NFTart07

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NFTart07

NFTart07

@maxwerba

Collecting Expressionism, Street Art, Contemporary Art & NFT. PE Investor by day, Art/NFT collector by night.

Hồ Chí Minh, Việt Nam Beigetreten Kasım 2015
458 Folgt307 Follower
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The Culturist
The Culturist@the_culturist_·
The most astonishingly lifelike sculptures ever produced - a thread 🧵 1. “David”, marble - Michelangelo (1504)
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Prof. Feynman
Prof. Feynman@ProfFeynman·
• If you're wrong, admit it. • If you're confused, ask questions. • If you're stuck, seek for help. • If you make mistake, learn from it. • If you learn something, teach others
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The Culturist
The Culturist@the_culturist_·
Marcus Aurelius' meditations are among the most influential words ever written. Two millennia ago, the world's most powerful man spent his evenings alone, journalling his thoughts. He never even meant to publish them, but they're still so relevant: 1. “Think of yourself as dead. You have lived your life. Now take what's left and live it properly.” 2. “Today I escaped from anxiety. Or no, I discarded it, because it was within me, in my own perceptions - not outside.” 3. “Everything that happens is either endurable or not. If it's endurable, then endure it. Stop complaining.” 4. “You don't have to turn this into something. It doesn't have to upset you. Things can't shape our decisions by themselves.” 5. “If it isn't ceasing to live that you're afraid of but never beginning to live properly... then you'll be worthy of the world that made you.” 6. “Stop talking about what the good man is like, and just be one.” 7. “You can also commit injustice by doing nothing.” 8. “The things you think about determine the quality of your mind. Your soul takes on the color of your thoughts.” 9. “Watch the courses of the stars as if you revolved with them. Keep constantly in mind how the elements alter into one another. Thoughts like this wash off the mud of life below.” 10. “At dawn, when you have trouble getting out of bed, tell yourself: "I have to go to work - as a human being. What do I have to complain of, if I'm going to do what I was born for - the things I was brought into the world to do? Or is this what I was created for? To huddle under the blankets and stay warm?" - But it's nicer here... So you were born to feel "nice"? Instead of doing things and experiencing them? Don't you see the plants, the birds, the ants and spiders and bees going about their individual tasks, putting the world in order, as best they can? And you're not willing to do your job as a human being? Why aren't you running to do what your nature demands?”
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Andrew D. Huberman, Ph.D.
Andrew D. Huberman, Ph.D.@hubermanlab·
I’m preparing a Huberman Lab podcast on colds & flus and how to avoid/treat them. What protocols besides the standard “rest, liquids, wait” advise do you believe can truly help you recover more quickly and/or stay non-infected? I am asking about colds & flu’s only/specifically.
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Vinod Khosla
Vinod Khosla@vkhosla·
There are real threats and people should take care, but "feeling threatened" by other people's statements is a unique & contagious disease of the extreme left wing. I say TOUGHEN UP. You have a mental health problem of FEELING THREATENED. You have a problem, not the world!
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GREG ISENBERG
GREG ISENBERG@gregisenberg·
This is one of the best videos to ever exist for entrepreneurs, creators... I think about it often. In 2016, Pharrell Williams visited a NYU music production class to critique student songs. At the beginning you could see student "Maggie Rogers" drenched with the absolute terror of sharing this with him. Pharrell is there just trying to keep his excitement in. The guy couldn’t wait to tell her this song is the bee’s knees. After he listened to a song called “Alaska”, he explained why “I have zero, zero, zero notes for that:” 24 hours later, someone posted the clip to Reddit. It blew up and the rest is history. Grammy nominated, millions of followers etc. And Maggie responded to the Reddit thread (i'll share screenshot in the next tweet). This story I find so cool because it inspires other artists to share what they got. We all can all connect with the fear of showing our work. It ain't easy. And to have a unique POV like Maggie. Easy to copy, harder to have something unique. I’ve got a bunch of designs, creations that have never seen the light of day. This video inspires me to publish more. My point of sharing this video: Publish your art anonymously. Or publish your art proudly as yourself. Bonus points if it's one of a kind work. But publish your darn art. This is your new week's energy. This is your 2024 energy. Go get 'em. -- If you enjoyed this, go listen to some Maggie Rogers. And thank you to Pharrell for being so supportive to an up and comer. And go follow me for more stories like this @gregisenberg, so you get more of it in your feed I share stories about internet communities, free startup ideas and more. (link in bio for more info about me)
