🚨 Do you understand what happened in the last 12 hours?
> A CEO of a $200 billion company said on camera that 35% of new grads won't find jobs. He didn't even flinch saying it.
> Meta made $165 billion last year and is still firing 15,000 people because apparently record profit isn't profitable enough.
> Some random guy in Florida sold his entire house in 5 days using ChatGPT. No real estate agent, no commission, no experience. Just vibes and a $20 subscription.
> A man in Australia cured his dying dog's cancer with AI after every single vet told him there was nothing left to do. Built a custom vaccine from his couch.
> The guy who created Uber and left 300,000 taxi drivers broke is back. Building robots now because apparently ruining one industry wasn't enough.
> Tinder wants access to your camera roll. Your drunk photos, your 3am notes app meltdowns, your deleted selfies. They're calling it a "vibe check."
> Naval, the man who made hundreds of millions investing in software, just said software is dead. Four words and the entire industry felt it.
> And Anthropic removed the limit on how long their AI can think and then doubled everyone's usage for free. Because when the product is addictive enough you give the first taste away.
All of that happened today. Not this week, not this quarter. Today. A random Saturday in March.
This is worse than you being on meth.
this story is absolutely insane 🤯
> tech guy with zero biology background.
> his dog got terminal cancer.
> vets said 1 - 6 months left.
> bro said nah not on my watch.
> asked ChatGPT for a treatment plan.
> sequenced tumor DNA for $3k.
> used AlphaFold AI to model mutated proteins.
> designed world’s first personalized mRNA vaccine for a dog.
> partnered with universities to synthesize it.
> ethics approval took 3 months.
> vaccine design took 2 months.
> first injection December 2025.
> tumors shrank 75% within weeks.
> dog happy.
> universities confirmed it worked.
> now designing version 2 for remaining tumor.
AI + a guy determined to save his dog just outperformed the pharma industry 💀
the cure for cancer will be open source.
I totally get why supporting complex expressions could make the UX less user-friendly and more error-prone. Money flows need zero ambiguity.
But would it really be risky to optionally allow basic math and clearly show the evaluated final amount before payment?
I often wonder why payment apps like @PhonePe / @GooglePayIndia don’t support even simple math (+ / -) in the amount field.
For everyday cases- say buying n items, you end up opening the calculator, then coming back to the app just to enter the final amount.
@GooglePay
@shaun_on_x Just remember that after a few years in job means primarily coding in Java, you might need to brush up on your C++ syntax before interviews. Using one language for both development and DSA can make things easier. but it’s completely fine to stick to C++ for DSA.
@shaun_on_x This was exactly my situation in my first year of work. And just FYI, even today, I still give DSA interviews in C++, while my day-to-day job revolves around Java.
There’s no issue with that. DSA interviews are meant to test your understanding of data structures and algorithms