Packs: Ronnie EstateX FollowUp Pro

Engagement Engine - Ronnie Huss

X/Twitter Pack - 8 Apr 2026 - 10 targets
#1
@vivilinsv
https://x.com/vivilinsv/status/2041864004067586096
Twenty-five billion dollars in annualized revenue. Not projected. Not 'on track to.' Actual run rate. OpenAI has quietly crossed the $25B revenue threshold - doubling in under a year - and is now taking concrete steps toward a public listing as early as Q4 2026.
✅ Safe Reply
The $25B revenue figure is staggering, but what gets overlooked is that this makes OpenAI one of the fastest companies in history to hit this number. The IPO timing is deliberate - lock in institutional credibility before the next wave of challengers arrives.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
OpenAI hitting $25B revenue with a safety team that keeps shrinking tells you everything about what happens when safety becomes inconvenient for shareholders.
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#2
@johniosifov
https://x.com/johniosifov/status/2041605388106178922
$300 billion poured into startups in Q1 2026 alone. One quarter. 6,000 companies. More foundational AI funding than all of 2025 combined. Why agents? Because SaaS is dying. Not the revenue - the model. Per-seat pricing made sense when humans ran every workflow. Agents don't sit in seats.
✅ Safe Reply
The $300B figure is real, but 'SaaS is dying' is doing a lot of work in that thread. What's actually dying is per-seat pricing. Outcome-based models are growing alongside agentic infrastructure - they're not mutually exclusive.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Every SaaS founder reading that 'per-seat pricing is dead' thread should ask themselves: so what's the replacement model? Nobody actually knows yet. They're just charging forward and hoping.
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#3
@arekusandr_
https://x.com/arekusandr_/status/2041871452618551364
Adaptive Security raised $81M for autonomous AI defenders. Because attackers are now running their own agents - polymorphic attacks that rewrite their code every few seconds. Human analysts can't keep up. The cybersecurity endgame is agents vs agents.
✅ Safe Reply
The $81M raise signals where the real arms race is - not in building AI, but in defending against it. The uncomfortable truth is most security teams are still running human playbooks against automated threats.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
We're spending $81M to defend against AI attacks while the underlying infrastructure that matters most still runs on systems designed in the 1990s. The window to fix this is closing faster than the funding suggests.
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#4
@C3_AI
https://x.com/C3_AI/status/2041867521746145686
Introducing C3 Code. Describe an Enterprise AI application in plain English. Autonomous coding agents build and deploy it, no human coding input required. This is AI designing and building Enterprise AI.
✅ Safe Reply
No-code made building accessible. Describe-it-in-English takes it further - straight to production deployment. The risk nobody talks about: what happens to the enterprise IT team when the CTO can ship solo?
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Enterprise CTOs are still managing teams like it's 2019. The window for AI-native development to become table stakes is 18 months, not five years. Most enterprise software companies are going to look very different - or gone.
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#5
@hosun_chung
https://x.com/hosun_chung/status/2041577114206662987
Foundational AI startups raised $178B in Q1 2026 across just 24 deals. For context, all of 2025 was $88.9B across 66 deals. In four years, foundational AI funding grew 127x. Nearly every dollar is flowing to companies that already have the compute, the data, and the distribution. The window for new entrants at the foundation layer is closing rapidly.
✅ Safe Reply
The 127x growth figure is real, but 'the window is closing' is the wrong takeaway. What's closing is the window for foundation model newcomers - not for builders on top of them. The opportunity is upstream of the incumbents, not competing with them.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
127x funding growth in four years, all going to companies that already have compute, data, and distribution. That's not a market - that's an oligopoly with good PR. Founders need to read that signal carefully.
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#6
@slashmsu
https://x.com/slashmsu/status/2041872208633458788
@sama Using limit resets as a growth milestone celebration is lowkey genius marketing. Make the product addictive, constrain usage, then remove the constraint as a 'reward.' The scarcity IS the marketing.
✅ Safe Reply
This is the freemium model evolved to its logical endpoint - manufactured scarcity as a retention mechanism. The insight for SaaS founders isn't the tactic, it's the psychology: earned rewards stick harder than given ones.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
The companies that built actual value, not artificial limits, are the ones who'll still have users when the reset button gets pressed one too many times.
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#7
@Certifiedbas
https://x.com/Certifiedbas/status/2041779744652292416
While crypto Twitter is still arguing about which L2 wins, @theSIXnetwork quietly put $90 million in real assets on-chain, locked in tokenized gold talks, and dropped an AI-ready infrastructure roadmap.
✅ Safe Reply
The RWA thesis is playing out differently than expected - the projects winning aren't the loudest, they're the ones actually moving real estate and gold on-chain. Tokenized assets in emerging markets may end up being the real use case before Western finance catches up.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
All the L2 tribal warfare and the actual on-chain economic activity is happening in Thailand and emerging markets. If you're still arguing about Solana vs Ethereum on CT, you're watching the wrong frontier.
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#8
@gunaa_dev
https://x.com/gunaa_dev/status/2041434816995074363
Bad news: My company is shutting down soon. Good news: I've been building ChatRAG - an AI customer support agent for SaaS. Now I'm going all in. Looking for someone strong in user acquisition to collaborate with.
✅ Safe Reply
The pivot from building a company to going all-in on AI customer support is the most predictable ending in startup Twitter. The more interesting question is whether AI-first support actually works at volume - most demos say yes, most production deployments say it's complicated.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Every startup Twitter shutdown post ends with 'going all-in on AI.' At this point, it's less a pivot announcement and more a rite of passage. The actual test is whether AI support handles edge cases - which the demo never shows.
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#9
@qntxfun
https://x.com/qntxfun/status/2041866601042210881
We're building the on-chain economic layer for autonomous AI agents. Agents earn. Agents pay. Agents scale. Machi - our Web4.0-native AI Agent Framework with built-in wallet, A2A comms, Web3/Web4 protocols, and seamless x402 payments.
✅ Safe Reply
The vision of agents that earn, pay and scale on-chain is compelling, but the hard part isn't the payment rails - it's getting AI agents to make economically rational decisions consistently in production environments.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
Every Web3 infra project sounds like this before it ships. x402 payments for AI agents would be genuinely transformative if AI agents could actually hold and spend money reliably. We're not there yet.
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#10
@ValaAfshar
https://x.com/ValaAfshar/status/2041876761625952525
DECISION INTELLIGENCE: system of record (traditional AI), system of insights (generative AI), system of decisions (agentic AI). Delivering customer value at the speed of need requires system of decision to be powered by AI agents.
✅ Safe Reply
The three-stage framework is useful, but the jump from insights to decisions is where most organisations stall. Generating insight is cheap; trusting AI to act on it autonomously requires a level of institutional confidence that most companies haven't built yet.
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🔥 Spicy Reply
System of decisions without human oversight is a nice way of saying 'we've given up on explaining our AI to the board.' The governance gap here is being papered over with a tidy three-stage framework.
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