E-nonymous

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E-nonymous

E-nonymous

@EnonymousAcc

Chinese-American, lawyer, liberal. Views are my own.

انضم Aralık 2018
432 يتبع344 المتابعون
E-nonymous أُعيد تغريده
TikTok民俗学
TikTok民俗学@mujo_to·
「テメエなんど言ったら分かるんだ!チンジャオロースーの作り方は、まずは細切りした豚肉に塩胡椒をし……」と怒鳴りながらも一から丁寧にレクチャーしてくれる「モラハラレシピ動画」というジャンルがあるらしい。 v.douyin.com/rmdyAPaVeYc/
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Adso Øvbelk
Adso Øvbelk@AdsoOfBelk·
I play crusader kings so that my sons may play Europa universalis and their sons may play Victoria 3
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E-nonymous
E-nonymous@EnonymousAcc·
@zephyr_z9 This reminds me of “picks and shovels” during the dotcom boom…
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E-nonymous@EnonymousAcc·
@AngelicaOung This seems fertile ground for a corrupt procurement scheme where some ROC politician subsequently leaves the island and magically becomes rich overseas
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Angelica 🌐⚛️🇹🇼🇨🇳🇺🇸
As the GCC allies demonstrated, if you are living in the neighborhoood with a major missile power, no amount of fancy US military equipment will save you. We are not buying deterrence. We are paying for overpriced friendship bracelets.
Murtaza Hussain@MazMHussain

U.S. lawmakers are visiting Taiwan to attempt to pressure the country's parliament to pass a massive $40 billion defense budget. The last major defense sale to Taiwan triggered major war games by the PRC around the strait; just more export of chaos for the sake of it.

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RedboxGlobal
RedboxGlobal@RedboxWire·
GULF STATES CONSIDER NEW PIPELINES TO AVOID STRAIT OF HORMUZ - FT
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E-nonymous أُعيد تغريده
jck✨
jck✨@Alea_·
🛑🛑🛑 US MILITARY OFFICIALS ARE PLANNING POTENTIAL GROUND ASSAULTS INSIDE IRAN, INCLUDING TARGETING KHARG ISLAND AND SEIZING ENRICHED URANIUM SITES - THE ATLANTIC, CITING PEOPLE FAMILIAR WITH THE MATTER
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E-nonymous أُعيد تغريده
Shaiel Ben-Ephraim
Shaiel Ben-Ephraim@academic_la·
Netanyahu is very frustrated at the high chance the war will end soon. Leaks from a recent cabinet meeting show him saying the following: 1) Israel has prepared a target bank focused on Iran's power stations and national infrastructure, believing that striking them would cause the collapse of the Tehran regime and shorten the war. The decision now awaits Trump. 2) Iran has roughly 300–400 ballistic missiles remaining. Israel and the US have destroyed hundreds of launchers, but Iran still retains more than half of its original launcher capacity. Bad weather is also limiting Israel's ability to hunt missile launchers. 3) Israel believes the US must act decisively to open the straitsa, warning that allowing Iran to keep it closed would be a major political win for Tehran. Israeli sources estimate a US operation there would be "the final chord of the war" and take about a month. 4) He highlighted economic damage to Iran — 70% of steel production capacity hit, GDP reduced by 2–3%. He also discussed potential energy pipeline routes through Saudi Arabia to bypass Hormuz, and mentioned growing Arab state cooperation with Israel. 5) Netanyahu stated Israel will refuse any externally imposed ceasefire in Lebanon, insisting it must remain Israel's independent decision. 6) Netanyahu criticized what he called a "massive depression industry" working to suppress Israeli public morale during the war. Netanyahu knows the US and Israel are losing the war and that Israeli public opinion is turning against him. He hopes to trap the US into an extended land war to change the equation.
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E-nonymous@EnonymousAcc·
@cma_1973 Kinda doesn’t feel like an end to the war
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E-nonymous أُعيد تغريده
Nicholas Mulder
Nicholas Mulder@njtmulder·
"Getting to Denmark," but it's 17th-century Denmark, a militarized absolutist state charging a small proportion of cargo value to allow ships to pass the international waterway it controls. Hormuz fee as the new Sound Dues.
Nicholas Mulder tweet media
Marko Jukic@mmjukic

Iran is not going to drive oil prices to $200/barrel if Trump just walks away. They are going to be confused for two weeks and then will just charge everyone a small fee for transit, which everyone will gladly pay. If they get attacked again, they will re-close the Strait.

