Jeff Kramer

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Jeff Kramer

Jeff Kramer

@Qworg

Leading research on AI making software @MSFT Prev: TA to the CTO @MSFT on AI, Cofounder and Advisor to @TPFinSys, @PGAFamilyFdn. Moonshots or bust.

Seattle, WA Beigetreten Ekim 2008
1.3K Folgt653 Follower
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hk@hassankhan·
idea: over the ear headphones that are comfortable with glasses
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Jeff Kramer
Jeff Kramer@Qworg·
@Danielle and the team @lightcellenergy are continuing to deliver on breakthrough after breakthrough to bring ultra high efficiency power generation to market. It is an incredibly exciting piece of tech and I'm stoked to be an investor.
Danielle Fong 🔆@DanielleFong

showing @lightcellenergy's latest stability, power, clean air combustion, salt recovery breakthroughs LIVE to VC love seeing eyes light up! show it's ~silent, flicking off the fumehood fan the flame now so clean we don't need it on thank you investors for getting us this far!!! a true adventure

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Jeff Kramer
Jeff Kramer@Qworg·
@DanielleFong @ZohranKMamdani Gifted programs are part of a spectrum of interventions that must be in public schools to adequately serve all children. It is even better to think of them as "special needs". Experiential classrooms are the best. We walk through fire to make sure our youngest gets access.
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Danielle Fong 🔆
Danielle Fong 🔆@DanielleFong·
Regarding @ZohranKMamdani, i think I have a point I haven't heard made -- I've been upset about one thing, which is targeting phasing out of the gifted program. I think we are not learning from history or experience here, and I'd like to explain why. I'm reminded that Leta Hollingworth pioneered some of the first gifted education in New York, at the Speyer school. Here's the thing, the curriculum she developed for gifted children, which was to essentially organize education along the lines of building a class encyclopedia on subjects organized into chapters on the subject of something amazing in the world around them, like human Flight, Trains (of course), Telecommunication, or Light! I think they even visited an aircraft factory! This method engages the students in the industry of collectively learning, and was profoundly successful in engaging the powerful learning abilities of the young learners working together. Here's the thing; she then applied the same principles to classes of mainstream, and slow learners. For all these sets of children, learning by doing, engaging in purpose, engaged the children in their powers of learning and curiosity. While you could not of course treat the same classes in the same ways, engaging classes in the useful project of their own learning was the essential engine, powering these alternative schools. It is a shame it is not more widely known and utilized, and would have been had Leta not died of cancer in 1939. If educational classes in NYC are being remade, either for gifted or mainstream or slowly learners, I suggest giving Leta Hollingworth's idea of guiding and sheperding self directed curiosity through useful projects as a guide. rfwp.com/bookstore/a-se… en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Speye… x.com/DanielleFong/s… x.com/DanielleFong/s…
Danielle Fong 🔆 tweet mediaDanielle Fong 🔆 tweet mediaDanielle Fong 🔆 tweet mediaDanielle Fong 🔆 tweet media
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Angelica 🌐⚛️🇹🇼🇨🇳🇺🇸
LinkedIn electric engineering Unc had the best insights to this project. TL:dr even second-rate or fanciful ideas get executed in China. Cuz they have the capacity and can afford to experiment. It’s kind of the reverse VC approach. Instead of investing in bunch of kids promising you the moon, you manage a huge team and you just make one of everything even the stuff that’s probably not gonna be great.
Angelica 🌐⚛️🇹🇼🇨🇳🇺🇸 tweet media
Li Zexin 李泽欣@XH_Lee23

China has completed building the world's first wind-powered underwater data center. Servers use external seawater for cooling, without energy-hungry AC. It's a win-win: saves electricity and maintains optimal server temperatures.

