WISDOMRY

2.7K posts

WISDOMRY banner
WISDOMRY

WISDOMRY

@AgelessWisdomry

Self Actualization || Mindfulness || Energy Embark on a journey within. Unveiling ancient secrets to awaken your mind's potential.🧠✨ #UnlockPotential #TheMan

Beigetreten Eylül 2023
64 Folgt34 Follower
WISDOMRY retweetet
Elvin Calcaño
Elvin Calcaño@elvin_calcano24·
El vicepresidente de Trump, convertido al catolicismo hace apenas 6 años, le dice al Papa, quien es doctor en teología y derecho canónico, que debe estudiar más la teología...Insisto: estamos viviendo el momento más idiota de la historia humana. Lo cual es una paradoja en sí.
Español
320
6.4K
30.9K
232.7K
Jeffrey Towson 陶迅
Jeffrey Towson 陶迅@JeffreyTowson·
The big risk is not that China builds an independent AI tech stack. For use in China. That is guaranteed. The big risk is that the China tech stack and ecosystems get international adoption. That’s already happening with DeepSeek, Qwen, Kling, and Seedance at the model level. And huawei is going international at the compute and data center level.
English
1
0
4
541
Armaan Sidhu
Armaan Sidhu@realarmaansidhu·
Jensen Huang just had the most important argument in tech on Dwarkesh Patel's podcast. The topic: should the US sell Nvidia chips to China? Jensen says yes. His reasoning is terrifying — not because he's wrong, but because he might be right. Dwarkesh's argument is intuitive and clean. American export controls limit China's access to advanced chips. Less compute means China trains weaker models. Weaker models mean the US maintains its AI advantage. Don't sell them the tools to beat us. Jensen's counter demolishes the premise. "Their AI development is going just fine. The best AI researchers in the world, because they are limited in compute, also come up with extremely smart algorithms. DeepSeek is not an inconsequential advance." DeepSeek proved the thesis wrong in real time. China, constrained by export controls, didn't fall behind. It innovated around the constraint. Built more efficient architectures. Trained competitive models with less compute. The export controls didn't create a capability gap. They created an efficiency gap — in China's favor. Jensen's actual fear isn't that China builds good models. It's that China builds an entire tech stack that doesn't include Nvidia. "The day that DeepSeek comes out on Huawei first, that is a horrible outcome for our nation." This is the kill line. Jensen isn't worried about China having AI. He's worried about China having AI that runs on Chinese hardware. Because if China's models optimize for Huawei chips instead of Nvidia chips, and those models are open-source, and they diffuse to every country in the Global South — India, the Middle East, Africa, Southeast Asia — then the entire world's AI stack runs on Chinese infrastructure. Not American. Computing ecosystems are sticky. Jensen compared it to x86 and Arm — architectures that persist for decades because switching costs are enormous. If the developing world builds its AI infrastructure on Chinese chips running Chinese models, that's a lock-in that lasts a generation. America doesn't just lose the Chinese market. It loses every market that China reaches first. Dwarkesh pushed back: Tesla sold EVs to China and China still built its own. iPhones are sold there and Chinese smartphones dominate. Why would chips be different? Jensen's response: "We are not a car. Computing is not like that. There's a reason why x86 still exists." He's right. You can switch car brands overnight. You cannot switch computing architectures without rewriting your entire software stack. The lock-in is structural, not preferential. "China is the largest contributor to open source software in the world. China's the largest contributor to open models in the world. Today it's built on the American tech stack, Nvidia's. Fact." Today. Built on Nvidia. But export controls are pushing China to build its own stack. And once that stack exists and open-source models are optimized for it, the migration away from Nvidia becomes irreversible. Jensen's prediction: "In a few years, when we want American technology diffused around the world — out to India, out to the Middle East, out to Africa — I will tell you exactly about today's conversation, about how your policy caused the United States to concede the second largest market in the world for no good reason at all." The CEO of the most important semiconductor company on earth is telling US policymakers that export controls are achieving the opposite of their intended effect. Not weakening China's AI. Strengthening China's incentive to build a competing ecosystem that eventually replaces American technology globally. This is the Renault problem applied to chips. You can't protect your position by refusing to compete. You can only accelerate your competitor's motivation to replace you. The most dangerous export control isn't the one that fails to stop your adversary. It's the one that succeeds in making them build something better without you.
Dwarkesh Patel@dwarkesh_sp

