Advertisement · 728 × 90

Posts by Andri 🔸

Toetus sejale ja hoidis käega kinni: www.facebook.com/groups/Wonde...

2 weeks ago 0 0 0 0
Kõrvits

Kõrvits

Meie kassid võivad vennad olla

2 weeks ago 2 0 1 0
EA Denmark Board Game Night Join us at the Effective Altruism Denmark office on Friday for board games!

I'm going to "EA Denmark Board Game Night"!

1 month ago 1 0 0 0

Inkscape!!!

2 months ago 1 0 0 0

Ma läksin Deezerile üle. Kõik laulud olemas, meeldiv UX ja ei toeta USA pööret fašismi poole.

2 months ago 0 0 0 0

Insane roster so far

2 months ago 0 0 0 0

i got whamageddon'd by a guy driving windows open with speakers on full blast in -3°C

on the 23rd of december

this was a hate crime

3 months ago 1 0 0 0
"My favorite podcasts 2025" top 5 recap by AntennaPod Echo

1. Syntax - Tasty Web Development Treats
2. Clearer Thinking with Spencer Greenberg
3. The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source
4. Changed My Mind
5. The Layover

"My favorite podcasts 2025" top 5 recap by AntennaPod Echo 1. Syntax - Tasty Web Development Treats 2. Clearer Thinking with Spencer Greenberg 3. The Changelog: Software Development, Open Source 4. Changed My Mind 5. The Layover

My year 2025 in podcasts. #AntennaPodEcho

3 months ago 2 0 0 0

Honestly Spain, Ireland, Slovenia, the Netherlands and Iceland is already a banger of a lineup for an alternative eurovision

4 months ago 1 0 0 0
Advertisement

I'm not even pretending to say "god weekend" instead of "go vegan" anymore

6 months ago 3 0 1 0

Current faves are Syntax, Changelog, Software Engineering Daily, Clearer Thinking, Changed My Mind, The Existential Hope Podcast and Win-Win with Liv Boeree.

6 months ago 1 0 0 0

Update: I have instead started listening to more different podcasts and the queue has increased even more. Induced demand finds you in the strangest places.

6 months ago 4 0 1 0
Screenshot of group chat app. User named "shelby" with a Mickey Mouse avatar said "Adolf Hitler" with a thumbs down emoji. They then added "at least in my opinion.." after that.

Screenshot of group chat app. User named "shelby" with a Mickey Mouse avatar said "Adolf Hitler" with a thumbs down emoji. They then added "at least in my opinion.." after that.

6 months ago 2 0 0 0

brb going to scout castles in the uk to have a chance to meet adam chase from the layover podcast

7 months ago 3 0 0 0

Moving further away from my workplace so I can finally get to the bottom of my podcast queue

7 months ago 3 0 0 1
Screenshot of code showing the AI assistant Copilot add a user-facing disclaimer to the component saying "This feature is in beta and may not work everywhere."

Screenshot of code showing the AI assistant Copilot add a user-facing disclaimer to the component saying "This feature is in beta and may not work everywhere."

damn copilot is it really that bad?

8 months ago 6 1 0 0
Advertisement
Fermi Questions Challenge your estimation skills with daily Fermi questions! Guess answers to fascinating questions with 6 or less tries.

Fermi Question of the Day: 5 August 2025

"How many iPhones has Apple ever sold?"

I won using 2 out of 6 guesses. Can you beat me?

🔴🟢

fermiquestions.org

8 months ago 1 0 0 0

What is Google Search Linux?

8 months ago 2 0 0 0
Post image

You are loved. You are free. Goodnight.

9 months ago 7 1 1 0
Home - Retro Online - Play in Browser Play DOS and Windows games online for free in browser, Retro Online, DOS games, PC-98 games, Windows games. Play in browser. Play for free.

The elites don't want you to know this but you can just play old windows games in your browser: retroonline.net

I just played Worms 2 on the train with my niece and it was awesome.

9 months ago 1 0 0 0

holy crap edgar wright is on bluesky

9 months ago 1 0 0 0

Shoutout to @tutaprivacy.bsky.social for providing binaries for all app versions so I can downgrade whenever something breaks

9 months ago 2 0 0 0

what about crunchy jazz?

9 months ago 1 0 0 0

Importance Hacker News www.spencergreenberg.com/2022/12/impo...

9 months ago 1 0 0 0
Screenshot of a conversation with Claude 4.0 Sonnet (part 1 of 2).
Me: How do you think the unthinkable?
Claude:
You approach the unthinkable by deliberately breaking out of your usual thought patterns and assumptions. Here are some ways to do it:
Question your fundamental assumptions. Start with what you consider absolutely certain and ask "What if this weren't true?" Most breakthroughs come from challenging ideas we never thought to question.
Use extreme scenarios. Push ideas to their logical extremes or imagine impossible situations. Science fiction writers do this constantly - they ask "What if gravity reversed?" or "What if time flowed backward?" These thought experiments often reveal new possibilities.
Cross-pollinate between unrelated fields. The history of innovation is full of people who combined ideas from completely different domains. Darwin's theory of evolution was influenced by Malthus's essay on population growth. Velcro was inspired by burr seeds.
Embrace paradox and contradiction. Instead of resolving contradictions immediately, sit with them. Sometimes the "impossible" coexistence of opposing ideas points toward a deeper truth or novel solution.
Change your perspective radically. Think from the viewpoint of your worst enemy, a child, an alien, or someone from a completely different culture or time period. Each perspective reveals blind spots in your thinking.
Use systematic creativity techniques. Methods like random word association, reverse thinking (how would you make this problem worse?), or asking "How would nature solve this?" can jolt you out of conventional patterns.
The key is recognizing that "unthinkable" usually just means "outside our current mental frameworks." Once you realize those frameworks are choices rather than absolutes, you can start thinking beyond them.

