Amateur Name (123BC)

3.7K posts

Amateur Name (123BC)

Amateur Name (123BC)

@Always123BC

Se unió Kasım 2019
649 Siguiendo108 Seguidores
Amateur Name (123BC)
Amateur Name (123BC)@Always123BC·
AI - too wordy - hallucinates - over-influenced by training (e.g. a random article online) - low-level (obviously) It's terrible, but of course can sometimes be better than deluded humans.
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Dr. Taylor Burrowes
Dr. Taylor Burrowes@taylorburrowes·
@jakozloski @CodyZervas Thanks Jake! I’m feeling much better about things (on my clients behalf) after this conversation. I’m taking all this to them for reassurance.
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Jake Kozloski
Jake Kozloski@jakozloski·
There are roughly 30 men in the entire US who are 6'5", blue eyes, trust fund, work in finance. One of the most common problems we see at Keeper: someone sets three or four non-negotiable filters that, combined, mathematically eliminate almost everyone in their city. No dating app has ever told them that. Keeper does. We show you exactly how many people are in your pool for any filter combination so you can see the real cost of each dealbreaker before you spend weeks waiting for matches that can't exist.
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Blaine Anderson
Blaine Anderson@datingbyblaine·
My worry for the AI matchmaker thesis is that singles don't want realistic, good-on-paper matches. Customers hire me for matchmaking precisely because I deliver unrealistic matches they can’t get elsewhere. AI pairing sounds nice, but actually think about the UX. Would you pay for Hinge if all the aspirational hotties disappeared, and you could only see 1-2 profiles a computer has deemed “realistic” for you every month? Why do you think Raya has been so successful? No shade implied for the teams working on AI matchmakers. Everyone I’ve interacted with in that world seems smart, and I genuinely wish them success. I’m just skeptical that AI pairing meshes with how people actually date.
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creekseeker
creekseeker@mudscryer·
It’s really awful being 143 IQ and such a total failure in life. I got my PhD in biology thinking I was going to help save the world but no one has hired me for a permanent position in over a year and a half of searching. I thought proof of my high IQ was supposed to land me a job
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Ace
Ace@Ace_da_Book·
Jeff is a well adjusted adult. This isn't a matter of IQ. SBF was probably way higher IQ, but the psychopathic behavior combined with austism makes for horrible leadership. Jeff also doesn't have the pressure to keep raising bigger and bigger rounds to inflate valuations and satisfy investors. He can focus on product.
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Speculator
Speculator@TheSpeculator0·
Jeff probably has over a standard deviation of IQ on me and I like hyperliquid but have we learned from the last cycle with these puff pieces about casually dressed guys with quirky personalities running exchanges?
Colossus@colossusmag

This is the story of Hyperliquid, the most profitable startup per employee on earth, told from a guarded office in Singapore. Last year, its team of 11 generated $900 million in profit. It's 3 years old, has never taken a dollar of venture capital, and is beginning to change how century-old markets work. Its founder, Jeffrey Yan (@chameleon_jeff), had never taken a physics class when he picked up a textbook at 16. Two years later, he won gold at the International Physics Olympiad. In 2019, he started trading with $10,000 from a living room in Puerto Rico—working off a television because he didn't own a monitor. Within 3 years, he was running one of the largest anonymous crypto trading firms. Then he shut it down. Yan was rich and free, but he had spent years inside crypto, watching it betray itself. Bitcoin's central premise was decentralization. Yet the biggest exchanges were centralized. Crypto kept reintroducing the dependence on trust it was built to eliminate. He set out to create what should have existed. Hyperliquid is a blockchain with a trading exchange on top, and anyone can build on it. Yan's vision is to house all of finance. In 3 years, it has done over $4 trillion in volume. And in the past few months, it has begun to outgrow crypto. Markets for oil, silver, and the S&P 500 now trade on Hyperliquid around the clock, weekends included, and are growing roughly 40% week on week. When the US and Israel bombed Iran on a Saturday in February, Hyperliquid was the venue traders turned to. Hyperliquid's success has cost Yan his freedom. He works out of a secret office in Singapore and cannot travel without two bodyguards. Even the team's housekeeper doesn't know what they do. In January, @domcooke spent a week at their office. Read his profile on Yan and @HyperliquidX below.

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tominoski
tominoski@tominoski·
this guy is a liar. to sell his product, he throws out highly controversial lies. no one can speak for the general population, yet this guy gives numbers on behalf of the whole population with inflated member counts. furthermore, they say they do science, but my entire team and i examined everywhere in detail, including their site, and he is completely lying. he publishes scientists' articles on his site without permission and calls this doing science. this guy is making up the numbers, do not believe him.
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Gaeten Dugas
Gaeten Dugas@GaetenD·
Blue tsunami but 17% California goes red.
Gaeten Dugas tweet media
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Amateur Name (123BC)
Amateur Name (123BC)@Always123BC·
@goldenpants013 Haha, they definitely lucked out and could've easily lost big with the Dechambeau short. It's a good short but still risky.
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GoldenPants13
GoldenPants13@goldenpants013·
Kinda lame that all the sharp bettors cosplayed as golf bettors for one week, shorted Bryson and had exactly 0 sweat en route to the bank. I feel like you all have been robbed of a real golf betting experience. Sad
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CuriousCapper
CuriousCapper@CuriousCapper·
@goldenpants013 I’m not showing it on FRL either. Looks like you got your wish already.
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GoldenPants13
GoldenPants13@goldenpants013·
Man I can't even imagine how much volume the Masters would have done on Kalshi if they hadn't switched to deci-cent across the orderbook. Everyone will be jumping around and not loading up levels - I understand wanting to do it 99+/98+...but will squash liquidity elsewhere
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Amateur Name (123BC)
Amateur Name (123BC)@Always123BC·
Amazing this Post has only 1 like. There are two types of men: Those who understand the egirl’s Tweet, and those who don’t. The latter group is colorfully summarized as “closeted h*mosexuals” in the post below, and they can really be foolish!
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Nishi
Nishi@nishikoripicks·
Rule number 1⃣ of Tennis Betting: You cannot back Korda live that low (500k+ matched below 1.10). No.
Nishi tweet media
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Amateur Name (123BC)
Amateur Name (123BC)@Always123BC·
@fanofrondo9 @nishikoripicks Yeah this exchange confused me a bit. Idk why jurisdiction would matter if purchasing information. Maybe he was thinking something other than a simple purchase
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SB
SB@swansonbenson0·
Even if hype went to 600, it wouldnt have been a ‘good buy’ at any point… crypto ogs all know alts have Massive capitulation during the deep bear with n=2, just look at eth and sol, both went -95% before their real run. Hype has to fully capitulate to set up the next bull
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Amateur Name (123BC)
Amateur Name (123BC)@Always123BC·
@UnabatedSports Journalists are maximally moronic in every context. No need to read the article to know what happened when a journalist tried sports betting.
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Unabated
Unabated@UnabatedSports·
- Deeply, morally opposed to gambling - Doesn't know the ML from the spread - Betting with the magazine's money - Refuses to heed basic betting advice from Nate Silver - Tails bet from Sean Perry - Fired half his BR on the Pats in the Super Bowl - Shocked he's down $10k
The Atlantic@TheAtlantic

After @McKayCoppins’s first bet on an NFL game, he was up $20. By the end of the season, he’d lost $10,000 and was checking DraftKings in church. Inside his season as a gambler—and what it taught him about how gambling is suffusing American life: theatlantic.com/magazine/2026/…

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