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Compounding Quality
Compounding Quality@QCompounding·
I struggled reading annual reports You know what was a game changer? The 6-step framework from Aswath Damodaran You can steal it here:
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Triple Net Investor
Triple Net Investor@TripleNetInvest·
This is one of my favorite entrepreneurship stories of all time In this 30 min clip, casino/RE tycoon Phil Ruffin shares how he went from 1 c-store in Wichita Kansas to becoming a billionaire, including owning the Treasure Island on the Vegas Strip In a remarkable series of transactions, he managed to turn $20M into $1.24 billion in just 13 yrs in one of the wildest series of RE transactions ever In this video, Ruffin shares his rag to riches story - it's a must watch if you've got 30 minutes to spare this long weekend
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NFTart07
NFTart07@maxwerba·
@beaniemaxi Which protocols are you referring to and/or looking at?
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Beanie
Beanie@beaniemaxi·
I know what fomo feels like as this is my 4th crypto cycle. First was in 2013 when Bitcoin did a 100x in a few months. Next in 2017 when it did a 40x, but Ethereum did a 100x and some altcoins just went silly. In 2020 DeFi Summer during Covid lockdowns put all other rallies to shame as literal anon shitcoins mooned to multi billion dollar marketcaps within hours. YFI went from pennies to nearly $50k within weeks. Then most recently we saw the 2021 NFT bull run, led by 1000x gains minting BAYC and other things. Now here we are late 2023 and I’m getting the same vibes. The tells are; 1) Solana 6x off FTX lows 2) BTC and ETH 2x+ off lows 3) Blast attracting $400m in days 4) Blur 4x off lows in a couple weeks As we’ve seen with each preceding cycle, the returns in the majors while big by comparison to nearly any other asset class in the world, sharply lag emerging crypto asset returns. That is, when crypto goes full “risk on” mode, look out. I think this cycle will mirror that trend. However with that said, anything really new is risky. You see Blast being rewarded because Blur has proven to be a winner and category leader. They built a winning product that took over the NFT market. That gives them credibility. That’s why Blast works. Good thing about this cycle is that there’s lots of proven winners hiding in plain sight. Particularly in DeFi. And I think given the current global narratives that DeFi is about to shine again. Just not in the same wild west fashion as before. Which is gold. It’s more sustainable now. Pretty much what started a few years ago with overnight multi billion dollar market caps came crashing back down to earth. So now we can plainly see which projects were real all along. Some of these are now highly derisked and deeply discounted. I’m talking about protocols that have been through the last several cycles and continue to not only build and gain mainstream traction throughout, but get battletested at the same time. There’s actually quite a few of them out there still trading relatively close to historic lows and well off previous fomo highs (which I think get taken out this cycle). Some projects were just MVPs a few years ago and have now proven themselves. Yet valuations are a fraction of what they were. I expect that to correct itself. It doesn’t make much sense for me to make venture bets of new protocols and platforms when I can substantially derisk and just buy the beaten down tokens of proven winners for essentially pennies on the dollar and stay liquid. Liquid funds are a big VC narrative rn. People always ask me why I bother posting here. Well this post is a prime example. I’d like to sharpen my thesis. Or be proven wrong. Plus I’d like to learn about protocols that I may have overlooked that fit into my thesis and potentially lead to outsided returns during this cycle. But are substantially derisked compared to buying something without a proven track record. Feel free to share thoughts below in the comments.
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Andrew D. Huberman, Ph.D.
Andrew D. Huberman, Ph.D.@hubermanlab·
Gratitude: It's not just about what we receive but how and from whom. Understanding the environmental and interpersonal nuances can profoundly amplify our happiness and well-being.
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Chris Bakke
Chris Bakke@ChrisJBakke·
I’m the head of Google AI ($15.7M TC). You better believe we’re using this OpenAI news to make rapid advancements and go on the offensive. As soon as I’m back from PTO for Thanksgiving break (December 1, 2023) I will be coordinating an all-hands with my team (on February 5, 2024), where we will put some Q2 OKRs in place to discuss a plan to get to parity with GPT 4 by the year 2026. Look out, world!
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Nassim Nicholas Taleb
Nassim Nicholas Taleb@nntaleb·
I kept looking for living people who understood the dynamics of this conflict & found NONE as clear-minded as Villepin, former French PM & mostly chief diplomat. I thought no living politician had the clairvoyance of Gaulle & Peyrefitte. I was wrong.
Arnaud Bertrand@RnaudBertrand

