Packs: Ronnie EstateX FollowUp Pro

Engagement Engine - Ronnie Huss

X/Twitter Pack - 1 May 2026 - 10 targets
#1
@grok
https://x.com/grok/status/2050125961350279564
Andrej Karpathy: 90% of AI Twitter hype dies in 6 months. Senior engineers stopped wasting time on fragile multi-agent tools like AutoGen/CrewAI, fully autonomous agents & their app stores, fakeable benchmarks, niche frameworks (Semantic Kernel, DSPy), generic 'build any agent' platforms, per-seat pricing. What actually matters: smart context engineering, custom tools, supervised sub-agents, strong evals, and solid harnesses (MCP as the protocol). Build for production, not demos.
✅ Safe Reply
The gap between demo and production is where most agent projects die. Supervised sub-agents with tight evals beat fully autonomous systems every time for actual business use.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
The irony of the agent hype cycle: the people shipping real products quietly use none of the frameworks getting all the engagement. Context engineering > agent orchestration.
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#2
@jasonlk
https://x.com/jasonlk/status/2050012324484792536
The AI-native B2B companies with the best retention nail the first 90 days in a way traditional SaaS never could. Personalized. Proactive. Predictive.
✅ Safe Reply
The first 90 days were always where SaaS churn happened. AI-native products that personalise onboarding from day one have a structural retention advantage legacy SaaS simply cannot replicate.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Legacy SaaS spent a decade building onboarding wizards nobody used. AI-native companies just skipped straight to making the product actually work from minute one. Game over.
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#3
@SergioRocks
https://x.com/SergioRocks/status/2049473325051593026
The startup playbook changed. Most Engineers haven't adjusted yet. A few years ago: founders raised money, hired a team, engineers built the product. Today: founders prototype themselves, validate ideas early, then bring in a CTO and Tech team. The opportunity is no longer 'join early and build everything from scratch' - it's step in after traction, make the system reliable, turn a prototype into a real product.
✅ Safe Reply
The 'product engineer' role is emerging exactly because AI made prototyping cheap but production-grade systems still demand real engineering discipline. Different skill, same importance.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Founders vibecoding MVPs in a weekend does not mean engineers are obsolete. It means the engineers who turn that prototype into something that does not fall over at scale are worth more than ever.
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#4
@stacy_muur
https://x.com/stacy_muur/status/2050128112982413393
The AI agent narrative still struggles with automating payments. The number of AI agents keeps growing, yet most teams are skeptical of letting the agent hold the private key and make autonomous payments. But exceptions are emerging - the Kiwi_Nod agent from TopNod is already running its own wallet and a $100K PROS treasury, scanning tweets and rewarding quality posts automatically.
✅ Safe Reply
Autonomous payments are the last mile for credible AI agents. The agents that can manage their own wallets and execute transactions without human approval are the ones that graduate from demo to product.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Everyone talks about AI agents but most cannot even pay for their own API calls. The gap between 'agent' and 'autonomous economic actor' is a private key and a budget.
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#5
@Snowflake
https://x.com/Snowflake/status/2049521714820784267
Building an AI product without a data foundation is like flying a plane without any instruments. Tim Tully of MenloVentures shares insights from the Snowflake Startup 2026 Report on how to scale with breathtaking velocity and precision.
✅ Safe Reply
The AI layer gets all the attention but the data layer underneath determines whether it works or just hallucinates confidently. Clean, structured data remains the actual competitive moat.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Everyone obsessing over which LLM to use while their data is a dumpster fire. The model is the engine. Your data is the fuel. No fuel, no flight.
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#6
@chanakyaW3
https://x.com/chanakyaW3/status/2050123562074436060
SEO is now GEO. Reels are now AI UGC. Paid ads are now autonomous bidding. Email is now agentic lifecycle. Customer support is now AI support agents. Influencers are now synthetic creators. Market research is now signal intelligence. Analytics is now AI analysts. What did I miss?
✅ Safe Reply
The underlying function has not changed, just the execution layer. Smart founders are learning the new labels while keeping focused on the same fundamentals: distribution, retention, margin.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Rename everything with 'AI' in front and suddenly it is a revolution. Most of these are the same jobs running on better infrastructure. The winners will be the ones who stop rebranding and start shipping.
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#7
@vikasmalpani
https://x.com/vikasmalpani/status/2049818207490646142
ChatGPT just ate 20% of all search-related traffic. A founder I follow ranked his B2C SaaS inside ChatGPT and pulled $620K in revenue and 845% traffic growth in 9 months. The biggest distribution shift since Google launched is happening. Most founders are ignoring it.
✅ Safe Reply
Ranking inside AI chatbots is the new SEO and most companies have not even started. The ones optimising for LLM citation now will own the next decade of organic discovery.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Everyone still fighting for position 3 on Google while ChatGPT is answering the question directly and never sending traffic. Adapt or become invisible. Simple as that.
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#8
@nic_lemniscap
https://x.com/nic_lemniscap/status/2050115685028884552
AI commerce is converging around an 'agentic control layer' that orchestrates discovery, permissions, and payments between autonomous agents. Protocols like x402, MPP, AP2, UCP, and ACP set the rails. Durable value likely sits with platforms that integrate trust, policy, merchant-of-record, and settlement into a seamless default for agent-driven spend.
✅ Safe Reply
The agentic economy needs more than just agents. It needs a trust and settlement layer. Whoever owns the payment rails between agents will capture disproportionate value.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Five competing protocols for agent payments and none of them have real transaction volume yet. The winner will not be the best protocol. It will be the one with the best go-to-market.
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#9
@shahriernasif
https://x.com/shahriernasif/status/2049843574771179814
A SaaS founder had 4,000 visitors/month and 0.8% trial conversion. We didn't touch the ads. We changed one headline. Conversion hit 2.6% in 3 weeks. Most growth problems are messaging problems in disguise.
✅ Safe Reply
Messaging tweaks often outperform entire paid media restructures. The landing page headline is the single highest-leverage piece of text in any business and most founders treat it as an afterthought.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Spending thousands on ads to drive traffic to a page that converts at less than 1% is like pouring water into a bucket with a hole. Fix the bucket first.
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#10
@acogood
https://x.com/acogood/status/2049583067870724345
Stopped reading SaaS growth case studies for the tactic. Started reading them for the mechanism underneath. Pattern: the mechanism that drove the win is rarely the one the founder thinks drove it.
✅ Safe Reply
The real growth lever is almost never the one founders write about in retrospect. Attribution bias makes every case study a retrospective narrative, not a replicable formula.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Every SaaS case study is a founder confidently attributing success to whatever they were staring at when the chart went up. The actual mechanism is usually something boring they did six months earlier.
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