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E-nonymous@EnonymousAcc·
@TheStalwart This seems to say we are talking but not negotiating
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E-nonymous@EnonymousAcc·
@cma_1973 The gulf states, but they’re egging him on
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E-nonymous أُعيد تغريده
Mark Cuban
Mark Cuban@mcuban·
I’m going to tell you how much worse it was at the start of the PC Revolution for white collar workers trying to adapt, vs today with AI Today, presumably every white collar worker has access to a smart phone and/or a PC/laptop. Back then, a PC cost $4,995 , an off brand was $3,995. 5k in 1984 is about $16k today. It was really expensive. The only reason I could learn how to code and support software is because my job let me take home a PC to learn. By reading the software manual. Literally. RTFM. Or pay to go to training. Classes that started at hundreds of dollars then. It was expensive. It absolutely limited who could get ahead. Today, ANYONE can go to their browser, to the AI LLM website of their choice, and type in the words “I’m a novice with zero computer background, teach me how to create an agent that reads my email and …” That concept applies to LEARNING ANYTHING Think about what this means. Any employee of any company can say “ I need to learn how to xyz for my job , which is to do the following: Tell me what more information do you need to help me be more efficient, productive and promotable”. Or “ what new skills can you teach me that will help me reduce my chances of getting laid off “. Or “what suggestions do you have for me to communicate to my boss, who I barely know, to help my chances of staying employed “ These aren’t great prompts. But they are a start that anyone can take. Think about how incredible that is. Back in the day was so much harder for white collar workers. It was harder for new grads because unless they took comp sci, they probably had never used a PC. Big Companies are going to cut jobs. No question about it. Small companies is are going to need more and more AI literate thinkers who can help them compete or get an edge What I tell every entrepreneur, and it’s more crucial today. “ when you run with the elephants there are the quick and the dead. Adopt tech quickly , you can out maneuver big companies. “
Mark Cuban@mcuban

An article from the 90s explaining how in the 1980s, personal computers changed the dynamic of college vs high school workers. College grads learned how to use PCs and grew wages faster Mind you, this was when interest rates were 15pct, white collar unemployment was the highest it’s been any non covid year, general unemployment was 10pct, there was a recession, 18pct mortgages, and the start of the savings and loan industry collapse. The economy was a mess. Except it was the start of the “digital revolution “ which lead to change. Here we are at the early days of the AI revolution. I think it will be very analogous to what happened back then. If you think learning how to use Clause seems daunting, imagine being 50 yrs old in 1983, not knowing how to type, using a 1.0 key adding machine with a tape roll to do all your work as an analyst and realizing you had to figure out how your brand new IBM PC and lotus 1-2-3 worked. Or having only used a typewriter your entire career , then having to learn the new PC and WordStar. Trust me. WordStar key combinations were far harder to learn than telling Claude what you want done Lots of people couldn’t figure it out. Those who did were more productive Ctrl QA with AI nber.org/digest/sep97/h…

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Joe Weisenthal
Joe Weisenthal@TheStalwart·
Futures jumping on that WSJ headline
Joe Weisenthal tweet media
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E-nonymous أُعيد تغريده
cma
cma@cma_1973·
Trump Tells Aides He’s Willing to End War Without Reopening Hormuz wsj.com/world/middle-e…
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E-nonymous
E-nonymous@EnonymousAcc·
@PAstynome I suppose their old status was akin to the HRE
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Phryne Astynome
Phryne Astynome@PAstynome·
@EnonymousAcc I mean among the nerds. Runciman did a lot of good work overturning the historical bias against them.
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E-nonymous@EnonymousAcc·
@PAstynome I think they’ve sort of been lionized because they were a Christian empire
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E-nonymous
E-nonymous@EnonymousAcc·
@PAstynome Eh, I’m not sure this is true. Byzantium as the eastern Roman Empire, Constantinople, Hagia Sophia etc have been aggrandized in American history education since before AoE was a thing
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E-nonymous
E-nonymous@EnonymousAcc·
@BretDevereaux Lol I had to do a double take on the edit to “war is hell”
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