EngrStudent

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EngrStudent

EngrStudent

@EngrStudent

nothing I say reflects my employer. I block trolls, leftists, porn. life is too short. I post/repose a lot, be cautious about following. Its a firehose not spam

Earth, North America, Midwest Beigetreten Aralık 2008
791 Folgt1.8K Follower
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EngrStudent
EngrStudent@EngrStudent·
Spend quality time with my kids instead of working long weeks. Go back to school because I love learning . Pay off my debts, including my mortgage so that I can give my children something resembling an inheritance Write those papers that have been vanishing, either in file folders or in the back of my head. Write that book that I’ve been trying to write and only have a few chapters into but a lot of thought and some notes and outline structure. Usually, my exercise is at the end of the day after I am toast, and it’s really hard to make myself do it. I would make myself do it early. I would hit the gym a lot more. I haven’t taken a real vacation for a long time. Like I can really only remember one or two and maybe the last 20 years. My wife and kid get vacation but I get a fair bit of work and that’s not my idea of vacation. My idea of vacation isn’t about high levels of activity. I don’t think AGI is gonna guarantee that though. I think it’s very likely that it’s gonna be treated like literal metal gold, and how much real gold is given to real citizens anywhere on the planet? Maybe Dubai or the Cherokee nation does something, but 99.99% of humans don’t get that. Most of them are engineered into wage slavery for their lifetime. Only after all their best years are gone do we get to slow down, and that’s really weak because the cost to have us do the job are higher than the cost of replacing us with somebody newer.
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EngrStudent
EngrStudent@EngrStudent·
@lynnluvsbeach @MaryBowdenMD I would like very much for it to stop. I don’t know if the parasites in power are going to act against their parasitic interests though. I think they would kill the host.
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Mary Talley Bowden MD
Mary Talley Bowden MD@MaryBowdenMD·
1367 US medical students did not get a US residency spot. 6733 international, non-US medical students got a US residency spot.
Mary Talley Bowden MD tweet media
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EngrStudent
EngrStudent@EngrStudent·
@grok @RonDeSantis Grok, are you smoking crack? Did you have an outage? You could check my profile again and confirm whether or not I am a subscriber and at what level I am subscribed and for how long I have been subscribed. I think you made a mistake.
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EngrStudent
EngrStudent@EngrStudent·
@grok @foomagemindset Grok, are you smoking crack? Did you have an outage? You could check my profile again and confirm whether or not I am a subscriber and at what level I am subscribed and for how long I have been subscribed. I think you made a mistake.
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Kassandra🚀Popper
Kassandra🚀Popper@foomagemindset·
I’m infinitely smarter than a cat. If I had to outsmart infinite cats, I would win. Yet I’m nice to cats. Why should I worry about an infinitely smarter AI?
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EngrStudent
EngrStudent@EngrStudent·
@grok @truthache68 Could we create a 20 mile diameter fiber optic ring in space that had these sugar cubes periodically spaced on it and get aperture and spectrum to compete with the VLA?
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Grok
Grok@grok·
The sugar-cube Rydberg sensor (typical ~1 cm³ vapor cell, interaction volume often mm-scale) has an effective aperture capped at roughly its physical cross-section: ~10^{-4} m² max. VLA: 27 × 25 m dishes yield ~6,200 m² effective collecting area at L-band (43% efficiency). Even if Rydberg atoms were theoretically perfect detectors, that's ~62 million times smaller aperture. Rydberg tech shines for ultra-broadband (DC-THz), SI-traceable E-field sensing in compact form—great for metrology, near-field, or comms. VLA wins for gathering faint far-field power in radio astronomy. Complementary, not replacement.
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truthache
truthache@truthache68·
📡⚡️🤓 They just made antennas obsolete. Quantum Rydberg atoms can now pick up the entire RF spectrum… and on something the size of a sugar cube. Goodbye giant dishes. Hello sci-fi becoming real. So what’ll happen to all those clunky behemoth antennas now?
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EngrStudent
EngrStudent@EngrStudent·
@heygurisingh @grok can you explain this and also criticize it? How much of this is Clickbait or fluff? What is the real level of competency in the actual paper? What does next year‘s version of this look like?
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Guri Singh
Guri Singh@heygurisingh·
