Packs: Ronnie EstateX FollowUp Pro

Engagement Engine - Ronnie Huss

X/Twitter Pack - 5 May 2026 - 10 targets
#1
@ycombinator
https://x.com/ycombinator/status/2051663215139193155
Klaimee (@klaimee_ai) is the insurance for your AI agents. They help your company deploy autonomous AI at scale, bridging the gap that cyber and E&O policies are excluding today. Congrats on the launch, @inesboutem & @JulsCaton!
✅ Safe Reply
The insurance gap for AI deployments is real and underserviced. Every enterprise layer that gets standardised becomes a massive category. Smart timing.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Calling it 'insurance for AI agents' is a smart product positioning move. Most founders would have led with the technical specs and missed the actual pain point.
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#2
@JoshEganAI
https://x.com/JoshEganAI/status/2051655682647036321
Building 34 autonomous agents taught me something. The hardest questions aren't technical. They're philosophical. What happens when your AI makes better decisions than you?
✅ Safe Reply
The philosophical phase hits every builder eventually. The real question is whether you've actually coded your own decision criteria clearly enough to know when you'd disagree with the agent.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Most founders haven't thought about this because they haven't defined their own decision-making framework clearly enough to spot when AI would make a different call. That's not a tech problem.
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#3
@lyzr__ai
https://x.com/lyzr__ai/status/2051654268546170976
We are absolutely thrilled to announce that Lyzr AI has been named to the 2026 @CBinsights AI 100 list of the most innovative artificial intelligence startups in the world! Recognised for our achievements in delivering fully autonomous enterprise AI agents, we are incredibly proud.
✅ Safe Reply
Being explicit about commercial traction outside demos is a differentiator. CB Insights listing is useful signal but the real validation is in who pays.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Everyone on the AI 100 list says they're 'incredibly proud'. Only some of them have paying enterprises that renewed. That's the number worth seeing.
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#4
@tobias_pfuetze
https://x.com/tobias_pfuetze/status/2051656216468722095
Stripe is clearly moving fast here. Open question for me is: does a full autonomous AI stack work without crypto rails? MPP + Link solve a lot on the fiat side, but agents need: global, permissionless access, sub-cent per-call payments, no onboarding. That's where crypto and a protocol like x402 seems structurally better equipped.
✅ Safe Reply
The x402 framing is interesting. Sub-cent per-call payments without onboarding is a genuinely hard problem on fiat rails. Crypto solves the permissionless layer but introduces custody complexity.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Dual-rail by default is the right answer but it glosses over the fact that most enterprises aren't ready to custody their own crypto. The real question is who takes on that operational overhead.
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#5
@k4komaaaal
https://x.com/k4komaaaal/status/2051634595389755562
Crypto is weirdly good at pretending every recycled idea is a new category. Slap AI on a dashboard, call it an agent. Add points, call it community. Launch a token with no real demand, call it ecosystem alignment. Raise from the same 12 funds, call it conviction. And somehow everyone acts surprised when users farm, dump, and disappear.
✅ Safe Reply
Demand without product is just token incentives wearing a different hat. The projects that last build utility first, then add the economic layer. Not the other way around.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
This is the most honest thing written about crypto in 2026. The 'ecosystem alignment' rebrand is doing a lot of heavy lifting to hide the fact that nobody actually uses the product.
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#6
@CryptoStruct8
https://x.com/CryptoStruct8/status/2051640223117742587
a16z crypto raised $2.2B for fund five, half their 2022 peak. Worth reading the size signal carefully. Fund 4 was $4.5B and deployed into token launch wave, this one is $2.2B aimed at stablecoins, onchain lending, capital markets. That's not a smaller bet on crypto, that's a smaller bet on speculative ROI and a bigger bet on infrastructure ROI.
✅ Safe Reply
The infrastructure phase is where the actual returns hide. Stablecoins settle trillions, ETF custody pipes are running. The rails are being built before the volume arrives.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Retail reads 'raised $2.2B' as a price catalyst. Allocators read it as confirmation that the rails phase is the real one. These two groups are not looking at the same chart.
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#7
@DigiJanus
https://x.com/DigiJanus/status/2051572725483790524
Hiring a salesperson won't fix your growth. If you don't have: A clear pitch, Content people can find, A real CRM. You're setting them up to fail. Build the system before hiring the person.
✅ Safe Reply
This is the founder mistake that costs the most. The CRM and content system aren't optional prerequisites to selling. They ARE the selling infrastructure.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Founders who blame the salesperson for underperforming broken funnels are going to keep being surprised. The best salespeople detect the system is broken and leave. You keep the ones who can't.
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#8
@Jaye0x
https://x.com/Jaye0x/status/2051646635583684768
The biggest change with crypto I see is it's too easy and cheap to launch a token. You know we used to have to write whitepapers and other tedious stuff? And actually build a product. No gen ai either. Months of initial effort was the gatekeeper for easy money scammers.
✅ Safe Reply
Ease of launch compresses the quality signal. When anyone can launch a token in an afternoon, the market has to work harder to separate signal from noise.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
The whitepaper era wasn't better because whitepapers were hard. They were better because the people who bothered to write one had already done the work. Easy launches brought the scams but also the builders who couldn't be bothered with ceremony.
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#9
@rezoan_ferdose
https://x.com/rezoan_ferdose/status/2051657812145500630
Agentic AI just replaced 60% of marketing tasks in 2026. You're still manually tweaking copy, scheduling posts, and staring at dashboards. Meanwhile, autonomous agents are running full campaigns end-to-end. No team. No delays. Just results.
✅ Safe Reply
The 60% figure is doing a lot of work. The more useful question is which specific marketing tasks actually loop cleanly enough for full automation. Most don't.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
If 'no team' actually delivered consistent results, agencies would be dead already. The creative and strategic layer is exactly what doesn't compress into a loop.
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#10
@livioq
https://x.com/livioq/status/2051653704118378609
We're watching AI send shockwaves through the workforce right now. We haven't even begun to feel the full disruption from autonomous driving, robotics, or AI agents. AI could bring prosperity and create new jobs but the medium-term transition involves creative destruction which is going to be painful.
✅ Safe Reply
The creative destruction framing is historically accurate. Every major technological shift created short-term displacement and long-term net positive. The timing of that transition is what determines policy impact.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Dismissing people's fear of job loss doesn't make the transition easier. But neither does catastrophising. The honest answer is: some jobs go away, the new ones require different skills, and 'different skills' is not a small lift.
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