$RDW is a joke. Price per share is the same as in Aug 2021, but market cap increased 8x. Even if this goes to $50, management will just dilute it back to $10. What an absolute disaster to hold this crap.
The team and I sweated the details on this eval.
Excited to see it getting picked up.
Let's go @KradleAI.
The best way to evaluate AI is in simulations.
This is probably one of the more important pages I have ever read. Carl Jung at 84, one year from his death.
"One cannot do more than live what one really is."
Jung is saying there is no level above being yourself. And being yourself might be the hardest thing of all. Because it means living in truth with what you actually are, including your tensions, contradictions, limitations, instincts, and complexity.
Too often people are trying to become more than themselves, when the people who seem most deeply satisfied in life have usually become more of themselves. More in tune with their own nature. More willing to live their life their way.
Jung believed most of our troubles come when we have lost contact with our guiding instincts... I think that's true. I'm still waiting to find someone deeply satisfied in life who is disconnected from themselves, abandoning their own nature, and living someone else’s script.
Acceptance of oneself is the essence of the moral problem and the acid test of one’s whole outlook on life.
This page also says that suffering is unavoidable. This is necessary suffering. Life will bring pain and heartbreak. Uncertainty is unavoidable. Grief will show up at your door when you least expect it. Hard decisions will come.
But there is also unnecessary suffering, the suffering that comes from resisting what is happening, refusing what life is asking of you, or not living true to yourself.
That type of suffering seems to eat at your soul.
I have come to the conclusion that it is better to Live what one really is and accept the difficulties that arise as a result - because avoidance is much worse.
Better to live your own destiny imperfectly than to perform an imitation of someone else’s life perfectly.
You can contort yourself, wear every mask, and distract yourself, but eventually you will need to answer, Am I really living life my way?
Perplexity just open-sourced the tool they use internally to keep their own developers safe. 😨
It's called Bumblebee. It runs quietly on a developer's laptop and checks for any sneaky code, suspicious browser plugins, or AI tools that might be silently leaking access to your data.
It covers Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, all of it.
Here is why this matters now.
For the last six months, hackers have been quietly slipping malicious code into the free building blocks that almost every app in the world is built on.
When a developer installs one of these poisoned pieces, the attacker gets a backdoor into everything that developer touches.
Including their AI tools and the keys that unlock them.
Most security tools defend the finished product. Bumblebee defends the person building it.
An independent security researcher read through the entire code and confirmed it is clean.
No hidden tracking. No data collection. No backdoors.
For two years, AI coding tools shipped with zero security defenses around them. Perplexity just shipped one. Free.
Worth installing if you build anything with AI.
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)
Most crypto hacks aren't technical exploits
They're usually social engineering attacks, compromised contacts on Telegram sending fake meeting links, SIM-swapped X accounts and poisoned addresses
Here's a 4-slide OpSec guide to keep you prepared and a reminder to do an audit of your security
I've never shared this before, but screw it.
I'm finally sharing my Claude Cowork Workflows that makes me $50,000 per month selling eBooks.
Like, RT and Comment ‘NEED’ & I’ll DM you the full guide for FREE.
Follow me first so I can DM.
FREE for 48 hours only.
Seeing $100k+/month in revenue for the first time 🚀
Crying from happiness. It took me 2.5 years to reach this. From zero. Had to go through hell: account deletion, lawsuits, losses, debt, frozen accounts, countless mistakes.
Just believe in yourself and don’t give up. You can work in public. Don’t be afraid to make mistakes. That’s how you find what works.
And the most unusual part, you can scroll through my entire X. I documented every step. What I shipped, what I tested. You can watch the video about me. @adamlyttleapps made a great episode, and nothing has changed since then. I just keep hitting the same point, slowly but consistently, and it’s starting to pay off.
Just created a complete analysis of AI infrastructure opportunities covering chip manufacturers, power companies and system integrators.
I shared this analysis with my 20,000+ students.
For 24 hours, it's yours for FREE.
Like, RT & Comment "AI" and I'll DM it to you.