Clayto
1.6K posts

Clayto
@AttorneyClayton
Musician/Attorney/Father/Husband. Opinions are my own. https://t.co/vjdKEJJ7CS

“Terrified the CIA” NEW Files Expose Alien Contact Cover-Up | Andy Puharich Andy Puharich is the son of Andrija Puharich, a CIA funded physician, inventor, and researcher best known for his work in parapsychology and fringe science. Puharich also conducted experiments on extrasensory perception (ESP) and claimed to explore communication with non-human intelligences. Greg Mallozzi is a filmmaker who produced & directed a new movie about Puharich called 'Mind Traveler' Source-youtu.be/ZI0dV5k8T0s?si…





prediction from @chamath : 95% of enterprise software running in production today will be rewritten in the next 3 years. AI made rewriting cheaper than maintaining. for 30 years the ROI on rebuilding software was brutal. a 7-figure build. a 2-year timeline. 60% chance of failure. executives chose maintenance every time, even as costs compounded. AI just flipped that equation. the moats that mattered for 30 years in enterprise software are about to collapse. first movers will own the new infrastructure. laggards will be the ones still paying maintenance fees to vendors that can't explain their own code. take a look at your own maintenance line item and ask what an AI-native rewrite would cost instead. reach out to us to learn about what use cases we've solved across healthcare/life science, government, manufacturing, & energy: sales@8090.ai



Tom Cruise’s delivery of “How many times?” 😭

Introducing Project Glasswing: an urgent initiative to help secure the world’s most critical software. It’s powered by our newest frontier model, Claude Mythos Preview, which can find software vulnerabilities better than all but the most skilled humans. anthropic.com/glasswing







I’m pretty confused by the Marathon discourse because uhhh this game is really fucking fun



Imagine getting your ass beat by a police ball


In death we’ve just begun. Watch the Marathon Launch Cinematic featuring Poppy and Son Lux. Marathon releases March 5. youtu.be/vtw5BDpKgJM

Figma CEO Dylan Field just identified the only competitive advantage that AI cannot commoditize. It isn’t your technical skill. It isn’t your speed. It isn’t your tools. Field: “If an agent can do it for you, an agent can do it for someone else.” That’s the fatal flaw in the entire AI productivity argument nobody wants to say out loud. When execution becomes free, execution becomes worthless. The moment anyone can build anything by typing a prompt, the output stops being the differentiator. What remains is taste. The one thing the agent cannot generate for you. Field: “What is different about your setup than others?” If you are typing generic prompts and accepting the first output the agent hands you, you aren’t building a product. You are retrieving a commodity. The same commodity available to every competitor on earth. Field: “You at least have to have something different there in order to not think that you’re just gonna get the same out.” But taste alone isn’t enough. The other half is exploration. Field: “The more you can sample the possibility space, it gives you something to react to.” The blank page is gone. The new constraint isn’t creation. It’s selection. The agent generates hundreds of possibilities in seconds. Your job is to go wide enough to find the best one hiding inside all of them. And then be honest enough with yourself to know when none of them are good enough. Field: “If you find areas where you’re going, ‘Hey, I don’t feel like I am liking this enough,’ then you got to keep pushing.” The creators who win this era won’t be the fastest builders. They’ll be the harshest critics. The ones who can generate the widest possibility space and identify the single best solution inside it. The ones whose taste is specific enough, developed enough, and honest enough to reject everything the agent produces until it produces something worth keeping. The AI can build anything you can describe. It cannot want anything. It cannot feel when something is wrong. It cannot tell the difference between good and extraordinary. That gap is the only moat left.







