Dr. Mirman

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Dr. Mirman

Dr. Mirman

@mmirman

Founder of @anarchy_ai_inc | Dr of Deep Logic @the_sri_lab | radically closed development

Wherever AI needs me 가입일 Mart 2009
766 팔로잉1.7K 팔로워
고정된 트윗
Dr. Mirman
Dr. Mirman@mmirman·
@anarchy_ai_inc has released its first enterprise-ready music video. Feel the SOC 2
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Dr. Mirman
Dr. Mirman@mmirman·
I am hosting the first ever Running Hackathon in NYC. How you ask? Join me to find out! luma.com/ykjh5vs1
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Dr. Mirman
Dr. Mirman@mmirman·
@joeprak1 This is exactly why we just set it up so you can use your chatgpt pro subscription in chat.dev
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Joe Prakash
Joe Prakash@joeprak1·
chat.dev is an interesting concept. It's a cloud for running coding agents. Kinda funny that codex took 27,000 tokens to run ls.
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Jan Schnyder
Jan Schnyder@jjschnyder·
Say Hello to William 👋 The first AI agent with a phone. 5 billion hours this year will be spent tapping the same buttons on a phone. Testing games. Navigating App. Doing repetitive workflows. We think that should be 0. RT and comment “William” to get access.
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Bryan Johnson
Bryan Johnson@bryan_johnson·
Lifting heavy things is one of the best things you can do for your health.
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Dr. Mirman
Dr. Mirman@mmirman·
@sigfig I am 1000x faster at research with access to LLMs
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sigfig
sigfig@sigfig·
a year ago i can see how people outside of the tech industry still saw potential in it but now i feel like there's no excuse. llms will not replace all human labor. they will not materially improve manufacturing or research. they will not even make money as consumer products
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sigfig
sigfig@sigfig·
nothing can happen in this country until we start accurately assessing the risk and financial outlook of ai businesses. almost the entire economy is frozen while we wait for the music to stop
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Dr. Mirman
Dr. Mirman@mmirman·
@nisten @im_roy_lee Typescript defaults to untyped, so a higher-level less-leet version of unsafeCoerce is at least available: "// @ts-ignore" and variations involving "any" seem to be common.
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Roy
Roy@im_roy_lee·
it's really fucking hard to find competent engineers. i've interviewed about 20 cs majors who claim to be experts at typescript and only 3 of them have been able to explain what the purpose of useState is (not trolling).
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Dr. Mirman
Dr. Mirman@mmirman·
@nisten @im_roy_lee If you don't know how to hack with unsafeCoerce, you might be the one that's bad at strongly typed languages.
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nisten🇨🇦e/acc
nisten🇨🇦e/acc@nisten·
@im_roy_lee I think you might be more stupid than them if you think a good way to judge someones proficiency at a strongly typed language is whether they're familiar with what's basically a dynamically-typed closure in javascript you fucking moron.
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Dr. Mirman
Dr. Mirman@mmirman·
@jon_stokes @bryan_johnson It's not a paradox. He's asking it, not the AI. The AI may very well solve the problem of how to give humans meaning. We just don't know the answer yet. Because we aren't AI.
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Jon Stokes
Jon Stokes@jon_stokes·
At first glance, your question is a paradox: "what will give us meaning" is a problem that remains, hence AI has not solved all problems. This is also the answer to your question: AI will not, in fact, solve all problems -- by this I mean the problems of the heart, i.e., the problems that all the songs on the radio are about, and which we obsess over in every entertainment and spare moment. Insofar as it relieves us of the trouble of labor to occupy our minds, and we're able to turn exclusively to that other class of heart problems, AI will multiply our problems and not end them.
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Bryan Johnson
Bryan Johnson@bryan_johnson·
If AI solves all problems, what will give us meaning?
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Dr. Mirman
Dr. Mirman@mmirman·
@bryan_johnson How does this not just show limitations of these biomarkers? This is pushing my skeptical buttons - there are too many confounding factors: AC availability, clean water, likelihood to get sun exposure...
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Bryan Johnson
Bryan Johnson@bryan_johnson·
What you should do 1. If given the option; choose to live in more temperate or and cooler climates, both extreme heat and extreme temperature swings can correlate with higher morbidity and mortality. 2. Using indoor air conditioning on hot days, temperatures between 20°C and 24°C were found ideal, also maintaining cognition as we age according to a recent study. 3. Avoid going out at extreme heat hours; both to protect yourself from the heat and the skin aging and skin cancer risk due to UV radiation. 4. Sleep in a well ventilated cool bedroom, with temperature around 20°C
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Bryan Johnson
Bryan Johnson@bryan_johnson·
People living in hotter climates age faster Published this week a study used three distinct epigenetic aging clocks to show that more hotter days on average (caution-level and extreme level heat) make you age faster. 🧵
Bryan Johnson tweet media
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Nikita Bier
Nikita Bier@nikitabier·
Yesterday was the inflection point: being based is now more cringe than being woke. Blindly agreeing with everything because it’s on your team actually makes you part of the problem. If you can’t name one thing you don’t like about your side’s platform, you are no different than a bot and you are more concerned with ego than truth.
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Dr. Mirman
Dr. Mirman@mmirman·
Even the CEO of microsoft uses AI to turn real announcements into spam
Satya Nadella@satyanadella

A couple reflections on the quantum computing breakthrough we just announced... Most of us grew up learning there are three main types of matter that matter: solid, liquid, and gas. Today, that changed. After a nearly 20 year pursuit, we’ve created an entirely new state of matter, unlocked by a new class of materials, topoconductors, that enable a fundamental leap in computing. It powers Majorana 1, the first quantum processing unit built on a topological core. We believe this breakthrough will allow us to create a truly meaningful quantum computer not in decades, as some have predicted, but in years. The qubits created with topoconductors are faster, more reliable, and smaller. They are 1/100th of a millimeter, meaning we now have a clear path to a million-qubit processor. Imagine a chip that can fit in the palm of your hand yet is capable of solving problems that even all the computers on Earth today combined could not! Sometimes researchers have to work on things for decades to make progress possible. It takes patience and persistence to have big impact in the world. And I am glad we get the opportunity to do just that at Microsoft. This is our focus: When productivity rises, economies grow faster, benefiting every sector and every corner of the globe. It’s not about hyping tech; it’s about building technology that truly serves the world.

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Dr. Mirman
Dr. Mirman@mmirman·
a bunch of longevity treatments make claims about it and it definitely is part of living healthily
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Dr. Mirman
Dr. Mirman@mmirman·
@bryan_johnson I don't know if your testing for it, but I'd be really interested to see your IQ/other intelligence markers over time
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Dr. Mirman
Dr. Mirman@mmirman·
@wesroth Reddit is going to win against AI spam because it has a downvote.
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Wes Roth
Wes Roth@WesRoth·
We might have just found the biggest threat to AI security yet. You're looking at it right now. Yes, a smiley face emoji.
Wes Roth tweet media
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Dr. Mirman
Dr. Mirman@mmirman·
@garrytan @paulg AI could make these connections but can't run for long enough consistently enough to convince anybody that it's made these new connections, and large labs have decided safety is more important than quality so it's hard for the AIs to convince anybody to listen.
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Paul Graham
Paul Graham@paulg·
When a big new thing appears, we tend to think of it initially in terms of the old thing. For example, people thought of cars and trains as mechanized carriages initially, before starting to see them as their own thing. How are we doing this with AI?
Paul Graham tweet media
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Dr. Mirman
Dr. Mirman@mmirman·
Still not very natural
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Dr. Mirman
Dr. Mirman@mmirman·
Any tweet/comment that begins with "Eh..." is wrong.
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