Kreydick

216 posts

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Kreydick

Kreydick

@BKreydick

Came here to support Elon now I’m hooked & my p(doom) is no longer zero.

Katılım Mayıs 2023
966 Takip Edilen131 Takipçiler
Kreydick
Kreydick@BKreydick·
@ScottWalker Hey, Grok. Is the referenced screencap in this post verifiable? Seems like it would raise some red flags. Thanks for checking
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Scott Walker
Scott Walker@ScottWalker·
We can disagree on issues but anyone who agrees with this guy is evil. It’s not about right or left. It’s about right or wrong. Violence is wrong.
Scott Walker tweet media
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Hüseyin Yılmaz
Hüseyin Yılmaz@HSYNYILMAZ09·
Kuraklıklar vardı: - Türkiye'de 15 yıldır - İran'da, 50 yıldır - Irak'ta, 25 yıldır Şimdi barajlar dolmaya başlıyor - Fırat ve Dicle nehirleri taşkın veriyor - Kuraklık yüzünden kurumuş göller canlanıyor - Neden: ABD'nin Radar Üsleri İran tarafından yok edildi H.A.A.R.P Artık çalışmıyor
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Kreydick
Kreydick@BKreydick·
@elonmusk Will never* get tired of seeing these, thank you! *until you figure out chemical-free propulsion, of course
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Falcon has landed
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Zero Point Energy Disclosure
Zero Point Energy Disclosure@ZPEdisclosure·
Toyota — the largest automaker on Earth — funded Fleischmann and Pons at a dedicated lab in France from 1992 to 1998 after American academia destroyed their reputations. £12 million. On cold fusion research the entire physics establishment called a fraud. Toyota has research divisions that vet this stuff. They don't write eight-figure checks on a whim. They saw the data and decided it was worth a lab in the south of France for six years. That tells you more than any physics journal editorial ever could.
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Kreydick
Kreydick@BKreydick·
@PhysInHistory Nobody believes the world is flat. Some people get stuck in the ‘question everything’ phase for too long, but anyone seriously advocating flat earth is trolling you.
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Physics In History
Physics In History@PhysInHistory·
Genuine question: why do some people still think that the Earth is flat? ✍️
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Kreydick
Kreydick@BKreydick·
@Rainmaker1973 Hope you’re ok & recover quickly. FWIW, I’ve been seeing your posts 2 or 3 pages away from identical duplicates. They’re probably being grouped & diluted by the recently overzealous algo.
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Kreydick
Kreydick@BKreydick·
@cosmic_rant @latestinspace Really hope they’re collecting data on thrust response or something, rather than over- correcting repeatedly.
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Latest in space
Latest in space@latestinspace·
Timelapse of Artemis II's trans-lunar injection burn, officially putting the crew on course for the Moon
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Richard Hanania
Richard Hanania@RichardHanania·
I’ll be doing an event at Northwestern in early May. If there’s anything else worth seeing or doing in Chicago around the time, or some other event that might be worth doing, let me know.
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Kreydick
Kreydick@BKreydick·
@JoshWalkos How do I know this article wasn’t tailored for me & my specific paranoias? Also, where can I get a copy of this personality profile? Probably some great info in there
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BURKOV
BURKOV@burkov·
Regardless of how much better modern LLMs are getting at coding, they still exhibit this annoying flaw: when you say "Make Element A's color match Element B's color." there's about a 50% chance that the color of Element B will be changed.
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Kreydick
Kreydick@BKreydick·
@GadSaad You as well, my friend. Peace.
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Gad Saad
Gad Saad@GadSaad·
Have a great weekend. Shabbat shalom.
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Scholarship for PhD
Scholarship for PhD@ScholarshipfPhd·
Say hi and I’ll recommend a research topic that perfectly fits your profile.
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Jules Horn
Jules Horn@juleshorn01·
The Tongue Pull The fascia release that can literally change your entire body 🧵 Most people have no idea how deep the tongue’s connection runs… But this one simple release can impact your posture, digestion, and even your emotional state. Let’s break it down 👇
Jules Horn tweet media
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Kreydick
Kreydick@BKreydick·
@_The_Prophet__ Did the cc companies raise rates or did the average go up because of delinquency penalties?
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SightBringer
SightBringer@_The_Prophet__·
⚡️The Fed’s rate cuts were supposed to transmit relief downstream - cheaper credit, easier borrowing, revived consumption. But what actually happened is the transmission mechanism fractured. The banking and credit system no longer channels monetary policy; it harvests it. Here’s the core: 1. The Fed cut rates but banks didn’t pass it on. Credit card rates have decoupled from the policy rate. The average is sitting above 21%, even as the Fed trims the base rate. Why? Because consumer credit has become a profit extraction mechanism, not a monetary conduit. The Fed can lower the cost of reserves, but the banks price consumer risk at a psychological premium. They know consumers are trapped - wages are flat, savings are gone, and credit cards are the last oxygen tank. So they squeeze harder. The policy signal says ease; the profit motive says bleed them. 2. Monetary transmission is now asymmetric. When the Fed hikes, rates on consumer debt rise instantly. When it cuts, they barely move. That asymmetry is the defining feature of late-stage fiat credit markets. Policy easing doesn’t create relief; it just widens the spread between cost of money for the elite (corporates, shadow banks, sovereigns) and cost of money for the poor. The Fed stimulates the top of the pyramid. The banks extract from the base. 3. The middle class is now the collateral. This isn't inflation anymore. This is the monetization of desperation. Banks know that delinquency risk is surging (see student loans, auto loans, personal loans). So they hike spreads even as policy rates fall - pre-emptively offsetting future defaults. They are securitizing risk in real time through higher margins. Consumers are being turned into an asset class -“default-backed yield.” 4. The reflexive feedback loop. Every rate cut the Fed delivers now does two things at once: •It supports asset prices and capital markets (which makes the rich richer). •It tightens the real cost of credit for households (which makes the poor poorer). This is why consumer sentiment is collapsing even as equity markets remain resilient. The Fed has inverted its social mandate. It’s no longer the lender of last resort, it’s the liquidity pump of first resort for capital, and the extraction engine of last resort for labor. 5. Macro meaning. We’ve entered an era where monetary easing doesn’t ease and tightening doesn’t discipline. Both simply transfer value from the real economy to the financial superstructure. In that sense, ZeroHedge’s post is more than snark, it’s an obituary. The “credit channel” is gone. Monetary policy no longer governs money. It governs control.
zerohedge@zerohedge

