Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | allenjhyang's commentslogin

Liminary | Seattle, Bay Area or NYC | Hybrid | Full-time | https://liminary.io

Liminary is building the cognitive companion for knowledge workers - it not only lets you easily save and recall the knowledge you need for your work, but it’s also accelerating your synthesis of insights, generating recommendations, and ghostwriting your work output alongside you. Liminary is an ambient AI that's built for professionals in high information synthesis roles - from researchers to consultants to investors. We aim to augment, not replace, humans, to empower them to focus on higher-value activities rooted in human creativity and judgment.

We're hiring for the remaining two members of our founding engineering team:

1. Product Engineer - Frontend: https://liminary.notion.site/Liminary-Product-Engineer-Front...

2. AI Engineer: https://liminary.notion.site/hiring-ai-engineer

If you like thinking about how to innovate on the interfaces with AI and/or about the nature of human thought and synthesis, we have some interesting projects for you.

Please apply through the website above.


Really cool. Is the mechanism already used for other diseases? Or is this a first-of-its-kind application that'll open the door to using the mechanism for others?


Also hard to marshal the resources you need internally to "kill" a competitor. Sometimes the way to handicap a startup rival is to build the feature / product yourself, but then the bigtech firm runs into the challenges of moving a large org quickly.


From my experience helping my company with GDPR, IMO it's true that the principles of GDPR are straightforward. But there can be a fair amount of ambiguity in how certain parts are interpreted, so in practice if you're taking it seriously (which every company should), you'll want to loop in your lawyers. Then there are more and more conversations to make sure everybody understands what the company is doing and what their stance is on GDPR.

Sadly, GDPR is not a black-and-white (pun intended with the chess project) checklist with black-and-white checklist items.


Very cool! Also makes me curious what will happen to this project next - will it morph into some other product or feature that we'll see a few months from now.

Anybody know of fun stories of what's happened to previous Google labs projects like this one?


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: