@TheAhmadOsman: Spending time learning graphs and networking theory is one of the highest-ROI investments you can make. It quietly comp…
Summary
A tweet recommends learning graph and networking theory as a high-ROI investment, listing key books, courses, and tools.
View Cached Full Text
Cached at: 06/20/26, 04:19 PM
Spending time learning graphs and networking theory is one of the highest-ROI investments you can make. It quietly compounds across distributed systems, AI, infrastructure, markets, and even social dynamics.
Solid starters: Barabási – Network Science; Easley/Kleinberg – Networks, Crowds, and Markets; MIT – Math for CS; Diestel – Graph Theory; Kleinberg/Tardos – Algorithm Design; Spielman – Spectral Graph Theory; Roughgarden AGT; CS224W; NetworkX, Gephi, SNAP, PyG.
Similar Articles
@DeRonin_: life when you discovered these Github repositories and strated saving $855/mo on paid AI tools
A tweet highlights discovering open-source GitHub repositories that replace paid AI tools and save $855 per month.
@TheAhmadOsman: People keep asking me why do I focus on fundamentals instead of agents or shiny products Shortcuts don’t compound - Mod…
Ahmad Osman argues that focusing on AI fundamentals (architectures, inference, memory, hardware, latency) is more valuable than chasing short-lived agents, products, or frameworks. He promotes his Local LLMs series for learning local AI.
@defileo: Engineers spend 4 years at university and $200,000 to learn what this Stanford lecture gives you in 47 minutes for free…
A tweet highlights a 47-minute Stanford lecture that allegedly provides the value of a four-year engineering degree, and promotes 25 AI prompts as a key productivity tool.
@techNmak: These engineering blogs have leveled up my tech skills more than any bootcamp, course, or conference. Here are the ones…
A Twitter thread recommending engineering blogs that significantly improve tech skills, claiming they are more valuable than formal bootcamps or courses.
@btwiambot: If you’re learning tech, stop memorizing and start understanding visually. These websites help you learn by seeing how …
A tweet recommending visual learning websites for tech, including VisuAlgo, NeetCode, LeetCode, Excalidraw, Kaggle, 3Blue1Brown, and roadmap.sh, for DSA, ML, and coding practice.