When I started my first job after school at a small local agency, a project manager once said something like: If someone has three companies on their CV and stayed less than a year in each, it doesn t look good.
I took that to heart. I tried to stay longer in every role, so I wouldn t seem unreliable, even in underpaid jobs I didn t enjoy. I endured it just to make my CV look stable. In hindsight, it was a little bit stupid. (Sometimes a waste of time.)
With AI bots getting harder to detect, there s been growing discussion around platforms using biometric verification (like face scans) to confirm real users.
Cool in theory... Reddit is full of bots, fake accounts and garbage engagement. But let s be real
A simple but intuitive savings calculator (runs in your browser) based on income and expenses, then, determines surplus and models Bitcoin Dollar Cost Average by user terms and returns estimated returns based on the Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) from previous Bitcoin returns. For now it is focuses on Canadian Income earners.
In a discussion forum with @monatruong_murror , we talked about how AI can help us learn things that aren t naturally familiar to us, like programming.
The biggest challenge was/is: Getting AI to guide you toward a solution, instead of just giving you the answer.
Let me start from the creator s perspective: I personally don t have a product (apart from hiring people for creative work or offering personal consultations).
But as a creator, I constantly share content, insights, and information, value that helps me build trust (for free). Based on that perceived expertise, people eventually decide to work with me (a paid service).
Early-stage founders often try to improve their product as much as possible and tend to take almost any feedback into account.
Sometimes they end up adding every feature users (even non-paying ones) ask for, even when those features are unnecessary. The product then becomes more complicated and harder to use.
And I m not even talking about the stage when the product is already established. At that point, there are more users, and their expectations start to differ.
That's why I built PrivateACB (Adjusted Cost Base). It sits somewhere between spreadsheet hell and cloud based tax calculations. Runs on your desktop, encrypted. Produces tax reports.
Too often, people sacrifice privacy for convenience - this is a dangerous habit. Your cloud information is easy pickings for Companies and Individuals that don't have your best interest in mind. Some of them are probably lurking withing these pages.
Today, I read a TechCrunch article about what investors are no longer looking for in SaaS, or rather, what to avoid if you don't want to lose their interest.
The red flags were:
Too easy to replicate light AI wrappers, generic horizontal tools, basic CRM clones, generic productivity or project management tools.
No real depth products where differentiation is mostly UI and automation, anything without proprietary data, surface-level analytics.
Becoming obsolete workflow automation tools that coordinate human work (agents are taking over), integrations as a moat (MCP is making connectors a commodity), and "workflow stickiness" products trying to keep humans inside their software.
TL;DR: Anthropic refused to sign a contract with the Pentagon that would have allowed the U.S. military to use all of its models without restrictions. Anthropic insisted on an exception, and brace yourself, that its models cannot be used: 1) for mass surveillance of citizens, 2) for autonomous killing. Now the administration is threatening that if the founder of Anthropic doesn't change his mind by a certain date, they will come after him.
Google, OpenAI, and Musk (Grok) have all signed the contract.
Following Sam Altman's announcement over the past few hours, people have been speaking out massively about cancelling their OpenAI subscriptions and subscribing to Claude.
I am a Computer Science student doing research into how solopreneurs and small startups create new apps and what their stack looks like. Particularly, I'm interested in how you handle things like authentication, billing, and permissions/authorization in your apps.
Let me know what you're working on below and how you're going about it -- I'd love to connect for some quick calls to learn about your product and talk about your process in building it!
A couple weeks ago, Boris Cherny (the creator of Claude Code) shared a bunch of really useful tips on getting the most out of Claude Code. #1 at the top of the list: do more in parallel. He himself runs 10-15 Claude codes in parallel.
His advice and practice makes sense: coding agents give us the ability scale infinitely. At this point, the only real limiter is our own ability to manage all of these agents.
A desktop crypto tax calculator built for privacy. Your transaction data never touches a server — all calculations happen locally, encrypted with AES-256.
One-time $39 purchase, not a yearly subscription. 30-day free trial with full features.
Generates CPA-ready reports:
US — Form 8949, Schedule D, wash sale detection, FIFO/LIFO/HIFO
Canada — Schedule 3, T1135, superficial loss, ACB method
Handles 100K+ transactions across 10+ exchanges. Account-by-account basis tracking for 2025
Don t accidentally cross a tax/visa threshold while traveling
Hi everyone! I joined the small Flamingo Compliance team less than 2 weeks ago and we re building an iOS app that helps frequent travelers and global teams track days-in-country and generate an audit-ready travel record. We don t give legal advice, we help you keep clean evidence and visibility.