i got invited to speak at upskill 1.0 yesterday.
my sessions covered ai + automation, honestly one of the most fun things i’ve done in a while and judging by the energy in the room, they felt it too.
you can do great things from a small place 🫶
i built a whatsapp agent that closed a sale at 1am while the owner was fast asleep.
the agent lives on whatsapp where the customers already are. it knows the full catalog, recommends the right product, price and everything else..,
studies say 78% of customers buy from the first business to respond, if you’re selling over whatsapp and still typing “yeah it’s in stock” by hand all day, i don’t know what to tell you.
i built an ai assistant that knows everything on your website, your customers can ask it anything and get an answer.
demo: i fed it the n8n documentation (1,200+ pages) then asked it a technical question, got a perfect answer in seconds.
it runs own your own server. your data stays private. zero api cost.
DM me if you want this for your business.
If this post gets 100 comments, I will make a tutorial video.
what should I build next?
Polyendocrine Metabolic Ovarian Syndrome honestly makes way more sense than Polycystic Ovary Syndrome.
Because this condition was never just about “ovarian cysts” or fertility.
Women with PCOS are at higher risk for:
-type 2 diabetes
-heart disease
-fatty liver disease
-sleep apnea
-high blood pressure
Yet so many women are never properly counseled about these risks or referred for appropriate care early enough. As a cardiometabolic physician, I meet women in their 50s and 60s dealing with advanced disease who tell me:
“I wish someone had warned me earlier.”
We minimized PCOS by treating it like a niche reproductive issue instead of the systemic metabolic condition it often is.
i built this so ….
you stop starting from zero every time you move platforms.
freelancers lose their reputation every time they switch platforms or get suspended.
we built POD to change that - your work history are on-chain forever.
built on @0G_labs@0g_CN
thanks to @HackQuest_ for giving us the platform to display this magnificent work.
name - POD
demo video - https://t.co/K0yte7HOnf
#0GHackathon #BuildOn0G
diana, you got lucky.
before you come for me, give me 45 seconds of your time.
i don’t mean you didn’t earn it. i mean something specific that made me angry when someone told me the same thing, and only made sense to me much later when i sat down and thought honestly about my own life. (even while writing this, i don’t really still believe in luck)
someone called my progress luck and i was ready to fight. i thought about the years i sacrificed, the nights i didn’t sleep, the times i kept going when nothing was working. then i realized something - imagine a version of me that didn’t have the necessary access or tools he won’t achieve same result or maybe better (who knows?)
think about it someone else have repeated similar path on other projects and didn’t get any better result.
luck is not only a coin flip. luck is the entire stage you were placed on before the play even started. the country some were born in, the year you were born, the family that fed you while you figured things out, the friend who happened to retweet your work to the right person, the people that onboarded you. you didn’t choose any of those. they chose you.
researchers studied this with hockey players in canada and found something that stops you cold. 40% of pros in the top leagues were born in january, february, or march. only 10% in october, november, december. being born early in the year makes you four times more likely to play professionally.
the reason is that kids leagues start the season in january. the kids born early are slightly bigger and faster than kids born late in the same group. coaches give them more attention, more game time, better tournaments. that tiny edge compounds(luck) for fifteen years until they reach the NHL.
ask any of those players how they made it. they will say discipline, training, waking up at 5am. none of them will say january. but january is why they are there.
your january exists somewhere too. mine does. diana’s does. it’s the thing you didn’t choose that made the work you did choose actually pay off. someone else, working just as hard, with the wrong january, didn’t get the same return.
this isn’t an attack on effort. effort is required. you cannot luck your way past someone who is genuinely prepared when the door opens. but in a world where ten thousand equally hungry, equally talented, equally relentless people are pushing on the same door, something has to decide which one of them gets through.
successful people almost never see their luck. not because they are dishonest. because the brain doesn’t store luck. it stores effort. you remember the hours. you don’t remember the ten quiet moments where things could have gone the other way and didn’t.
so the story you tell yourself, and everyone else, edits luck out completely.
diana, you earned your spot. and something put you on the right stage to earn it. both are true.
the people who refuse to admit the second half are the ones who look at someone else struggling and assume that person just didn’t want it badly enough.
funny part - you can make and manipulate your own luck.