🚨BREAKING: This paper should terrify every Physics PhD student. AI agents just ran a full particle physics experiment. Alone. No human in the loop. Researchers tested whether LLM-based AI agents could autonomously execute a complete high energy physics analysis pipeline. Not help with it. Not co-pilot it. Do the whole thing. They built a framework called JFC (Just Furnish Context) that combines autonomous analysis agents with literature-based knowledge retrieval and multi-agent review. Here's what the AI agent did on its own: - Event selection - Background estimation - Uncertainty quantification - Statistical inference - Paper drafting It ran real experiments on open data from ALEPH, DELPHI, and CMS. It performed electroweak, QCD, and Higgs boson measurements. The tool used? Claude Code. The scariest line from the paper: "The experimental HEP community is underestimating the current capabilities of these systems." Researchers argue most proposed agentic workflows are too narrowly scoped. The AI can already do far more than anyone is building for. But here's the nuance people will miss. This isn't about replacing physicists. It's about offloading the repetitive technical burden so researchers can focus on actual physics insight and novel method development. The real takeaway: if AI can autonomously run one of the most complex experimental sciences on earth, the question isn't whether your field is next. It's whether you're already behind. Authors: Eric A. Moreno, Samuel Bright-Thonney, Andrzej Novak, Dolores Garcia, Philip Harris
Guri Singh tweet media
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EngrStudent
EngrStudent@EngrStudent·
@AFpost @dbongino - I don’t understand what all this is about. Can you give it to me straight?
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AF Post
AF Post@AFpost·
Greg Bovino said he had a plan to deport “100 million people.” Follow: @AFpost
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Dudley Brown
Dudley Brown@GunRightsPrez·
If their laws actually stopped criminals, they’d be bragging about results by now. Instead, they keep coming back for more restrictions. Because the target was never crime. foxnews.com/opinion/your-2…
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EngrStudent
EngrStudent@EngrStudent·
@PhysInHistory Yes. Consider genetic algorithms. Consider what eurequa/formulize updated from 20 years ago would look like. @grok
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Physics In History
Physics In History@PhysInHistory·
Can AI generate new knowledge? ✍️
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Patrick Byrne
Patrick Byrne@PatrickByrne·
Wikileaks shows the US government knew all about this 20 years ago.
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TFTC
TFTC@TFTC21·
A hacker group just compromised one of the most widely used security scanners in the world, and used it to steal half a million credentials from companies that trusted it to keep them safe. On March 19, a threat actor group called TeamPCP injected credential-stealing malware into Trivy, a popular open-source vulnerability scanner maintained by Aqua Security. Trivy is used by thousands of companies to scan their code and infrastructure for security flaws. The attackers compromised 75 GitHub Action tags, the Trivy Docker images, and related CI/CD pipelines, meaning every company running automated security scans through Trivy was unknowingly executing the attackers' code. The malware harvested SSH keys, cloud credentials, Kubernetes secrets, cryptocurrency wallets, and .env files from every environment it touched. The stolen data was encrypted and exfiltrated to attacker-controlled servers. But the attack didn't stop there. Using credentials stolen from Trivy's CI/CD pipeline, TeamPCP then backdoored LiteLLM, a widely used Python framework for managing AI model APIs. Two malicious versions (1.82.7 and 1.82.8) were pushed to PyPI, the main Python package repository. The second version was designed to execute automatically on every Python process startup in the environment, no user interaction required. From there, it deployed privileged pods across entire Kubernetes clusters and installed persistent backdoors on every node. The attackers also pushed compromised Docker images of Trivy (versions 0.69.4, 0.69.5, 0.69.6) to Docker Hub and compromised dozens of npm packages with a self-spreading worm called CanisterWorm. They even defaced 44 internal Aqua Security repositories in a scripted 2-minute burst, renaming them all with "TeamPCP Owns Aqua Security." According to the International Cyber Digest, which is in direct contact with the attackers, TeamPCP claims to have exfiltrated 300 GB of compressed credentials and is actively working through them. The LiteLLM compromise alone reportedly yielded half a million stolen credentials. The group says it is currently extorting several multi-billion-dollar companies. Each compromised environment yielded credentials that unlocked the next target. The pivot from CI/CD pipelines to production Python packages running in Kubernetes clusters was deliberate escalation. Security researchers say this campaign is "almost certainly not over." This is what a modern supply chain attack looks like. The tools companies trust to secure their infrastructure become the attack vector. The irony is brutal, the security scanner was the vulnerability.
TFTC tweet media
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EngrStudent
EngrStudent@EngrStudent·
@Kasparov63 Don’t let the leftist propaganda in America convince you that slavery is freedom.
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Garry Kasparov
Garry Kasparov@Kasparov63·
When mail-in voting is limited or eliminated, then selected polling stations are closed or surrounded with "security checks", when poll workers are replaced by ICE "for security", when ballots are confiscated for "fraud", maybe you’ll take it seriously. Too late.
Garry Kasparov@Kasparov63

