I got my first Tesla yesterday. I said I would get one when self driving was better than me. This car drove me around for 3 hours without any intervention.
Driving is solved, what a time to be alive.
Google paid $2.7B to buy Shazeer back from https://t.co/lmTUO9zpvv. OpenAI got him anyway... less than two years later.
golden handcuffs only hold if the person doesn't want to leave. the AI talent race is insane.. and Google's stock price today shows it
My goal with the syndicate is to allow a million people to invest $100 each into the next Uber, Robinhood or SpaceX
This requires the SEC to create a sophisticated investor test (like a driver's license) or repeal the profoundly unfair accreditation laws!
These laws are designed to keep the poor and middle class stagnant while allowing the wealthy to become ultra-wealthy.
It’s evil and should be found to be unconstitutional.
Traded my Range Rover for a @Tesla Model Y and picked it up two weeks ago. Turned on FSD today after the 14.3.3 update.
If you don’t believe in magic, I don’t know what to tell you. I’ve always been fascinated by technology for as long as I can remember, but this is something else entirely.
@Microsoft shipping its own coding + reasoning models to lean off openai is the whole game in one move: don't get locked to one provider. don't be reliant. even as an individual builder, don't put your eggs in the same basket... except your own basket
right now i like claude + gemini side by side on my content pipeline for the same reason. the model's a commodity. the system around it isn't.
https://t.co/97qnAybDrX
DocuSign Personal: $10 to $15 per month.
DocuSign Standard: $25 to $45 per user per month.
DocuSign Business Pro: $40 to $65 per user per month.
A 10-person team on Business Pro pays $4,800 to $7,800 a year. To put signatures on PDFs.
A team of 50 pays $24,000 to $39,000 a year.
And there is a 100-envelopes-per-year cap on most plans. Send more contracts and you pay extra.
Need SMS delivery? $0.40 per send.
Need ID verification? $2.50 per attempt.
Need premium support? $5,000 to $50,000 per year add-on.
You are rationing digital signatures in 2026.
DocuSign is a $10 billion company built entirely on this pricing model.
Now meet DocuSeal.
A free and open source alternative to DocuSign.
Created in 2023 by a Ruby developer named Alex who was simply trying to sign one document and realised every solution online was overpriced or required a subscription.
Three weeks later he had a working alternative. He pushed it to GitHub under the AGPL-3.0 license.
Today it has 11,800+ stars and over 1,000 forks. Bootstrapped. No VCs. No paywalls.
Here is what DocuSeal does:
- Upload any PDF and turn it into a fillable, signable form
- Drag and drop signature fields, dates, checkboxes, file uploads, and 13 field types
- Send to multiple signers with custom signing order
- Automated email reminders
- Mobile signing on any device
- PDF signature verification built in
- Audit trail for every document
- Bulk send and templates
- Full API access
- Self-host with one Docker command
Here is what DocuSeal costs:
Zero. Forever. Unlimited documents. Unlimited signers. Unlimited storage.
DocuSign limits envelopes. DocuSeal doesn't.
DocuSign charges per SMS. DocuSeal doesn't.
DocuSign charges for ID checks. DocuSeal doesn't.
DocuSign sees your contracts on their servers. DocuSeal doesn't.
Here is the wildest part:
The median DocuSign contract per Vendr is $17,250 per year. One Reddit thread has people saying "they want me to pay $4.80 per e-signature."
Self-host DocuSeal on a $5 cloud server and a 50-person team can sign as many contracts as they want without paying a single dollar.
Your contracts never leave your server. Your client lists. Your NDAs. Your employment agreements. None of it touches a third-party company.
For individuals who only sign a few contracts a year, you save $180.
For small teams of 10, you save up to $7,800 a year.
For a 50-person company, you save up to $39,000 a year.
Your documents. Your signatures. Your server.
100% Open Source. (Link in the comments)
claude code just shipped routines
you tell it what to do, point it at your project, set a trigger, and it runs 24/7 on their servers with your laptop closed
i immediately thought of larry ellison: "the money is never in the technology, it's in the infrastructure the technology runs on"
the model is the commodity. the trigger is the product. and whoever maps the most valuable real world events to the most specific industry workflows is going to build something massive
here's what i mean by trigger....
a permit gets filed. a customer's usage drops 40% in a week. a competitor launches a feature. a deal sits in your pipeline untouched for 14 days. a contract hits 90 days before renewal. a stripe payment fails. these are all triggers.
some public, some inside your own tools and every single one is a moment where an AI agent can step in and do something valuable before a human gets around to it
the playbook is like this:
map every trigger that matters in one industry → wire an AI agent to each one → sell the outcome. the person who shows up first with exactly what someone needs at exactly the right moment wins the deal every time
and the people who go embarrassingly deep on one industry's trigger map are going to build generational companies
that's the entire game right now for people reading this tweet.
claude routines, openclaw, hermes etc... the infrastructure is all here.
just pick your niche
build audiences/content to get awareness
wire the agents to triggers
start selling
and pinch yourself that this is the greatest time in history to be starting a company
let's go
Since 2004, there have been nearly 10,000 rounds registered at The Players Championship.
Ludvig's round today ranks top-5 in ball striking.
He gained +7.27 SG tee to green.
ok WOW.
Woke up this morning and said, for fun, lets try to recreate monday. com w Claude cowork. it wont work or anything, but we can just show our audience that its plausible.
1 hour later... I literally have my own monday. com that's plugged into my calendar & gmail and surfaced a kids bday that was not anywhere on my radar and I need to get a gift for. Can imagine next step being: order gift and have it delivered by Sunday.
2026 is WILD.
Elon Musk's answer to the question of why he continues to work for the benefit of humanity, being such a rich man:
“Certainly there are times when I have doubts about these things... It's a good question because it goes at a foundational level: what is my philosophy, and why does it lead to this conclusion?
So the reason is that when I was a teenager, I had, like, an existential crisis to try to figure out what's the meaning of life. There doesn't seem to be any meaning. For me, at least the religious texts, and I read all of them that I could get my hands on, did not seem convincing. Then I started reading the philosophers.
Be careful of reading German philosophers as a teenager. It's definitely not going to help with your depression. So, reading Schopenhauer, Nietzsche as an adult, it's much more manageable. But as a kid, you're like, 'Whoa.'
So then I was like, 'Man, I'm just struggling to find meaning in life here.' And then I read Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. And basically what Douglas Adams was saying is that we don't really know what the right questions are to ask. The question is not, 'What's the meaning of life?'
In The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Earth, it turns out, is a big computer, and its goal is to answer the question, 'What's the meaning of life?' And Earth comes up with the answer '42'. This is where the 42 number comes from. And 420 is just ten times 42. In that book, which is really sort of a book about, it's an existential philosophy book disguised as humor. They come to the conclusion that the real problem is trying to formulate the question. And to really have the right question, you need a much bigger computer than Earth.
And so maybe one way, I think, of characterizing this would be to say, 'The universe is the answer. What is the question? Or what are the questions?'
The more we can expand the scope and scale of consciousness, the better we can understand what questions to ask about the answer that is the universe. The more we can expand consciousness, become a multi-planet species, ultimately a multistellar species… we have a chance of figuring out what the hell is going on.
And so this is why I think we should have more humans and both biological and digital consciousness. And why we should become a multi-planet species and a multistellar species is so that we can understand the nature of the universe.
And then, in order for that to occur, then we have to make sure that things are good on Earth. We don't want Earth to disappear, so sustainable energy is important.”