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Jeff Kramer
Jeff Kramer@Qworg·
@sincethestudy I absolutely want one - I assume the compute for each camera isn't onboard?
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brian-machado-high-inference@sincethestudy·
These guys had a good run. Bracket Bot cameras are $15 and have better depth.
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Jeff Kramer
Jeff Kramer@Qworg·
@DanielleFong S curves up, S curves down, but there are always more S curves.
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Danielle Fong 🔆
Danielle Fong 🔆@DanielleFong·
the bitter lesson of intelligence is that you’ll forever find new dimensions to asymptote on, the golden lesson is you’ll forever find new dimensions to innovate on
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Danielle Fong 🔆
Danielle Fong 🔆@DanielleFong·
real
SemiAnalysis@SemiAnalysis_

Dylan explains to @lexfridman how large-scale operations cause the electricity grid to become wildly unstable during communication-only parts of the trace, and how hacks like PYTORCH_NO_POWERPLANT_BLOWUP=1 are needed as a temporary fix for these issues. Permanent fixes require deploying large in rack capacity banks.

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Jeff Kramer
Jeff Kramer@Qworg·
@yishan @LoneStarChica Didn't average urban worker wages more than 10x from 2000 to 2022? That likely also contributed. As well as an almost 3x increase in minimum wage over the same time period. Cost of the basket of goods decreased broadly in real terms over that time period.
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Yishan
Yishan@yishan·
Large amounts of excess factory capacity built for wartime production were converted to civilian manufacturing use. This made the real costs of consumer goods really low compared to average compensation. The way to have this again isn’t higher minimum wage, but continual investment in larger volumes of production to drive down prices. You don’t need to make more money if everything gets cheaper faster. This is what’s happening in China: continual investment in industrial policy means staples and consumer goods are incredibly cheap compared to wages, so more and more people can live well.
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Leisha
Leisha@LoneStarChica·
Just one lifetime ago in the United States, our grandfathers could buy a home, buy a car, have 3 to 4 children, keep their wives at home, take annual vacations, and then retire… all on one middle-class salary. What happened?
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Jeff Kramer
Jeff Kramer@Qworg·
@DanielleFong I used to have Gb symmetric in Seattle - it was awesome. We could have spent quite a bit more for 10Gb, but I didn't have a need (nor the rest of the infra) Now, I suffer with cellular. =(
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Danielle Fong 🔆
Danielle Fong 🔆@DanielleFong·
do any of my followers have fiber internet? what is the fastest fiber you have gotten? is it awesome?
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Nathan Schmidt
Nathan Schmidt@hinathan·
@DanielleFong Imagining little drones wrapping corkscrews around the telco lines, dodging branches and staying below the hot leads. ZZzzzzzZZZZzzzzZZZZzzzZZZ and it gets more maneuverable as the canister unspools and gets lighter. Great use case for Lightcell ...
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Jeff Kramer
Jeff Kramer@Qworg·
@DanielleFong Somewhere in the mathematical perfection of its stripes, you can find your polity. You can belong. Infinite Pluralism.
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Sam D'Amico
Sam D'Amico@sdamico·
@paulmarin90 except a single company in any of those jurisdictions like a ~tesla would run the region out of engineers for everyone else. the bay area doesn't have this problem.
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Sam D'Amico
Sam D'Amico@sdamico·
“American Shenzhen” is best manifested by looking for the closest analog to Hong Kong — an expensive superstar city with lots of knowledge workers + financial horsepower that would accelerate advanced manufacturing in a new jurisdiction nearby. SF / Solano and San Joaquin County
Laura Fingal-Surma 🚡 frontier urbanist@urbanistvc

Special economic zones for manufacturing in the US: “Every superstar city in the US needs to think about where their Shenzhen is.” — @sdamico @Noahpinion proposes Austin for SF. I chime in with @CAForever. Sam agrees and adds Lathrop and Stockton in the meantime.