Distilled recap of the back-and-forth with Jensen on export controls: Dwarkesh: Wouldn’t selling Nvidia chips to China enable them to train models like Claude Mythos with cyber offensive capabilities that would be threats to American companies and national security? Jensen: First of all, Mythos was trained on fairly mundane capacity and a fairly mundane amount of it by an extraordinary company. The amount of capacity and the type of compute it was trained on is abundantly available in China. Dwarkesh: With that, could they eventually train a model like Mythos? Yes. But the question is, because we have more FLOPs, American labs are able to get to this level of capabilities first. Furthermore, even if they trained a model like this, the ability to deploy it at scale matters. If you had a cyber hacker, it's much more dangerous if they have a million of them versus a thousand of them. Jensen: Your premise is just wrong. The fact of the matter is their AI development is going just fine. The best AI researchers in the world, because they are limited in compute, also come up with extremely smart algorithms. DeepSeek is not an inconsequential advance. The day that DeepSeek comes out on Huawei first, that is a horrible outcome for our nation. Dwarkesh: Currently, you can have a model like DeepSeek that can run on any accelerator if it's open source. Why would that stop being the case in the future? Jensen: Suppose it optimizes for Huawei. Suppose it optimizes for their architecture. It would put others at a disadvantage. As AI diffuses out into the rest of the world, their standards and their tech stack will become superior to ours because their models are open. Dwarkesh: Tesla sold extremely good electric vehicles to China for a long time. iPhones are sold in China. They didn't cause some lock-in. China will still make their version of EVs, and they're dominating, or smartphones, they're dominating. Jensen: We are not a car. The fact that I can buy this car brand one day and use another car brand another day is easy. Computing is not like that. There's a reason why x86 still exists. There's a reason why Arm is so sticky. These ecosystems are hard to replace. Dwarkesh: It's just hard to imagine that there's a long-term lock-in to the Chinese ecosystem, even if they have this slightly better open-source model for a while. American labs port across accelerators constantly. Anthropic's models are run on GPUs, they're run on Trainium, they're run on TPUs. There are so many things you can do, from distilling to a model that's well fit for your chips. Jensen: China is the largest contributor to open source software in the world. China's the largest contributor to open models in the world. Today it's built on the American tech stack, Nvidia’s. Fact. All five layers of the tech stack for AI are important. The United States ought to go win all five of them. in a few years time, I'm making you the prediction that when we want American technology to be diffused around the world—out to India, out to the Middle East, out to Africa, out to Southeast Asia—on that day, I will tell you exactly about today's conversation, about how your policy ... caused the United States to concede the second largest market in the world for no good reason at all.

English
28
81
481
101K
WISDOMRY
WISDOMRY@AgelessWisdomry·
@realarmaansidhu America and its GPT- powered fanboys (includinh you) are like fish out of water. No matter how strategic their movements and processes are, China WILL develop its own EVERYTHING, not just computing infra but everything. Because it CAN and it has all the time in the world.
English
0
0
0
206
WISDOMRY
WISDOMRY@AgelessWisdomry·
@lisaawrites Nopes. Definitely not. Its the sign of normies. Its because of their incessant ability to simplify that they are stuck in 9-5 while goons and pedos lead them. After all who cares...its just a vote, i have to eat bread..as simple as that.
English
0
0
0
306
`
`@lisaawrites·
A sign of intelligent person is their ability to simplify things, not complicate them.
English
234
4.9K
31.6K
447.2K
WISDOMRY
WISDOMRY@AgelessWisdomry·
@badazn Its not that simple. Any soul is not just a product of its environment.
English
0
0
1
4.5K
Arthur Kwon Lee
Arthur Kwon Lee@badazn·
Weak father = Slutty daughter Dominating mother = Mama’s boy Narcissistic mother = Insecure son Absent father = Self-hating children Poor marriages = Unhappy Homes Unhappy home = Unhappy society Broken homes breed broken men, and broken men burn the world. Strong father = Confident daughter Feminine mother = Masculine son Loving parents = Secure children Healthy marriage = peaceful home Peaceful home = Strong society
English
117
1.3K
8.7K
833.9K
WISDOMRY
WISDOMRY@AgelessWisdomry·
@MikeSonko Those who say size "obviously" win have never been in an actual fight.
English
0
0
0
1.9K
Mike Sonko
Mike Sonko@MikeSonko·
This fight should be studied for future generations
English
1.1K
1.6K
16.9K
1.6M
WISDOMRY retweetet
Rage ❉
Rage ❉@ragecvlt·
Isolation is the price of truth.
English
25
269
1.4K
38.4K
WISDOMRY
WISDOMRY@AgelessWisdomry·
@flirtaeyeon She was sleeping with Mr. Pedo, Elon Musk, in the mansion belonging to Depp.
English
0
0
0
4.5K
WISDOMRY
WISDOMRY@AgelessWisdomry·
@sjgadler I never like Dwarkesh but here he is asking some legit questions...and Jensen as usual is gaslighting.
English
0
0
2
1.3K
Steven Adler
Steven Adler@sjgadler·
Dwarkesh: Why would we want to sell China the materials for a serious cyberweapon? It's like selling them nukes with a casing that says 'made by Boeing' and claiming that's good for the US Jensen: Comparing AI to nukes is lunacy. Enriched uranium is a lousy analogy. It's an illogical analogy. What we have to recognize is that AI is a five-layered cake.
English
136
66
1.8K
473K
WISDOMRY retweetet
Meg | The Feminist Motherhood
The reporter’s eyes are just so full of pity and the other dude’s eyes are just so dead, I really can’t watch this all the way through.
English
121
261
14.4K
286.4K
WISDOMRY retweetet
Dami’ Adenuga
Dami’ Adenuga@DAMIADENUGA·
The 5 moods of man
English
200
4.1K
31.7K
1M
matt666
matt666@mattDCLXVI·
fellas what’s stopping you from looking like this
matt666 tweet mediamatt666 tweet media
English
1.2K
89
4.7K
2.9M
WISDOMRY retweetet
Claire Lehmann
Claire Lehmann@clairlemon·
Reading about Clavicular and am wondering why we're trying to make a poor kid with body dysmorphia and drug addiction famous? He's obviously unwell.
English
220
109
2.5K
72.8K
Axeel
Axeel@AxeelFCB·
🚨‼️Otro ángulo de la tarjeta roja a Eric Garcia y el más claro donde se ve que Sorloth tropieza con su otra pierna por lo tanto no es roja ni falta. DIFUNDIR💣
Español
4K
4.6K
32.6K
4.2M
WISDOMRY retweetet
سيف
سيف@Saiifisco·
شايفين سرعة يامال بالكوره؟ ميسي كان يسويها وهو بسرعة دبل ويراوغ على سرعته عشان كذا اضحك على اللي يقارن بينهم
العربية
45
95
1.5K
77K