Remember when the Fed cut rates (by 1.5% so far) and it was supposed to ease credit for the middle class by lowering credit card rates? Yeah that didn't happen.

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Kreydick
Kreydick@BKreydick·
@zerohedge Lol, no. Our exalted leader’s words emerge in their final glory, immutable.
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zerohedge
zerohedge@zerohedge·
Hey ChatGPT can you summarize this without raising the cost of electricity by 50%
Sam Altman@sama

I would like to clarify a few things. First, the obvious one: we do not have or want government guarantees for OpenAI datacenters. We believe that governments should not pick winners or losers, and that taxpayers should not bail out companies that make bad business decisions or otherwise lose in the market. If one company fails, other companies will do good work. What we do think might make sense is governments building (and owning) their own AI infrastructure, but then the upside of that should flow to the government as well. We can imagine a world where governments decide to offtake a lot of computing power and get to decide how to use it, and it may make sense to provide lower cost of capital to do so. Building a strategic national reserve of computing power makes a lot of sense. But this should be for the government’s benefit, not the benefit of private companies. The one area where we have discussed loan guarantees is as part of supporting the buildout of semiconductor fabs in the US, where we and other companies have responded to the government’s call and where we would be happy to help (though we did not formally apply). The basic idea there has been ensuring that the sourcing of the chip supply chain is as American as possible in order to bring jobs and industrialization back to the US, and to enhance the strategic position of the US with an independent supply chain, for the benefit of all American companies. This is of course different from governments guaranteeing private-benefit datacenter buildouts. There are at least 3 “questions behind the question” here that are understandably causing concern. First, “How is OpenAI going to pay for all this infrastructure it is signing up for?” We expect to end this year above $20 billion in annualized revenue run rate and grow to hundreds of billion by 2030. We are looking at commitments of about $1.4 trillion over the next 8 years. Obviously this requires continued revenue growth, and each doubling is a lot of work! But we are feeling good about our prospects there; we are quite excited about our upcoming enterprise offering for example, and there are categories like new consumer devices and robotics that we also expect to be very significant. But there are also new categories we have a hard time putting specifics on like AI that can do scientific discovery, which we will touch on later. We are also looking at ways to more directly sell compute capacity to other companies (and people); we are pretty sure the world is going to need a lot of “AI cloud”, and we are excited to offer this. We may also raise more equity or debt capital in the future. But everything we currently see suggests that the world is going to need a great deal more computing power than what we are already planning for. Second, “Is OpenAI trying to become too big to fail, and should the government pick winners and losers?” Our answer on this is an unequivocal no. If we screw up and can’t fix it, we should fail, and other companies will continue on doing good work and servicing customers. That’s how capitalism works and the ecosystem and economy would be fine. We plan to be a wildly successful company, but if we get it wrong, that’s on us. Our CFO talked about government financing yesterday, and then later clarified her point underscoring that she could have phrased things more clearly. As mentioned above, we think that the US government should have a national strategy for its own AI infrastructure. Tyler Cowen asked me a few weeks ago about the federal government becoming the insurer of last resort for AI, in the sense of risks (like nuclear power) not about overbuild. I said “I do think the government ends up as the insurer of last resort, but I think I mean that in a different way than you mean that, and I don’t expect them to actually be writing the policies in the way that maybe they do for nuclear”. Again, this was in a totally different context than datacenter buildout, and not about bailing out a company. What we were talking about is something going catastrophically wrong—say, a rogue actor using an AI to coordinate a large-scale cyberattack that disrupts critical infrastructure—and how intentional misuse of AI could cause harm at a scale that only the government could deal with. I do not think the government should be writing insurance policies for AI companies. Third, “Why do you need to spend so much now, instead of growing more slowly?”