Ya no delego lo que puedo construir con IA. No es que no tenga con qué pagar — es que solo voy más rápido que en equipo. El stack del fundador solo ya es real.
Stopped outsourcing things I can ship with AI. Not because I can't afford help — because I move faster alone now. The solo founder stack is finally real.
There's a specific Friday energy where you just want to ship something. AI made that feeling way worse (in the best way). 🚀
Hay una energía específica de viernes donde solo quieres lanzar algo. La IA empeoró ese sentimiento, en el mejor sentido posible.
Friday night vibe: laptop open, music on, something building in the background.
AI didn't kill the joy of building. It just removed all the boring parts so you get more of the good stuff. 🔥
La verdadera brecha con IA no es entre los que la usan y los que no.
Es entre quienes la usan para hacer cosas que antes eran imposibles, y quienes solo la usan para hacer lo mismo más barato.
Son dos juegos completamente distintos.
The real AI divide isn't between companies with and without AI.
It's between builders who use it to do things that weren't possible before, and those who just use it to do the same things cheaper.
Two completely different games.
Suzuka next. Track that separates real setup engineers from the rest.
Norris has momentum but Max historically owns this circuit.
Who's your pole pick? #F1#JapaneseGP
Hot take: the best AI products in 2026 won't be built by the biggest teams.
They'll be built by solo founders who figured out how to make AI agents do the work of 10 engineers.
The leverage is insane right now.
The biggest mistake most people make with AI tools: using them to do the same thing faster instead of doing things that were previously impossible.
Speed is a feature. Capability unlocking is the revolution.
This needs to be brought up again.
A little over a year before SBF/FTX was thrown under the bus by the Tether bros, Tether did a disastrous interview where @dee_bosa completely annihilated them.
You'll notice in the middle of the interview the Chief Technical Officer, suddenly has "technical difficulties" and abandons the interview for a few minutes.
That wasn't a technical difficulty. That was intentional because they realized they were being ambushed by a reporter asking actual questions and not about how nice the weather is. Paolo made an emergency call to Giancarlo to evaluate what to do before returning to the interview. You can watch his body language and see him stressing the fuck out.
Paolo mentions that Giancarlo Devasini is too busy to do interviews, because he's a very busy man helping Sam at Alameda steal money from his customers.
After SBF blew up, Tethers lawyers sent a bunch of nasty grams to CNBC to get them to delete this interview, which CNBC did while evaluating the nasty grams.
The interview ultimately was restored, but then they sent nasty grams to YouTube causing the interview to be shadowbanned temporarily.
Tether DOES NOT want you to watch this interview. It was an unmitigated disaster for them.
Tether will go down in history as one of the largest financial frauds in history. One of the largest money laundering operations in history.
And it all started with an asshole on Twitter.
You're welcome.
https://t.co/1JuWGXB118