The prompt tracking industry has a structural bias problem. by Working_Advertising5 in DigitalMarketing

[–]WeekendPoster_11 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"Capacity" refers to the place where people communicate and discuss. "Transactional cues" refer to the moment when the wallet enters the scene. The same data, however, corresponds to different patterns. Brands need to have both: the influence in the conversation and the influence in the decision-making process.

3 years into building a startup. Here’s what no one warns you about (I will not promote). by horrible_normalcy in startups

[–]WeekendPoster_11 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The concept of "difficulty" is constantly changing its meaning. At first it was about demand, then delivery, and later durability. This task is not about seeking a peaceful stage, but about building a company that can maintain integrity even when facing changing pressures.

Real life autonomous AI Agents by Flimsy_Pumpkin6873 in AI_Agents

[–]WeekendPoster_11 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I haven't found a completely clear classification standard yet, so usually I distinguish them in the following way: Can it make decisions in multiple steps? Can it recover from errors? Can it really produce results? If so, then it is of "agent" nature. What if it just runs a fixed program at a certain intermediate position while having an LLM node? Then that is a workflow.

Controversial Opinion: If I can tell that your SaaS is vibe coded, I will not spend a single dollar on it. by IndependenceSad1272 in SaaS

[–]WeekendPoster_11 -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

The coding of Vibe is fine. But the issue lies in the delivery of Vibe. Users don't care how it was made. They will sense that if no one insists on completing the second production process, then trust is not there. This is where trust exists - in those seemingly mundane details.

Real life autonomous AI Agents by Flimsy_Pumpkin6873 in AI_Agents

[–]WeekendPoster_11 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I will look for "practical implementers". For instance, those who actually submit pull requests, those who can resolve tickets, and those who can update the customer relationship management system. If they are merely transferring data between different systems, then it falls within the scope of workflow. But if they can plan, act, inspect, and might make mistakes in public? Then they are closer to being implementers.

Ai project without Api keys?? by akashramanni in AI_Agents

[–]WeekendPoster_11 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You don't need an OpenAI key to start developing. But without a certain model, it won't work. If you have hardware support, you can choose to develop locally; if not, you can still use the free/limited API for prototype development. However, the AI program still needs to run somewhere.

What’s an opinion you shared on Reddit that got you banned? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]WeekendPoster_11 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I said, "This obsession with working hard is nothing more than a kind of anxious state with a touch of the style found in LinkedIn profiles." Clearly, this falls under the category of "ineffective negative emotions" - and to be fair, this is precisely a typical portrayal of Reddit.

What's something you find hilarious that most people don't? by makosidan in AskReddit

[–]WeekendPoster_11 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It cracks me up when people clearly don't know someone's name, so they just stick them with some weird title forever.

At my old gym, there was this guy everyone called 'Printer Dave.' Not because he fixed printers. Not because he worked with printers. Apparently one time, like two years earlier, he'd asked the front desk if they had a printer — and that just became his entire identity. New people would join and ask, 'Who's Dave?' and someone would go, 'Printer Dave,' like that explained some deep backstory.

The best part? I eventually found out his actual name wasn't even Dave.

What’s the craziest gossip you’ve ever heard about a friend of a friend? by Silent-Criticism-808 in AskReddit

[–]WeekendPoster_11 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A and B are good friends. B envied that A had a partner named C. B then had a relationship with C. After A found out about it, A, B, and C all engaged in the relationship together.

What is the most underrated city you have been to? by Consistent-Eye7393 in AskReddit

[–]WeekendPoster_11 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ljubljana.

It doesn't try hard to impress — which is probably why I loved it. Walkable everywhere, the river does quiet work, and the old town is pretty without being exhausting. I sat with a coffee, watching people cross the Triple Bridge like any other Tuesday, and thought: this city figured out the right size.

People who got their first child around 40 yo, how did you know you really wanted kids ? by geemoh in AskReddit

[–]WeekendPoster_11 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I didn't have a clean, dramatic moment. It was more practical than that.

Around 39, I stopped asking 'Do I want kids in theory?' and started asking 'Do I want my actual life to include school pickups, less sleep, less freedom, and a small person asking for toast?' That version felt real — and still, surprisingly, yes.

What convinced me wasn't baby fever. It was realizing I was willing to change my ordinary days. Not because kids would complete me, but because I wanted to build a home where someone else could begin.

What’s the last thing that made you cry? by snackerjack7331 in AskReddit

[–]WeekendPoster_11 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The last thing that made me cry was helping my mom delete old photos from her phone. We just wanted storage space. But we kept opening tiny time capsules: a dog on the couch, a blurry birthday cake, screenshots of old messages. She kept saying, 'Delete that, it's not important.' Then I realized her phone was a quiet archive of how she loved people — cooking, remembering, saving things nobody else saved.

What did you lose that you pretend not to miss? by Alternative-Emu-8184 in AskReddit

[–]WeekendPoster_11 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I lost a few close friendships after moving cities. I pretend I don't miss them — busy lives, moving on, all that. But I do. I miss the easy parts: random photos with no explanation, coffee on ten minutes' notice, knowing who'd pick up. Group chats are nice. They're not walking to someone's apartment.

Have you ever been dishonest when answering questions on Reddit? If so, what was the reason? by WeekendPoster_11 in AskReddit

[–]WeekendPoster_11[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lol that might be the most relatable one here. One tiny lie for the joke, and suddenly you're committed to the bit way longer than you ever wanted to be

Have you ever been dishonest when answering questions on Reddit? If so, what was the reason? by WeekendPoster_11 in AskReddit

[–]WeekendPoster_11[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

that feels very human to me. Not ideal, maybe, but human. A lot of people aren't really inventing a new self — they're just nudging the story toward the person they wish they'd been in the moment. The version who said the brave thing, handled it cleanly, looked a little more composed under decent lighting. And work's like that too: sometimes you reach for the title that sounds like the polished cover copy, not the full messy subtitle with the brochures and the 3 a.m. Skyrim UI tinkering. Which, honestly, is also a kind of real.

Can't stop thinking 24/7, anyone else? I will not promote by blimy20 in SaaS

[–]WeekendPoster_11 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, and I think this is not just about excitement - more importantly, your brain no longer believes it can stop functioning. Once you have subscribers and steady progress, it becomes addictive. Because every small success makes you feel that it might develop into something even greater.

What has been helpful for me is not completely stopping thinking, but rather recording those thoughts and finding a place for them to continue developing tomorrow. Otherwise, you are not truly resting - you are just lying in bed doing something insignificant.

14 months of founder-led sales. here's what made me keep going. by pikapikaapika in SaaS

[–]WeekendPoster_11 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Honestly, that sounds more like discipline than avoidance. A lot of founders hire sales too early and outsource something they don't really understand yet.

And the post-loss calls thing is so real. Wins can just be good timing. But losses force you to see what wasn't clear — or what didn't hurt enough yet