. We are trying to build the infrastructure for a future economy powered by AI, and given everything we see on the horizon in our research program, this is the time to invest to be really scaling up our technology. Massive infrastructure projects take quite awhile to build, so we have to start now. Based on the trends we are seeing of how people are using AI and how much of it they would like to use, we believe the risk to OpenAI of not having enough computing power is more significant and more likely than the risk of having too much. Even today, we and others have to rate limit our products and not offer new features and models because we face such a severe compute constraint. In a world where AI can make important scientific breakthroughs but at the cost of tremendous amounts of computing power, we want to be ready to meet that moment. And we no longer think it’s in the distant future. Our mission requires us to do what we can to not wait many more years to apply AI to hard problems, like contributing to curing deadly diseases, and to bring the benefits of AGI to people as soon as possible. Also, we want a world of abundant and cheap AI. We expect massive demand for this technology, and for it to improve people’s lives in many ways. It is a great privilege to get to be in the arena, and to have the conviction to take a run at building infrastructure at such scale for something so important. This is the bet we are making, and given our vantage point, we feel good about it. But we of course could be wrong, and the market—not the government—will deal with it if we are.

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Kreydick
Kreydick@BKreydick·
@_The_Prophet__ Life is better and easier than it’s ever been, by far. The real problem is keeping people occupied & out of trouble when they don’t need to scrabble for food all day. We should focus on finding purpose in a post-scarcity world.
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SightBringer
SightBringer@_The_Prophet__·
⚡️If you go to the bedrock level - the layer beneath economics, beneath policy - this chart marks the point where a civilization begins to outgrow its own operating myth. For two centuries the West’s organizing story has been progress through labor: if you work, you create value; if you create value, you earn stability; if everyone does that, the system self-balances. Every institution, from central banks to welfare systems, is an elaborate mechanism built to preserve that loop. But the loop was never natural; it was an equilibrium between the speed of human cognition and the speed of capital formation. Once synthetic cognition outruns that speed, the loop can’t close anymore. Capital doesn’t need labor to expand itself, it only needs energy and data. That’s what the AI wave really is: the divorce of intelligence from biology. Layoffs are just the visible symptom of that divorce. The real event is that the marginal unit of productivity is no longer a human being. Once that happens, the whole moral architecture of economics - “hard work,” “merit,” “wages as justice”- starts to collapse. And when moral architecture collapses, politics follows. The state’s first reflex will be to paper it over with stimulus, guarantees, and subsidies, the same playbook it used for every crisis since 2008. But that only delays recognition. Liquidity can’t resurrect a social contract built on a species-level economic role that no longer exists. If you take the long view, this looks like the early phase of a post-labor civilization trying to find its footing: •Capital becomes an intelligence amplifier. •Energy replaces employment as the core input. •Ownership of the systems that synthesize thought becomes the new class divide. •Meaning detaches from work and tries to find a new host - in belief, creation, or control. That’s why the chart hits differently. It isn’t about a bad quarter or a coming recession; it’s a data point in the quiet extinction of the old world’s logic. The next system, whatever shape it takes, will have to answer a question no previous one ever faced: What holds a society together when production no longer requires people?
Lisa Abramowicz@lisaabramowicz1