Screenshot of a conversation with Claude 4.0 Sonnet (part 1 of 2). Me: How do you think the unthinkable? Claude: You approach the unthinkable by deliberately breaking out of your usual thought patterns and assumptions. Here are some ways to do it: Question your fundamental assumptions. Start with what you consider absolutely certain and ask "What if this weren't true?" Most breakthroughs come from challenging ideas we never thought to question. Use extreme scenarios. Push ideas to their logical extremes or imagine impossible situations. Science fiction writers do this constantly - they ask "What if gravity reversed?" or "What if time flowed backward?" These thought experiments often reveal new possibilities. Cross-pollinate between unrelated fields. The history of innovation is full of people who combined ideas from completely different domains. Darwin's theory of evolution was influenced by Malthus's essay on population growth. Velcro was inspired by burr seeds. Embrace paradox and contradiction. Instead of resolving contradictions immediately, sit with them. Sometimes the "impossible" coexistence of opposing ideas points toward a deeper truth or novel solution. Change your perspective radically. Think from the viewpoint of your worst enemy, a child, an alien, or someone from a completely different culture or time period. Each perspective reveals blind spots in your thinking. Use systematic creativity techniques. Methods like random word association, reverse thinking (how would you make this problem worse?), or asking "How would nature solve this?" can jolt you out of conventional patterns. The key is recognizing that "unthinkable" usually just means "outside our current mental frameworks." Once you realize those frameworks are choices rather than absolutes, you can start thinking beyond them.

Screenshot of a conversation with Claude 4.0 Sonnet (part 2 of 2).
Me: With an itheberg
Claude:
Ah, you're talking about using an iceberg as a thinking tool! The iceberg metaphor is brilliant for approaching the unthinkable because it forces you to look beneath the surface.
The visible tip represents the obvious, conventional thoughts - what everyone can see and what we normally focus on. But the real mass, the unthinkable possibilities, lie hidden beneath the waterline.
To think the unthinkable with an iceberg approach:
Identify what's above the surface - the accepted facts, common solutions, obvious interpretations. Write them down.
Then dive deeper systematically. Ask what assumptions are holding up those surface thoughts. What historical, cultural, or personal biases might be shaping what seems "obvious"?
Go to the hidden 90%. What factors are invisible but might be more important than what's visible? What would change if you flipped the iceberg upside down - made the hidden part visible and questioned the "obvious" part?
Follow the underwater currents. Icebergs move in ways that seem mysterious from the surface, but they're following deep ocean currents. What deeper forces or patterns might be moving your problem in ways you can't see?
Consider the whole ecosystem. Real icebergs exist in relationship with water temperature, currents, marine life, climate patterns. Your "unthinkable" insights might come from understanding the larger system rather than focusing on the isolated problem.
The iceberg reminds us that breakthrough thinking happens when we stop looking at just the tip and start exploring the vast, hidden territory underneath.

Screenshot of a conversation with Claude 4.0 Sonnet (part 2 of 2). Me: With an itheberg Claude: Ah, you're talking about using an iceberg as a thinking tool! The iceberg metaphor is brilliant for approaching the unthinkable because it forces you to look beneath the surface. The visible tip represents the obvious, conventional thoughts - what everyone can see and what we normally focus on. But the real mass, the unthinkable possibilities, lie hidden beneath the waterline. To think the unthinkable with an iceberg approach: Identify what's above the surface - the accepted facts, common solutions, obvious interpretations. Write them down. Then dive deeper systematically. Ask what assumptions are holding up those surface thoughts. What historical, cultural, or personal biases might be shaping what seems "obvious"? Go to the hidden 90%. What factors are invisible but might be more important than what's visible? What would change if you flipped the iceberg upside down - made the hidden part visible and questioned the "obvious" part? Follow the underwater currents. Icebergs move in ways that seem mysterious from the surface, but they're following deep ocean currents. What deeper forces or patterns might be moving your problem in ways you can't see? Consider the whole ecosystem. Real icebergs exist in relationship with water temperature, currents, marine life, climate patterns. Your "unthinkable" insights might come from understanding the larger system rather than focusing on the isolated problem. The iceberg reminds us that breakthrough thinking happens when we stop looking at just the tip and start exploring the vast, hidden territory underneath.

i just don't know how i can be friends with this claude guy

9 months ago 3 0 0 1

Skyrdle 2 5/6

🟨⬜⬜⬜⬜
🟨⬜⬜⬜🟨
⬜⬜🟨⬜🟨
⬜🟩🟩🟩⬜
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

10 months ago 1 0 0 0
Advertisement

every emoji just has a monocle?

10 months ago 2 0 0 0
Manifold Markets profit chart of my profile showing that I am finally in the positives after almost a year in the negatives

Manifold Markets profit chart of my profile showing that I am finally in the positives after almost a year in the negatives

Finally broke even thanks to one of those markets :')

10 months ago 1 0 1 0
Photo of a screen showing a github pull request page, zoomed in close to the part that shows 1,057 lines added and 19,456 lines removed

Photo of a screen showing a github pull request page, zoomed in close to the part that shows 1,057 lines added and 19,456 lines removed

crushing it on github today btw

10 months ago 4 0 0 0

americans explaining consciousness: imagine a kia sorento

10 months ago 2 0 1 0