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Jeff Kramer
Jeff Kramer@Qworg·
@sdav1986 @stevehou Citation needed - efficiency is downstream of high demand and scarcity, not a goal in and of itself. If one roboticized the American factory, does it not have the same effect on the American worker as offshoring?
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david
david@sdav1986·
@stevehou Cheap labour maybe reduces the incentives to develop technology tobe more efficient? I am not sure he is correct but I don’t see any immediate flaws with argument either. I think of Swiss exporters. Strong currency and high cost labour has forced them to innovate to stay in biz
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Steve Hou
Steve Hou@stevehou·
This is a moving speech. I was initially quite taken with it and thought “wait is Vance right and have I been operating under a false theory of innovation and productivity this whole time?”. After a night’s reflection, I don’t think he is.
Eric Daugherty@EricLDaugh

🚨 THIS IS A MASTERCLASS: VP JD Vance just absolutely excoriated the whole premise behind globalism. Future of the Republican Party right here. He says the solution to globalists' hunger for cheap labor in other countries is to bring back American innovation. He is RIGHT. "Because there were two conceits that our leadership class had when it came to globalization. The first is assuming that we can separate the making of things from the design of things. The idea of globalization was that rich countries would move further up the value chain while the poor countries made the simpler things." "It turns out that the geographies that do the manufacturing get awfully good at the designing of things. There are network effects as you all well understand. The firms that design products work with firms that manufacture." "They share intellectual property. They share best practices, and they even sometimes share critical employees. Now we assume that other nations would always trail us in the value chain, but it turns out that as they got better at the low end of the value chain, they also started catching up on the higher end. We were squeezed from both ends. Now that was the first conceit of globalization." "I think the second is that cheap labor is fundamentally a crutch, and it's a crutch that inhibits innovation. I might even say that it's a drug that too many American firms got addicted to. Now if you can make a product more cheaply, it's far too easy to do that rather than to innovate." "And whether we were offshoring factories to cheap labor economies or importing cheap labor through our immigration system - cheap labor became the drug of Western economies." "And I'd say that if you look in nearly every country from Canada to the UK that imported large amounts of cheap labor, you've seen productivity stagnate. And I don't think that that's not a total happenstance. I think that the connection is very direct." "Now one of the debates you hear on the minimum wage, for instance, is that increases in the minimum wage force firms to automate. So a higher wage at McDonald's means more kiosks. And whatever your views on the wisdom of the minimum wage, I'm not gonna comment on that here. Companies innovating in the absence of cheap labor is a good thing." "I think most of you are not worried about getting cheaper and cheaper labor. You're worried about innovating, about building new things, about the old formulation of technology is doing more with less. You guys are all trying to do more with less every single day." "And so I I'd ask my friends, both on the the tech optimist side and on the populist side, not to see the failure of the logic of globalization as a failure of innovation. Indeed, I'd say that globalization's hunger for cheap labor is is a problem precisely because it's been bad for innovation." "Both our working people, our populace, and our innovators gathered here today have the same enemy, and the solution, I believe, is American innovation."

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Jeff Kramer
Jeff Kramer@Qworg·
@DanielleFong @whatwhatyeahyea The unwillingness to engage with reality - even thinking _one step_ beyond actions - is really remarkable amongst your replies. _Why_ matters - otherwise, you're just surrendering any attempt at understanding the world. Incredibly reductive thinking.
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Danielle Fong 🔆
Danielle Fong 🔆@DanielleFong·
@whatwhatyeahyea elon himself has turned to overriding the law. that's crime. i don't condone the burning of electric cars or dealerships. just as i don't condone trump burning down alliances and goodwill, or elon burning down tesla's brand equity. who will stop them
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Danielle Fong 🔆
Danielle Fong 🔆@DanielleFong·
you’d hear otherwise from the people asking you, begging you, to not rush past points of no return, but you’ve blocked and muted them from your life. do you really not understand how, in making so many people feel they are targeted enemies, you have made enemies of yourself?
Acyn@Acyn

Musk: I always thought that Democrats were supposed to be the party of empathy.. I’ve never done anything harmful, I’ve only done productive things: this doesn't make any sense. I think there are larger forces at work.

