC funds in general unless your project demands it.

It seems that many people my age sometimes optimize for building/(Hyping?) a project/company and then having it be VC-funded just to get access to the money even if there might not be necessity of it.

Not/(maybe even many) every project should be VC-funded. I think though I like to treat tech as still a business with sound financials. Although I see some aspects of VC funded tech to be quite de-tached from business with sound financials.

Also if I care about a project, I'd like to prefer to keep the control of the project without any external pressure if/as long as possible.

If any of my projects needs money, I have those ideas in back of my mind and I can then work on projects/ideas which don't need much money and then hopefully make money through that or job and if I still feel passionate about the other project, then launching that too. Atleast that's how I think.


I'm in complete agreement with your comment.

My recommendation remains in this case, because we're talking about a young person that tries to launch a business, for some CRM software; and that can't be the hobby software of someone that young. He's probably getting into this business to make money, with ideas (and without capital to execute it - assuming), something like YCombinator (or any other seed, angel, vc) is a way to get on that path.


Yes I agree with your comment as well. But if the only thing that they want to do is get money. Then I mean c'mon they are 15, I wish to say to them that even though I am 17, 15 were one of the most fun periods of my life. The amount of nostalgia hit from all the things when I was 15 hits quite a lot actually.

So I kindly suggest them to not use them solely for making money. I would recommend them not to worry about money, as I think that there are no free lunch generally and if there is any little free lunch, then there's a million times more competition to get to that free lunch that its not worth it.

I wish to say to them to stop worrying about money. Just, enjoy life with friends and do what they feel like. 15 was the most liberating age because not worried about college or anything that much. It was the last year of that thing and me and my friends from school constantly have nostalgia about that age.

I recommend them to setup a minecraft server, yes I know, not the most financial thing but one of the coolest things I had in my life was when I was 15 and me and my friends all went home and 8-11 people played minecraft with each other and we then talked in class.

You got your whole life to make businesses, but this age is genuinely nostalgic. I suggest them to savour it if possible and let their interest in things grow naturally if possible rather than be forced like a carrot on a stick where the carrot's money/hype.

So I would recommend them to create a minecraft SMP, heck even make minor modpacks themselves or learn about servers. One of the first projects I made was breaking nats by custom-patching ssh/dropbear on an intel nat jupyter server only and only because I wanted to play with my friend and he wanted to add some modpacks and I didn't wish to pay for servers. That was one of the best things I did. Although I didn't write any line of code and well for what its worth, many of my projects still haven't been written but I wish to write them by hand when I get into college this year hopefully or the next. My point is that this whole experience genuinely gave me this feeling of code/open source can do so many things, the possibilities are endless :)

All because I wanted to play minecraft with my friend in a more hacker-y way than usual inspired by Hackernews posts and comments too.

(So direct tldr to Wilhelm: You should enjoy your life with your friends at the moment and make a minecraft SMP or anything similar and there are so many stuff that you can gradually move on from there and take your time with that, don't rush hopefully.)

Edit: Another point I wish to add but when you are 15, code/learn about open source because you want to etc. too because you like doing it I guess. My biggest investment in my life at 14-15 was running Linux, so I recommend them to do that if that's possible too making my own custom rices and mixing and matching. Taught me quite a lot of things and familiarity with terminal which has helped me a lot.

So I suggest Wilhelm to use Linux, get familiar with open source projects that he finds cool. Bookmark/star them. Create Minecraft servers with their friends and try to relax perhaps.

I mean I wouldn't be wrong when I thought that damn I should've learnt to do some things that I do now but when I was 15 because I had less stress that time but it was only with this discussion that I feel like, it was for sort of good actually that I didn't stress too much about things and just used linux and everything and I recommend them to do the same if possible.

So within the tldr, use Linux is another priority too :) and you can actually level up in those things too Wilhelm with ideas from Debian/Fedora to Archlinux etc and so many other things and all of this is very likely to help you in future as you become more familiar with Terminal.


Honestly, the one thing that irked me the most was the fact he says he emailed 70 partners, on one replied and then the next paragraph, he quotes a reply. So... some replied? Of those I emailed, 70 didn't reply? What is it? It feels inconsistent logically.

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