Darrick Hall
30 posts

Darrick Hall
@TacticoolTech
Tech enthusiast sharing AI, automation, cybersecurity, and learning content.
USA 参加日 Mayıs 2026
25 フォロー中2 フォロワー

@kenrt_ I think AI raises the floor, but coding still raises the ceiling.
Someone who understands how software works can usually get far more out of AI than someone who doesn't.
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@Excellentsalvic I wasn't alive in the 70s, but I'd trade smartphones away in a heartbeat if it meant giving kids back the freedom of riding bikes all summer, hanging out with friends, and living more of life in person.
I think we gave up more than we gained.
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As someone who has gone all-in on AI with zero regrets, I find myself wondering about the economics long-term.
At my scale, running out of credits is a minor annoyance.
But what happens when a Fortune 500 company replaces a meaningful amount of knowledge work with AI?
Human labor has relatively predictable costs.
What happens when your workforce's operating costs are tied to token consumption, model pricing, compute availability, and vendor decisions?
I'm not arguing against AI.
I'm wondering if replacing labor and augmenting labor turn out to be two very different economic models.

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@kumxem Normal people back in the day either had roommates, they most definitely didn't pay 280.00 for internet. They found a second job. Working seems to be taboo in 2026.
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@MikeEmbrich What a load of nonsense lol.. I have never met a person who didn't love their Tesla. Absolute nonsense.
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If you’re thinking about switching to a Tesla because gas prices are high, don’t do it.
Let me save you.
First, you’ll still be driving a car built by a company run like a group chat with stock options. Every “upgrade” feels like a software update you didn’t ask for, and somehow the car has fewer normal buttons than a microwave from 1997.
Full Self-Driving? Cool name. Except you still have to supervise it like a toddler holding scissors. Nothing says “future of transportation” like paying thousands of dollars to beta test anxiety.
Then there’s the interior. Minimalist? Sure. But there’s a fine line between “clean design” and “where the hell did all the controls go?” Sometimes I don’t want to dig through a touchscreen menu just to open a glovebox or adjust something basic. Revolutionary stuff.
No physical key, because apparently your phone needs one more job. Great until your phone dies, glitches, updates, overheats, or decides today is the day it no longer believes in Bluetooth.
And the door handles. Why are we reinventing door handles? Humanity had this one figured out.
Charging sounds great until you’re on a road trip, staring at a charger like you’re waiting for a printer to connect to Wi-Fi. Gas stations may smell like fumes, but at least the pump doesn’t make you download an app, check availability, and pray the charger actually works.
The build quality? Let’s just say some Teslas look like they were assembled during an earthquake by people being chased. Panel gaps, rattles, weird noises — but hey, at least it has fart mode.
And yes, it has a massive screen, cameras everywhere, ambient lights, games, apps, AI, and a bunch of features that make it feel less like a car and more like a rolling tech demo nobody finished.
So before you buy a Tesla because gas prices are high, remember: saving money at the pump is cool, but so is owning a car that doesn’t feel like it was designed by Reddit, built by interns, and updated by chaos.
You’ve been warned. ⚡🚗❌
#Tesla #TeslaSucks #EVs #GasPrices #Cars
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@BraddrofliT I am curious if you think we have a tax problem, or a spending problem? If you have an addiction to gambling, you stop gambling and change your ways before you try to borrow more money from friends and family.
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If taxing unrealized gains is somehow “unfair” for billionaires holding stock, then why are middle class homeowners hit every year with rising property taxes based on the unrealized value of their home?
Most people haven’t sold their house. They haven’t “realized” anything. Yet the tax bill keeps going up anyway.
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@JeroenV53420689 @Pallavi_345 Microsoft might use OpenAi under the hood, but the experience is night and day different in my experience.
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@TacticoolTech @Pallavi_345 There is no Microsoft's AI. There is CoPilot, which is a chatgpt wrapper with sharepoint integrations.
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@AbhiCodes15 Optimus Robots made me stay. When the ship sinks, we will all be going together.
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@SaraDiscovers All of them, each for their own unique purpose. Android the purpose was a lapse in judgment lol.
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@ravikiran_dev7 I work for a security vendor, and the majority of my customers have an enterprise license of Claude. I can't say the same for ChatGPT. I love ChatGPT, but the money likely exists in greater quantities within the enterprise space.
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@ShawverTech @Pallavi_345 I have been using it to build a mobile app the past couple of days. It is ok. I am going to do the same thing with ChatGPT next, and then Claude. I am interested to see the ease from start to finish, and the final product. I have never built a mobile app, but it is going well.
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@Pallavi_345 Grok honestly. The others have clear use cases and consistent quality. Grok feels like it was built around a personality rather than a product vision. The gap between what it promises and what it delivers is the widest of the four.
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@KaiXCreator Two people with the same technical capabilities, one uses AI effectively, one acts like AI is the devil come to steal their job (which it likely will), the one who uses AI is going to be more productive.
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@justbyte_ ChatGPT is overall a good easy to use tool. Beginners can mean many different things. What is the end goal?
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