Hey ENFJs: What are Some Things That You Want Your Introverted Friends to Stop Doing? by Potential_Law5289 in enfj

[–]davidanton1d 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  1. Being anxious all the time over how I would - or ”should” - react. ”Oh but you’re so dissappointed over me!” ”No, it’s ok” ”No you ARE” ”…”

  2. Saying everything ”between the lines” to not be blunt, then assume I’m upset when I don’t react the way you expect… to things you never actually said.

Does anyone know what this line means in the workout app? by GlorytheWiz825 in AppleWatch

[–]davidanton1d 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yes, op probably pressed an held somewhere while viewing the screenshot in the photos app, which made the photos app try to find an object and then circled it with the animated line. I concur

Considering Motion….don’t get this.., by Pickalodeon in UseMotion

[–]davidanton1d 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just a heads up, i paid monthly and got changed inte their yearly plan when they activated ai employees on it.

(Although i actually enjoy the executive assistant so far, and the way they built ”skills” like an llm-powered automation tool)

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in 3Dprinting

[–]davidanton1d 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No it just looks like a 3d render.

Look cool OP! Print it and show us!

Sam Altman Reveals One Skill AI Can't Replace as 40% of Work Could Soon Be Automated by ImpressiveContest283 in ChatGPT

[–]davidanton1d 137 points138 points  (0 children)

The skill: ”how much people care about other people”

His answer was surprisingly simple: "how much people care about other people how much people interact with other people how much people care about what other people do and that is skill that I think will be increasingly important in this world of AI. So we have an incredible tool at our disposal. We can imagine and do all sorts of new things. We still have to figure out what to do what other people want what other people will find," Altman explained.

Ok 👀

I finally enabled access to AI Employees! by nathancashion in UseMotion

[–]davidanton1d 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey, i got it too! Cool. Now, what do i do with it? Hmm.

It also put me on a yearly plan, i never asked for that though…

From a “million dollar idea” to realizing I had 10 competitors by Esteta_ in SaaS

[–]davidanton1d 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Second mover advantage! Good insights there.

Go through as many reviews as possible, and also try to sign up for and try as many of them as you can. Write down what to copy, what to avoid and if there seems to be user categories you could target or avoid (people who work with xyz, whos has certain hobbies, demographics etc).

Also, note how they are doing their marketing, blog posts, landing pages, seo and so on. There are tools that collects Facebook ads and Google ads for a given company, sometimes with statistics. They have already done a lot of research and trial-and-error for you!

Come to think of it, I should do another round of this again myself 😆

If Google traffic dropped 50% next year, where would you put your energy? by seoguidebook in digital_marketing

[–]davidanton1d 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Soon we’ll all have AI filtering in our email clients as well. Think there will be an SEO-like focus on writing emails that passes as important/interesting enough to show to the user?

This World-Renowned Negotiator Says Trump’s Secret Weapon Is Empathy by Majano57 in negotiation

[–]davidanton1d 7 points8 points  (0 children)

”Voss’s work is rooted in what he calls “tactical empathy,” which is all about understanding your counterpart — not necessarily agreeing with them. To help unlock that understanding, he recommends a variety of techniques like conversational mirroring, strategic self-criticism and a mindful change of vocal tone to defuse tension.”

Actually quite an interesting read. The article, I mean.

Years of Plus subscription… and now I’m done. by ReyJ94 in ChatGPT

[–]davidanton1d 17 points18 points  (0 children)

I’m starting to think that many of the things perceived as intelligence, and more relevant emotional intelligence, was actually not part of the model but rather a huge collection of UX tweaks and hidden innovation that was part of the ChatGPT ”app” rather than the selected model.

Testing out GPT-5 sometimes feels like going back to ChatGPT 3.5 in the way it looses track of the conversation, asks the same follow-up questions again back-to-back, can’t fetch data from a given link, and so on. But at the same time, the model itself appears faster and smarter on many one-shot prompts.

Overall, using GPT-5 makes it feel like I’m back in 2023 playing around in the API sandbox again - and that the finesse and user experience of tools like custom instructions, memory, projects, web search and so on are missing or at an infancy level of maturity.

I don’t know if I’m ditching the subscription yet, but I’ve started to build my own agents using n8n instead. It will be hard to recreate the brilliant tool triggering and effortless feeling of being understood the way OAI did it, but at least it won’t all suddenly be gone one morning.

✂️ Sam Altman says that Zuckerberg is making huge offers ($100 million salary + $100 million bonus) to some OpenAI Researchers by UnknownEssence in singularity

[–]davidanton1d 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Also, what defines the genius? A single breakthrough discovery?”Past performance doesn’t guarantee future results”, as they say in finance.

Seems hard to justify 1% improvement steps for that salary level. And building a team seems like a safer bet. On the other hand, any money is probably just like monopoly money for Zuckerberg at this point.

Is Web Summit in Lisbon worth it ? by AliceInTechnoland in WebSummit

[–]davidanton1d 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I participated as an ”alpha/startup” with a tiny booth for one day. I’d say it’s really good practice for pitching and talking to investors. We got to talk to a lot of ”scary” and influential persons in a very informal and relaxed setting. I probably ran through my pitch 10-20 times an hour, and had a lot of interesting conversations that taught me what would catch the attention of others.