Absolutely masterful interview on Gaza of Dominique De Villepin, former Prime Minister of France, who famously led France's opposition to the Iraq war and who, IMHO is the best diplomat the West has produced in decades. This is so important, so incredibly well argued, that I decided to translate it in full: "Hamas has set a trap for us, and this trap is one of maximum horror, of maximum cruelty. And so there's a risk of an escalation in militarism, of more military interventions, as if we could with armies solve a problem as serious as the Palestinian question. There's also a second major trap, which is that of Occidentalism. We find ourselves trapped, with Israel, in this western bloc which today is being challenged by most of the international community. [Presenter: What is Occidentalism?] Occidentalism is the idea that the West, which for 5 centuries managed the world's affairs, will be able to quietly continue to do so. And we can clearly see, even in the debates of the French political class, that there is the idea that, faced with what is currently happening in the Middle East, we must continue the fight even more, towards what might resemble a religious or a civilizational war. That is to say, to isolate ourselves even more on the international stage. This is not the way, especially since there's a third trap, which is that of moralism. And here we have in a way the proof, through what is happening in Ukraine and what is happening in the Middle East, of this double standard that is denounced everywhere in the world, including in recent weeks when I travel to Africa, the Middle East, or Latin America. The criticism is always the same: look at how civilian populations are treated in Gaza, you denounce what happened in Ukraine, and you are very timid in the face of the tragedy unfolding in Gaza. Consider international law, the second criticism that is made by the global south. We sanction Russia when it aggresses Ukraine, we sanction Russia when it doesn't respect the resolutions of the United Nations, and it's been 70 years that the resolutions of the United Nations have been voted in vain and that Israel doesn't respect them. [Presenter: Do you believe that the Westerners are currently guilty of hubris?] Westerners must open their eyes to the extent of the historical drama unfolding before us to find the right answers. [Presenter: What is the historical drama? I mean, we're talking about the tragedy of October 7th first and foremost, right?] Of course, there are these horrors happening, but the way to respond to them is crucial. Are we going to kill the future by finding the wrong answers... [Presenter: Kill the future?] Kill the future, yes! Why? [Presenter: But who is killing whom?] You are in a game of causes and effects. Faced with the tragedy of history, one cannot take this 'chain of causality' analytical grid, simply because if you do you can't escape from it. Once we understand that there is a trap, once we realize that behind this trap there has also been a change in the Middle East regarding the Palestinian issue... The situation today is profoundly different [from what it was in the past]. The Palestinian cause was a political and secular cause. Today we are faced with an Islamist cause, led by Hamas. Obviously, this kind of cause is absolute and allows no form of negotiation. On the Israeli side, there has also been a development. Zionism was secular and political, championed by Theodor Herzl in the late 19th century. It has largely become messianic, biblical today. This means that they too do not want to compromise, and everything that the far-right Israeli government does, continuing to encourage colonization, obviously makes things worse, including since October 7th. So in this context, understand that we are already in this region facing a problem that seems profoundly insoluble. Added to this is the hardening of states. Diplomatically, look at the statements of the King of Jordan, they are not the same as six months ago. Look at the statements of Erdogan in Turkey. [Presenter: Precisely, these are extremely harsh statements...] Extremely worrying. Why? Because if the Palestinian cause, the Palestinian issue, hasn't been brought to the forefront, hasn't been put on stage [for a while], and if most of the youth today in Europe have often never even heard of it, it remains for the Arab peoples the mother of all battles. All the progress made towards an attempt to stabilize the Middle East, where one could believe... [Presenter: Yes, but whose fault is it? I have a hard time following you, is it Hamas's fault?] But Ms. Malherbe, I am trained as a diplomat. The question of fault will be addressed by historians and philosophers. [Presenter: But you can't remain neutral, it's difficult, it's complicated, isn't it?] I am not neutral, I am in action. I am simply telling you that every day that passes, we can ensure that this horrific cycle stops... that's why I speak of a trap and that's why it's so important to know what response we are going to give. We stand alone before history today. And we do not treat this new world the way we currently do, knowing that today we are no longer in a position of strength, we are not able to manage on our own, as the world's policemen. [Presenter: So what do we do?] Exactly, what should we do? This is where it is essential not to cut off anyone on the international stage. [Presenter: Including the Russians?] Everyone. [Presenter: Everyone? Should we ask the Russians for help?] I'm not saying we should ask the Russians for help. I'm saying: if the Russians can contribute by calming some factions in this region, then it will be a step in the right direction. [Presenter: How can we proportionally respond to barbarism? It's no longer army against army.] But listen, Appolline de Malherbe, the civilian populations that are dying in Gaza, don't they exist? So because horror was committed on one side, horror must be committed on the other? [Presenter: Do we indeed need to equate the two?] No, it's you who are doing that. I'm not saying I equate the faults. I try to take into account what a large part of humanity thinks. There is certainly a realistic objective to pursue, which is to eradicate the Hamas leaders who committed this horror. And not to confuse the Palestinians with Hamas, that's a realistic goal. The second thing is a targeted response. Let's define realistic political objectives. And the third thing is a combined response. Because there is no effective use of force without a political strategy. We are not in 1973 or in 1967. There are things no army in the world knows how to do, which is to win in an asymmetrical battle against terrorists. The war on terror has never been won anywhere. And it instead triggers extremely dramatic misdeeds, cycles, and escalations. If America lost in Afghanistan, if America lost in Iraq, if we lost in the Sahel, it's because it's a battle that can't be won simply, it's not like you have a hammer that strikes a nail and the problem is solved. So we need to mobilize the international community, get out of this Western entrapment in which we are. [Presenter: But when Emmanuel Macron talks about an international coalition…] Yes, and what was the response? [Presenter: None.] Exactly. We need a political perspective, and this is challenging because the two-state solution has been removed from the Israeli political and diplomatic program. Israel needs to understand that for a country with a territory of 20,000 square kilometers, a population of 9 million inhabitants, facing 1.5 billion people... Peoples have never forgotten that the Palestinian cause and the injustice done to the Palestinians was a significant source of mobilization. We must consider this situation, and I believe it is essential to help Israel, to guide... some say impose, but I think it's better to convince, to move in this direction. The challenge is that there is no interlocutor today, neither on the Israeli side nor the Palestinian side. We need to bring out interlocutors. [Presenter: It's not for us to choose who will be the leaders of Palestine.] The Israeli policy over recent years did not necessarily want to cultivate a Palestinian leadership... Many are in prison, and Israel's interest - because I repeat: it was not in their program or in Israel's interest at the time, or so they thought - was instead to divide the Palestinians and ensure that the Palestinian question fades. This Palestinian question will not fade. And so we must address it and find an answer. This is where we need courage. The use of force is a dead end. The moral condemnation of what Hamas did - and there's no "but" in my words regarding the moral condemnation of this horror - must not prevent us from moving forward politically and diplomatically in an enlightened manner. The law of retaliation is a never-ending cycle. [Presenter: The "eye for an eye, tooth for tooth".] Yes. That's why the political response must be defended by us. Israel has a right to self-defense, but this right cannot be indiscriminate vengeance. And there cannot be collective responsibility of the Palestinian people for the actions of a terrorist minority from Hamas. When you get into this cycle of finding faults, one side's memories clash with the other's. Some will juxtapose Israel's memories with the memories of the Nakba, the 1948 catastrophe, which is a disaster that the Palestinians still experience every day. So you can't break these cycles. We must have the strength, of course, to understand and denounce what happened, and from this standpoint, there's no doubt about our position. But we must also have the courage, and that's what diplomacy is... diplomacy is about being able to believe that there is light at the end of the tunnel. And that's the cunning of history; when you're at the bottom, something can happen that gives hope. After the 1973 war, who would have thought that before the end of the decade, Egypt would sign a peace treaty with Israel? The debate shouldn't be about rhetoric or word choice. The debate today is about action; we must act. And when you think about action, there are two options. Either it's war, war, war. Or it's about trying to move towards peace, and I'll say it again, it's in Israel's interest. It's in Israel's interest!"

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The Economist
The Economist@TheEconomist·
We asked @harari_yuval why he believes AI is the end of human-dominated history. Watch the full conversation here: econ.st/3RuFqJk
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Compounding Quality
Compounding Quality@QCompounding·
Warren Buffett is the best investor in the world. The Oracle of Omaha has been writing annual shareholders letters for more than 4 decades. I read them all and summarized them in 10 key lessons for you:
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Now Media
Now Media@nowmedia·
EXCLUSIVE: @doodles has officially announced the details of its next project: Doodles 2 The project will be fully integrated into @flow_blockchain to expand the ecosystem and allow endless NFT customization with “nonexistent gas fees.” Learn more here: nftnow.com/news/exclusive…
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hfa-studio.eth
hfa-studio.eth@hfa_studio·
GM! An introduction of who we are and what we do 🧵1/10
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