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Agentio | Senior Software Engineer | On-site (Brooklyn, NY) | Full-time | https://www.agentio.com | $150k–225k + Equity

Agentio is AI-native platform enabling brands like Bombas, DoorDash, and HelloFresh to scale revenue through creator-led advertising—and empowering creators to monetize more efficiently.

We raised our Series A in November from Benchmark (Uber, Snap, Instagram), and we’re solving rich, technical problems across marketplace dynamics, LLM-powered content understanding, and real-time optimization. We’re a small, hands-on team with experience from Spotify, AWS, Twitter, and Pinterest. We're building tools used daily and already loved by some of the world’s most sophisticated marketing teams and top creators — with Agentio as the leading revenue source for many — transforming the way they partner.

Apply at https://agentio.link/careers


Agentio | Senior Software Engineer | Full time | New York - NYC (5 days in office)

Agentio is the first ad platform for creator content, starting with YouTube. We make it as easy and efficient for brands to buy creator led ad reads as they can buy ads on Meta or Google. For creators, we enable monetization of up to 100% of their content with brands they love enabling them to 2x-5x their earnings. This enables smaller creators to work on their content full time and larger creators to expand their team and invest more in their content.

Join our early engineering team to help build the next great marketing channel and help creators live off and fund their work.

Job posting: https://www.linkedin.com/company/agentio-hq/jobs/ Website: https://www.agentio.com/


Leap Motion: What do developers want?

Developers: Hand tracking on mobile and an updated Android SDK.

Leap Motion: Ok, here's the blueprints to a PC tethered AR headset.


The two aren't mutually incompatible. Stay tuned.


"Leap Motion sensor" is an USB 3.0 camera with clever driver, you can have it on mobile when we start seeing USB 3.0 enabled smartphones.


That's not a blocker. It's a USB 2 and 3 hybrid device, but we never actually rolled out USB 3 in the firmware (would have raised the minimum spec too high for too many people with almost no benefits), so it runs on USB 2.0.


There is no requirement, but if you are spending a meaningful amount of money per month on AWS (over $100) and plan on working on DL projects for the next year or two it might make sense to make the initial up front investment.


You can definitely get by just using AWS and the flexibility is great but it can get expensive.

The Tiramisu model from lesson 14 takes like 25 hours to train and at $0.90 per hour, it adds up pretty fast...


Nader Theory has a post "The Ultimate Layman's Guide to Bitcoin" that is great: http://www.nadertheory.com/#!/main/articles/post-08-the-ulti...

Since you will no longer be a layman, you can then follow that up with his post "The Intelligent Cryptocurrency Investor" : http://www.nadertheory.com/#!/main/articles/post-09-the-inte...

Edit: include article titles


While it is true US foreign policy favored isolationism pre-WWII, calling current restrictions on immigration into the US "isolationist" is a conflation of the term. The US maintains a global military presence and there is no evidence this will change until another state actor (or a coalition of state actors) forcibly shrinks the US global footprint. In George Friedman's book, "The Next 100 Years" the central theme to current US foreign policy is that, as a global super power, the US will actively seek to destabilize regions of the world that threaten its interests now and in the future. That simple guideline can help to understand the lionshare of American foreign policy decisions post WWII and is of course, not an isolationist policy whatsoever.

Edit: spelling of Friedman


Do you have evidence that a meal kit produces more "trash" than the packaging required to ship all of the included products to a store? Additionally, your argument is incomplete without addressing the efficiencies that meal kit companies gain by limiting food waste. The real question is what provides a more efficient food system, a grocery store or a meal kit?


I'd love to see a proper study as well. Every argument I've ever seen against these meals in a box services regarding trash, including the ones I've read in this thread, are entirely based on individual personal anecdotes.

Superficially I can see the appeal of arguing based on the packaging you receive, but this fails to account for recycling options, and ignores aspects like the avoidance of food wastage given the precisely measured amounts. There's clearly more to this problem than 'wow that's more cardboard and plastic than I expected'.


Ofc it's going to be anecdotal. But that doesn't mean it's not true. 12 eggs indivially wrapped vs a dozen. 1 green onion in a plastic bag instead of a few in a smaller grocery plastic bag. Individual plastic bottles to hold 3 tablespoons of vinegar.


I'm not arguing it isn't true at all - just saying that anecdotes alone aren't going to prove this one way or another, at least not to my satisfaction.

> Ofc it's going to be anecdotal

Not really. People link to studies/research here frequently in comments.


https://www.jennettefulda.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/ing...

I mean just look at this photo... A resealable plastic bag for 1 green onion?


It's packed like an MRE! (Only less ready to eat, and probably much more appetizing.) This is the first I've heard of Blue Apron, but I'm really seeing where the accusations of excessive waste come from.


This is eerily similar to the plot of The Three-Body Problem[1], specifically the cyclical development of intelligent life and its race to avoid mass extinction caused by intersecting one of three suns in its stellar system.

[1]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Three-Body_Problem


I heard this is a great book but could not get into this book. I was listening to an audio book. Maybe I should try a physical book next time.


Highly recommend (I read the physical book). It picks up after the first 100 pages or so.


The audiobook worked for me but I do admit it's written in a very different style than most western sci-fi novels.


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