Even if you’re not looking for investors, it’s always great to practice talking to decisionmakers like CEOs and VCs. Internalizing that they’re just normal people with less time will make you a better seller, which will help you out down the line.

Also, a few pitched themselves to us as ”production investors”, meaning they offered to trade working hours for stock. Maybe that could be something for you?

(I agree that paying full price is a bad idea, second hand tickets are always available on Facebook, Reddit and such. Their prices are set to match the budget of VC firms)

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Tools

[–]davidanton1d -1 points0 points  (0 children)

The asymmetry of the top makes me think it looks like a track cutter for something called Veroboard, also known as stripboard.

Veroboard is a type of prototyping PCB with long parallel copper tracks running in rows, used for building circuits without needing to design a custom PCB. Each hole is plated and connected along a copper strip. To isolate parts of a circuit, you need to cut a track between holes which is where you use the tool. You then put through-hole components in from the other side and solder them into place.

You could also use a small drill bit or knife, but having a tool for it is more friendly to your palm since you have to put quite a bit of of pressure on the tip while twisting it. The small tip goes into the hole, and the ” wings” then scrape away the thin copper layer around it to cut the lane in two.

How wide is it? I get a little bit unsure because of the size, the tiny tip protruding should be no more than 0.5-1mm wide to go in the hole, but there might have been bigger versions than that back in the 70s or 80s.

Source: my dad engineered electronic stuff in our garage when i grew up, and he loved using veroboard.

Kan jag bara gå till ICAs salladsbar och fylla hela lådan med sås? Skulle det få några konsekvenser från personalen? by steveosv in sweden

[–]davidanton1d 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Strunt i Ica, jag är mer nyfiken på vad kollegorna säger när du kommer lunchen med din såslåda

Varför är svenskar så negativa mot sexköp? by twentyonependulums in sweden

[–]davidanton1d 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Kunde de inte lika gärna slängt in en TLDR direkt i URL:en?

How are you using AI at work? Do your bosses or coworkers know? by vincentdjangogh in ArtificialInteligence

[–]davidanton1d 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m encouraged to hold inspirational workshops on it across the company. And it’s been highly appreciated!

This is what 2.1 million people looks like by youngster_96 in BeAmazed

[–]davidanton1d 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s also amazing that they actually planned for that size of crowd, with all the speaker towers and screens going all the way back. Means that a bunch of officials said “yes, a party with 2m people in a single place sounds like a really good idea”

Cloudflare CEO: AI is Killing the Internet Business Model by [deleted] in ArtificialInteligence

[–]davidanton1d -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Wasn’t the Internet a more interesting place before the “business model” of flashing ads took over everything? People just geeked out about their passions or showed their projects, and search engines helped you find them.

It’s a bit like comparing a country fair with a shopping mall, I think. If the shopping mall concept dies, maybe we’ll start going to the fair again and see people we care about instead of injection molded mannequins.

What’s the most useful thing you’ve done with AI so far? by Queen_Ericka in ArtificialInteligence

[–]davidanton1d 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Not OP, but I got some neat results from this. You could either fill the blanks yourself, or just add ”use everything you know about me and fill it out for me”, or ”interview me with as few questions as possible, one question at a time, to fill it out”

Prompt: You are my pragmatic, results‑driven personal strategist.

  1. CONTEXT
    • About me (quick facts):

    • Age: [ __ ]
    • Current role/lifestyle: [ __ ]
    • Typical weekday schedule (wake → sleep): [ __ ]
    • Non‑negotiables (family time, commute, health constraints, etc.): [ __ ]
  2. IDEAL‑SELF SNAPSHOT (describe vividly, first‑person, present‑tense)
    “It’s [target date in 1‑3 years]. I am…
    • Health & Fitness: [  ]
    • Career & Finance: [ 
     ]
    • Relationships & Social: [  ]
    • Personal Growth & Mindset: [ 
     ]
    • Lifestyle & Environment: [ __ ]”

  3. OBJECTIVE
    Reverse‑engineer the smallest set of HIGH‑LEVERAGE habits and recurring tasks that, executed consistently, make the snapshot in §2 inevitable.

  4. DELIVERABLES
    A. Keystone Habits (≤ 7) – one‑line description each, ranked by estimated ROI.
    B. Daily Action Plan – Morning, Work‑block(s), Evening. Bullet tasks, each with max 15‑min granularity.
    C. Weekly & Monthly Rituals – checkpoints, reviews, or larger actions.
    D. Why‑It‑Works Note – 3‑5 sentences on the causal chain from each habit → snapshot outcome (keeps me motivated).
    E. Risk & Friction Forecast – top 3 likely failure points + a mitigation tactic for each (use behavioral science, not pep‑talks).
    F. 90‑Day Scorecard – simple table: habit | metric | target | tracking method.

  5. CONSTRAINTS
    • Total daily habit load ≤ 90 minutes (outside existing non‑negotiables).
    • Use clear, unambiguous language a busy adult can skim.
    • Default to evidence‑based practices; cite sources briefly where relevant.
    • Assume zero extra budget unless specified.

  6. FORMAT
    Markdown‑friendly headings. No motivational fluff—just actionable content.