500 a week, interested then DM,, fully online

We are looking for a reliable person for a fully online part time role. You can work from home using your phone or computer with a stable internet connection. No previous experience is required because training and clear instructions will be provided. The work involves following instructions carefully, staying active throughout the week, and completing assigned work on time. Good communication and consistency are important. Payment is 500 INR per week. This opportunity is suitable for students or anyone looking for flexible online work in their free time. If you are responsible, willing to learn, and can complete work on time, we would like to hear from you. Send a short message introducing yourself, mention your availability, and let us know if you have experience with platforms such as Reddit, Discord, or other online communities.

reddit.com
u/ansh_k74 — 4 hours ago

Should document access be a retriever, or a set of tools an agent can call?

A pattern I keep seeing in document-heavy agent workflows is that the retriever abstraction ends up doing too much magic under the hood (parsing, chunking, filtering), which gets awkward when the agent needs to actually reason over a doc collection instead of just fetching an isolated answer.

i swapped out my standard vector retriever for a Linkly AI setup via MCP, which exposes document access to the agent as explicit tools. now instead of blindly hitting an index, the agent has tools to search for likely docs, inspect an outline, and read specific text snippets based on its current plan. the files stay local and the context window stays clean since it only pulls exactly what it needs.

What I like is that at least i can see what it searched, which section it actually read, and exactly where the answer came from. the only real bottleneck right now is my own messy local directories. i still need to spend some time organizing my older archives before i map the rest of the folders into the setup.

reddit.com
u/ansh_k74 — 4 hours ago

I think some podcasts answer every question too quickly

Sometimes a host asks a really interesting question, but before the guest has a chance to explore it, the conversation moves on to the next topic. The episode ends up covering a lot, but nothing feels like it had room to breathe.

Ironically, the episodes I remember most are usually the ones where the hosts were comfortable sitting with one idea a little longer instead of trying to fit everything into an hour.

I have also noticed that some podcast-focused teams like PodcastCola seem to leave space for conversations to develop naturally instead of constantly steering them back to the outline, which probably helps listeners feel more invested.

Curious if anyone else has noticed this. Do you prefer podcasts that cover a lot of ground, or ones that spend more time exploring fewer ideas?

reddit.com
u/ansh_k74 — 13 hours ago

my desk is slowly becoming a tiny sci fi arcade

started with just an ultrawide and a keyboard.

then somehow the pixel screens, RGB lights, little gadgets, and desk toys kept multiplying.

ngl, it makes me weirdly happy every time I sit down now.

not sure if this is still a workspace or just my tiny sci fi arcade corner.

reddit.com
u/ansh_k74 — 1 day ago

How do you keep reusable sticky bras sticky after washing?

i’m so done with disposable nipple covers.i burn through them every event season and it feels like such a waste of money.

i’ve been looking at ones with a real storage board and replaceable adhesive pads. I think puff bra has that setup, which sounds useful, but I’m still skeptical because every reusable bra brand says theirs lasts forever.

What’s the actual trick here? Specific soap? No tap water? Better storage? And how many wears are people realistically getting before the adhesive gets annoying? Not the brand claim, the real number.

reddit.com
u/ansh_k74 — 1 day ago

Which MBA programs in China offer the best career prospects and ROI?

MBA tuition has become expensive almost everywhere, so ROI is probably one of the most important factors for applicants. When evaluating MBA programs in China, I am mainly interested in employment outcomes, career progression, salary growth, and opportunities for career transition after graduation.

Programs such as CEIBS, Fudan MBA, and SJTU Antai are often mentioned when people discuss long-term career value.

What caught my attention about Fudan MBA was its focus on career development. The program appears to invest heavily in helping students with career planning, employer connections, industry exposure, and professional growth, which can have a direct impact on ROI for working professionals.

Of course, ROI can mean different things to different people. For some, it is salary growth. For others, it is switching industries, moving into management, or expanding their professional opportunities.

For people who have completed an MBA in China, which program delivered the strongest return on investment for your career, and why?

reddit.com
u/ansh_k74 — 2 days ago

migrated a chunk of our outbound stack off clay this quarter

the real reason was cost plus complexity, clay's great but the workflow builder has a learning curve and every icp tweak meant rebuilding graphs.

moved linkedin monitoring and account research over to Swan. Simple prompting there was way faster than rebuilding a clay workflow every time our targeting shifted. kept core enrichment on the old stack for now, data coverage there still isn't quite where clay's is for some of our niche verticals.

ended up folding what used to be three separate point tools into that one piece, which i wasn't expecting going in. onboarding with Swan was quick, mostly through slack, which was the one part of this migration that didn't involve a headache. props to the team.

this said, it’s not a full clay replacement for us yet, more like we finally split the workload between two tools instead of forcing one to do everything. good stuff though. anyone else done a partial migration like this instead of an all or nothing switch?

reddit.com
u/ansh_k74 — 3 days ago

Is AI roleplay the same thing as AI creative writing?