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Jeff Kramer
Jeff Kramer@Qworg·
@DanielleFong @BDBSoCal 100% this - I think "let's find actual ways to make the government more efficient" would be supported across the political spectrum. Instead, a pogrom and fictions.
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Danielle Fong 🔆
Danielle Fong 🔆@DanielleFong·
@BDBSoCal i would have been so supportive of doge but they went after watchdogs guardrails and culture war targets. efficiency is a ratio between value / cost — they aren’t providing any new value except cruelty — and they apparently aren’t even slashing cost? and the lies!
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Jeff Kramer
Jeff Kramer@Qworg·
@jheitzeb @NickADobos Absolutely - thanks Joe! E2E systems that maximize what humans are good at AND what machines are good at.
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Nick Dobos
Nick Dobos@NickADobos·
Replit agent, lovable and cursor are all making awesome strides But I can’t help but think they are stuck in an old paradigm: Chat or Agent on top of a dev environment Similar to how writing & publishing a book got a lot easier with printers. Or with a blog But it’s still this paradigm where you write a website/app then publish it. As this big thing But there’s still no “anyone can post a tweet, or pull out their phone and record a video YouTube/tiktok” type moment. Feels like we are still searching for a rapid collaborative social personal code app We need the tweet composer, or TikTok video editor, but for code. But right now everyone is building the super high end word doc or professional video editors
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Jeff Kramer
Jeff Kramer@Qworg·
@visakanv Gross motor skills before focusing on intellectual development. Being able to move well unlocks the ability to be curious about things faster (and increases self-confidence).
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Visa is doing marketing consults (see pinned!)
what are the best stats to pump on a baby’s skill tree in the early game? I think Wave Hand is OP, because they can then use it in public at strangers and this has like a 30-50% Charm bonus which leads to more interactions which is more XP
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Jeff Kramer
Jeff Kramer@Qworg·
@uncledoomer Great thread! The "reason for bigger trucks" is pretty complicated and goes much further back than "cash for clunkers" - lots of good small trucks outside of the US, but we just can't get them here. reason.com/2024/02/02/why…
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doomer
doomer@uncledoomer·
conclusion- the hype and buzz around these trucks is not unfounded. they are super fun. theyre super capable. the kei truck surprised me constantly at what i was able to do with it especially off road. and the actual bed was exactly as useful as everybody says for hauling stuff like construction materials, equipment, gear, junk, whatever. the people that come on twitter and make broad politically charged statements about how nobody should have a big truck in america and that we should all be forced by the government to drive kei trucks because of some nebulous safety or environmentalist reasons? those people are idiots and probably farming engagement. maybe trucks are too big in america. i genuinely dont care. we had great small and midsize trucks in america in the 80s and 90s. now you cant build or sell them because unelected bureaucrats have decided that every vehicle needs to have a stupid amount of extra electronic bullshit and physically needs to be at least a certain size. and then ballsack hussein obama crushed a lot of those older smaller trucks during cash for clunkers, despite them being perfectly fine vehicles that could have been hand me downs for a generation of young men who needed a starter truck. its a whole big mess and thinking about it too much will make you mad. and everybody else on the road is driving gigantic cars these days in america, so do you really want to take your life in your hands driving something tiny just because its efficient and smol and cute? idk man im just a beloved twitter shit poster. make your own choices. the kei truck was a little too small for me to be happy with it as a primary truck to do truck stuff. but if i didnt already have a great midsize pickup? if i was on an absolute shoestring budget? the kei truck is a dream come true. this thread is just my observations about what i liked and didnt like about the kei truck. make your own decisions on what truck to buy. but my final thought is that whatever vehicle you get, be it cheap, expensive, barebones, luxury, fast, slow, utilitarian, ostentacious, whatever, you should love it. you should get in your vehicle and smile and enjoy it and feel like its the right vehicle for you. life is too short to drive a car you hate.
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doomer
doomer@uncledoomer·
i sold it. while it was a fun little toy to have for eight months, i found that i was just not using it enough to justify keeping it around. that doesnt mean i dont love these little trucks. i had envisioned it being useful. but for a few key reasons, it just wasnt for me(thread)
doomer@uncledoomer

i just bought this lmao

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Jeff Kramer retweetet
Thomas Dohmke
Thomas Dohmke@ashtom·
At Ignite, @satyanadella just unveiled our sweeping new agentic future for Copilot Workspace. Workspace is the most advanced – and the first – agentic IDE. Built right in the GitHub Issue, Workspace deploys five agents to get you all the way to the pull request: Brainstorm. Spec. Plan. Implement. Build/Repair (¼)
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