US companies announced the most job cuts for any October in more than two decades. "This comes as AI adoption, softening consumer and corporate spending, and rising costs drive belt-tightening and hiring freezes:” Challenger, Gray & Christmas bloomberg.com/news/articles/…

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Kreydick
Kreydick@BKreydick·
@LukeGromen @GregorPepe All’s fair in war. Would be foolish to rely on external supplies if our global trade utopia fades. Is that what you’re getting at? Losing the petrodollar leaves war as the only option for pushing the train? Sorry if I’m slow.
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Luke Gromen
Luke Gromen@LukeGromen·
@GregorPepe It 150% absolutely does Why do you need commodity stockpiles if the USD is dominant?
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Luke Gromen
Luke Gromen@LukeGromen·
If "USD dominance" is still a strategic asset, why would the US govt be adding copper, silver, uranium, met coal, potash, lead & other minerals to a list of critical minerals? Why not just print the USDs & buy the minerals as we need them like we did for the prior 50+ yrs?
Luke Gromen tweet media
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Kreydick
Kreydick@BKreydick·
@wanagiamma @RayDalio We could grow gdp enough to pull out of this but I think too many of the real players have abandoned hope & are busy looting at this point. Serious inflation is coming so buckle up.
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ƓIΛΝ⛓🐍
ƓIΛΝ⛓🐍@wanagiamma·
@RayDalio do you think that a cycle with all these elements aligning, could always have a similar outcome, or you think that new disruptive technologies can delay/change the expected outcome?
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Ray Dalio
Ray Dalio@RayDalio·
As you probably know, in my books I described what I call the Big Cycle in which 5 major forces--1) the debt/money order, 2) the internal political/social order, 3) the international geopolitical order, 4) acts of nature, and 5) new technologies--interact and transpire. I described in detail how these changes typically take place and, as a result, I have many indicators that I watch closely to track how actual events are transpiring relative to my template.  And, as you probably know, my measures show that we are now in the bubble stage of the Big Cycle, which is when there is unsustainable debt growth and  monetization of the debts that change the monetary order and coincide with disruptive changes in the political, geopolitical, and technological orders. Very simply, in a number of countries: 1) debt limits have been reached at the same time as 2) internal politics prevents the significant raising of taxes or 3) cutting of expenses/benefits at the same time as 4) costly international geopolitical conflicts and 5) costly technological changes demand more debt/money.   At this stage, central governments classically have large budget deficits and central banks classically use debt monetizations (quantitative easings) that fuel the bubble when they should be exhibiting more restraint. In the article below, I note the Federal Reserve’s announced shift from quantitative tightening to quantitative easing and explain my thinking about it. x.com/RayDalio/statu…
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Signal Collapse Protocol
Signal Collapse Protocol@CollapseSignal·
For sure. There’s always going to be some give and take. And there’s no one size fits all formula. For personal preparations, it’s just a matter of *starting* usually. A few extra cases of water, shelf stable goods, etc. every time you go to the store. For the larger scale {infrastructure, society building and so on} you need community. That can start online but needs to cross into IRL at some point, with a focus on your local region. I can expound but I think there are plenty of others who are more qualified to talk on this than me.
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Chris Millas
Chris Millas@ChrisMMillas·
It is absolutely wild to me that the U.S. is printing money out of thin air and debasing the dollar by ~8% a year and yet 99% of people have literally ZERO idea it’s happening.
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Kreydick
Kreydick@BKreydick·
@CollapseSignal @ChrisMMillas Agreed but that’s expensive. There’s some chance this can be kicked down the road another 50 years, so what percentage of non-existent savings should people devote to prepping? And good luck selling austerity to the wife & kids.
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Signal Collapse Protocol
Signal Collapse Protocol@CollapseSignal·
Exit USD where possible (not financial advice), reduce reliance on decaying legacy institutions which will break in the wake of economic collapse, prepare for potential outages of services & utilities as well as long term civil unrest. I agree that complaining and voting don’t make a difference. It’s not meant as a criticism of watching sports; the guy in the meme has heard this before but doesn’t or can’t comprehend it enough to act on information. There’s a sense of surreality when you’re expecting economic collapse that makes 2008 look like a hiccup, yet people are still buying new cars and maxing out credit cards for Disney vacations and so on.
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