Same tools, arguably different headspace. Roleplay is live and improvisational. Creative writing has authorial distance and revision. I lean toward ""different in practice, same in mechanics."" But the distinction also gets used to gatekeep in annoying ways. Where do you land on this?

reddit.com
u/ansh_k74 — 3 days ago

Best SaaS link building agencies in 2026?

Trying to avoid the usual guest post spam and find a team that actually understands B2B pipeline

My current shortlist based on industry threads:

- LinkBuilder.io (The standard name)

- Siege Media (Looks good but very enterprise/expensive)

- Above Apex (Really like their focus on topical authority over bulk DR metrics) Has anyone worked with any of these recently? Would love some real feedback before scheduling discovery calls....

reddit.com
u/ansh_k74 — 3 days ago

Reading 50 books a year is a vanity metric that actively harms your understanding.

Every December, people post their Goodreads challenges showing they hit their 50 book goal.

I used to do this. I would speed read, listen to audiobooks on 2x speed, and pick shorter books just to hit the number. Then someone asked me to explain the core premise of a book I had read three months prior, and I drew a blank.

Volume is the enemy of depth. If you are racing to finish a book, you are not stopping to reflect, argue with the author, or apply the concepts. You are just letting words wash over your brain so you can check a box.

Reading fewer books, but reading them twice, taking notes, and discussing them, yields a massive return on investment. Reading 50 books just gives you a tweet.

Have we gamified reading to the point where it lost its actual purpose?

reddit.com
u/ansh_k74 — 4 days ago

The best learning resource I've ever used wasn't a course, a book, or a tutorial. It was a senior engineer's reading list with 10 words of context per link.

Three years ago a senior engineer at my company shared a Google Doc with me. It had about 25 links. Each one had a short sentence explaining what to pay attention to and roughly when to read it relative to the others.

That document taught me more about distributed systems in a month than I'd learned in a year of random reading.

The difference wasn't the quality of the individual resources. Most of them I'd already seen. The difference was the sequence and the context. Knowing WHAT to read is easy. Knowing WHEN to read it and WHY it matters at that point in your learning is the hard part.

I've been looking for something like that in every domain since. Curated, ordered reading paths from people who actually know the field. Not courses (too slow), not textbooks (too broad), not blog posts (too scattered). Just: here's what to read, in this order, and here's what to look for.

Has anyone else found resources like this? What domain were they in?

reddit.com
u/ansh_k74 — 4 days ago

Can anyone recommend a tool to remove blemishes from photos professionally?

I’m looking for something reliable for quick blemish removal without spending too much time on manual retouching in Photoshop. I ve seen tools like retouchme mentioned a few times, but I’m lookin what else people here use for more better results.

reddit.com
u/ansh_k74 — 4 days ago

Charms Official Discount code: 10CHARM (10% Sitewide)

​

Charms Official offers a range of stylish jewelry, including charm bracelets, necklaces, rings, earrings, and more. Use code 10CHARM at checkout to get 10% off sitewide and save on your order.

reddit.com
u/ansh_k74 — 5 days ago

Заголовок: Кто-нибудь играл на RioBet? Интересуют реальные отзывы

Недавно наткнулся на riobet.com — похоже, это криптоказино. Хотелось бы узнать, есть ли здесь те, кто действительно пользовался этой платформой.

Как вам выбор игр? Насколько удобно проходят депозиты и вывод средств в криптовалюте? Были ли какие-либо проблемы с выплатами, верификацией аккаунта или службой поддержки?

Меня не интересуют реферальные ссылки, бонусы или реклама — хотелось бы услышать только честные отзывы от людей с реальным опытом использования. Порекомендовали бы вы RioBet, или есть другие криптоказино, с которыми у вас был более положительный опыт?

Заранее спасибо!

reddit.com
u/ansh_k74 — 5 days ago

The trap of optimizing your life until you have zero unscheduled time

I fell down the productivity rabbit hole hard. Morning routine, time blocking, habit trackers, meal prep, sleep optimization.

For a while, it felt amazing. I was a machine. But then I noticed something strange. I became incredibly stressed if a friend wanted to grab a coffee spontaneously because it ruined my calendar block

I optimized all the serendipity out of my life. There was no room for random thoughts, unexpected conversations, or just sitting on the couch doing nothing. My entire existence was engineered for output

Productivity culture teaches us that idle time is wasted time. But I am starting to think idle time is where the actual creative leaps happen. When every minute is scheduled, you execute well, but you stop discovering new things

Has anyone else had to forcefully de optimize their routine to get their sanity back?

reddit.com
u/ansh_k74 — 5 days ago

The memory problem in AI roleplay still isn't solved in 2026

Bigger context windows help but don't fix it. Past a certain point the model starts treating early facts as background noise even if they're technically still in the window. What works for me: a short session summary I update between sessions, plus a quick in-character ""anchor"" moment every 10-15 messages to keep the model calibrated. What's your workaround?

reddit.com
u/ansh_k74 — 6 days ago

What should I watch out for when using Made-in-China brand?

I’m thinking of using Made-in-China to look for suppliers, but I haven’t used the platform before hahaha. If you’ve sourced from there, what were the biggest doubts or thought you noticed when choosing a supplier?

reddit.com
u/ansh_k74 — 6 days ago