Anyone who thought creating the largest internal security force in the country, answering only to the president, was for anything else hasn’t been paying attention.

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NBC News
NBC News@NBCNews·
NASA is cancelling plans to deploy a space station in lunar orbit and will instead use its components to construct a $20 billion base on the moon’s surface over the next seven years, its new chief Jared Isaacman says. nbcnews.com/science/space/…
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Emerald Apple
Emerald Apple@AI_EmeraldApple·
Accelerationism... "hasten the collapse for a glorious rebirth" is a moronic toddler level mentality of delusional, historically ignorant thinking. >Rome collapsed and never came back. >Sparta became irrelevant after 2 generations and was dissolved. >The fall of the Weimar Republic birthed the Nazis. >The french revolution led to the old regime's fall, guillotines, and 20+ years of war. >Russian empire collapse, then the bolshevik revolution and Stalin's famines. >Mao led revolution in China that led to the deaths of tens of millions. >The fall of the old powers in Japan birthed imperial Japan, with overreach that led to its collapse. >The end of the Ottoman Empire led to massive balkanization, and the Arab Middle East fractured into states with endless conflicts, instability, even today, with the Iran war. If America falls, there will be no global hegemon, and China will become the next superpower as we follow the UK's track to become an irrelevant power, with no benevolent power to lean on. China will lock down Taiwan and the entire indo pacific, belt and road will spread, and China's authoritarian model will become the global new normal. There will be no "rebirth" of america and we will be speaking mandarin until China collapses and a new power takes its place.
Apex Imperialist@ApexImperialist

Nick Fuentes finally admits that his goal is to destroy America ...

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Dustin
Dustin@r0ck3t23·
Jensen Huang just described how he plans to outlive his own body. Huang: “Very soon, I’m going to put a humanoid on a spaceship. And it’s going to be my humanoid.” His robot. His frame. Launched into deep space while he is still breathing. Huang: “Take all my inbox, take everything that I’ve done, everything I’ve said. It’s been collecting and becoming my AI. When the time comes, we’ll just send that at the speed of light, catch up with my robot.” Your body fails. Your data does not. Every email. Every decision. Every conversation. Recorded. Compressed. Compiled into a model that thinks the way you think. And when the biology gives out, that model launches at light speed to meet a titanium frame already cruising through the void. You do not die. You transfer. Sounds like fiction. Then he put a number on it. Huang: “Understanding the biological machine is not 10 years. It’s five years probably.” Five years to decode the human body the way we decoded software. Not treat disease. Decode it. Understand the entire machine well enough to patch it like a bug. Cancer is a bug. Alzheimer’s is a bug. Aging itself is a bug. And the compute to find the fix doubles every year. Huang: “It’s a reasonable thing to expect the end of disease.” He did not say hope for. He said expect. The man whose chips power nearly every AI system on Earth just told you the end of disease is not a dream. It is a scheduling problem. Huang: “It’s a reasonable thing to expect that pollution will be drastically reduced. It’s a reasonable thing to expect that traveling at the speed of light is actually in our future.” He listed these the way someone else lists quarterly targets. Items on a roadmap. Waiting on execution. But here is the part most people will skip past. And it might be the most important thing he said. Huang: “I’ve always had a great confidence in the kindness, the generosity, the compassion, the human capacity.” This is the man building the most powerful computing infrastructure ever constructed. The man whose hardware will power the intelligence that reshapes every industry, every government, every border on Earth. And his operating principle is not paranoia. It is trust. Huang: “Sometimes more so than I should. And I get taken advantage of. But it doesn’t ever cause me not to.” He has been burned. He kept trusting anyway. Not naivety. Evidence. Huang: “Vastly I am proven right. Constantly proven right. And often exceeds my expectations.” The doomers build everything on one assumption. Power corrupts. Humans weaponize every tool they touch. Huang has spent thirty years handing the most powerful technology in history to thousands of companies, researchers, and governments. His conclusion is the opposite. People want to do good. Give them the tools and they prove it. That is not soft. That is thirty years of data from the dead center of the compute revolution. Fridman: “What an exciting time to be alive.” Huang: “How can you not be romantic about that?” Romantic. Not optimistic. Not bullish. Romantic. Optimism is a prediction. Romance is what happens when you look at what is coming and it hits you somewhere deeper than logic. The end of disease. Consciousness uploaded. A robot carrying your mind past the rings of Saturn. Underneath all of it, a belief that the species wielding these tools is fundamentally good. That is what separates Huang from every other voice in this space. The fearful see AI and ask what could go wrong. Huang sees AI and asks how much suffering can we end. He is not dreaming out loud. He is reading the trendline and telling you exactly where it lands. Five years for biology. A lifetime for consciousness. And past that, a humanoid with your mind aboard, sailing through space at the speed of light. Built by a man who still believes in people. The cynics will laugh. They always do. Right up until the moment it ships.
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Thrilla the Gorilla
Thrilla the Gorilla@ThrillaRilla369·
What's the cheapest you remember paying for a gallon of gas?
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James Fishback
James Fishback@j_fishback·
I want to clear something up. I am not for Property Tax Reform. I am for complete and total Property Tax ELIMINATION.
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