Tom Fool 🎈🛡
5.4K posts

Tom Fool 🎈🛡
@CryptoTomFool
Tom Fool was an American Thoroughbred racehorse, a winner of the American Horse of the Year award and a Hall of Fame inductee.
National Museum of Racing Katılım Ocak 2021
2.5K Takip Edilen328 Takipçiler
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@hymnduncan Hard to spin this one - wish we had cp3 to knock some sense into someome and call a timeout from the bench lmao
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Tom Fool 🎈🛡 retweetledi

"Why are you benchmarking DGX Spark? It's a training box."
Yeah. Low bandwidth, but 128GB of unified memory is just sitting there. Plenty of room to optimize.
DGX Spark + Qwen3.6 27B. Four backend/quant combos:
🔴 llama.cpp + UD_Q4_K_XL
> 11.0 tok/s (baseline), TTFT 297ms
🟢 llama.cpp + DFlash
> 20.4 tok/s (peaks at 97 tok/s), TTFT 320ms
🟡 vLLM FP8 + MTP
> 13.1 tok/s, TTFT 540ms
🟣 vLLM NVFP4 + MTP
> 24.2 tok/s, TTFT 376ms
NVFP4+MTP is the winner for me, rock stable around 24 tok/s, no wild swings.
DFlash is the wildcard: massive peaks, but fluctuates a lot.
FP8+MTP barely beats baseline, and it's FP8.
Love my Spark.
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$ZEC
50% TP’d @ 434
Funding turns red and/or OI comes off a bit and I’ll re-size.
This is the first time I’ve seen the TL align on this coin, which isn’t necessarily bad given it’s only 6-7B MC.


Mandelbrot@Wild_Randomness
$ZEC gm North America
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Tom Fool 🎈🛡 retweetledi

DocuSign Personal: $10 to $15 per month.
DocuSign Standard: $25 to $45 per user per month.
DocuSign Business Pro: $40 to $65 per user per month.
A 10-person team on Business Pro pays $4,800 to $7,800 a year. To put signatures on PDFs.
A team of 50 pays $24,000 to $39,000 a year.
And there is a 100-envelopes-per-year cap on most plans. Send more contracts and you pay extra.
Need SMS delivery? $0.40 per send.
Need ID verification? $2.50 per attempt.
Need premium support? $5,000 to $50,000 per year add-on.
You are rationing digital signatures in 2026.
DocuSign is a $10 billion company built entirely on this pricing model.
Now meet DocuSeal.
A free and open source alternative to DocuSign.
Created in 2023 by a Ruby developer named Alex who was simply trying to sign one document and realised every solution online was overpriced or required a subscription.
Three weeks later he had a working alternative. He pushed it to GitHub under the AGPL-3.0 license.
Today it has 11,800+ stars and over 1,000 forks. Bootstrapped. No VCs. No paywalls.
Here is what DocuSeal does:
- Upload any PDF and turn it into a fillable, signable form
- Drag and drop signature fields, dates, checkboxes, file uploads, and 13 field types
- Send to multiple signers with custom signing order
- Automated email reminders
- Mobile signing on any device
- PDF signature verification built in
- Audit trail for every document
- Bulk send and templates
- Full API access
- Self-host with one Docker command
Here is what DocuSeal costs:
Zero. Forever. Unlimited documents. Unlimited signers. Unlimited storage.
DocuSign limits envelopes. DocuSeal doesn't.
DocuSign charges per SMS. DocuSeal doesn't.
DocuSign charges for ID checks. DocuSeal doesn't.
DocuSign sees your contracts on their servers. DocuSeal doesn't.
Here is the wildest part:
The median DocuSign contract per Vendr is $17,250 per year. One Reddit thread has people saying "they want me to pay $4.80 per e-signature."
Self-host DocuSeal on a $5 cloud server and a 50-person team can sign as many contracts as they want without paying a single dollar.
Your contracts never leave your server. Your client lists. Your NDAs. Your employment agreements. None of it touches a third-party company.
For individuals who only sign a few contracts a year, you save $180.
For small teams of 10, you save up to $7,800 a year.
For a 50-person company, you save up to $39,000 a year.
Your documents. Your signatures. Your server.
100% Open Source. (Link in the comments)

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Tom Fool 🎈🛡 retweetledi

the degree to which how pervasive in normie circles the ai/data center water consumption aspersion is
and simultaneously how vital data center buildout is to national security
it wouldn't surprise me if there were foreign actors actively directing narrative ops towards memetically/cognitively vulnerable groups
Will Manidis@WillManidis
I don’t think any of you have processed at any level how widespread and profound the ai water libel is
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Korean equities opening through IBKR, to foreigners
In short: Holdcos + Preferred
cryptobyrde.substack.com/p/korean-equit…
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Tom Fool 🎈🛡 retweetledi
Tom Fool 🎈🛡 retweetledi

neocloud demise very overstated for now
Also makes me think anti datacenter political movement ends up being farce - for every jurisdiction that doesn’t want one another will be there that will (or the gov will just eminent domain)
Follow the money
David Orr@orrdavid
@hkuppy @danielgladis This is a hell of a chart. Take it really seriously, stew on it in an honest way. Thus far, somehow the older GPU prices have gone *up* over time, not down. So in the above table, there's an even more bullish outcome (not that I believe that over 7 years ofc).
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@WorldWideWob @veH0rny 2022 Suns were the #1 seed that year and title favorites - 2026 Hawks are playing better than expected but still a mid team (salty about that Spurs pick tho)
hard to dethrone this meme
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Tom Fool 🎈🛡 retweetledi

@chumbawamba22 Need chumba_world part 2 QQQ melt up version instead of BTC
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Tom Fool 🎈🛡 retweetledi
Tom Fool 🎈🛡 retweetledi

Are we done with object detection? What about tiny objects beyond 200 meters? 🔎
Telescope 🔭 addresses long-range perception by explicitly tackling extreme scale imbalance ⚖️ in images. It hinges on a learnable hyperbolic foveation transform from a low-resolution image, magnifying distant regions 🔍 while compressing nearby ones - effectively normalizing object scales with minimal computational overhead. Objects are detected in the transformed (Riemannian) space using a novel bounding box parameterization and are then mapped back to the original image.
Project: light.princeton.edu/telescope/
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