
CyclingBoulder 🇺🇦
5.7K posts

CyclingBoulder 🇺🇦
@CyclingBoulder
A bunch of cyclists in Boulder, coordinating rides. https://t.co/x5SNvTNTn6…





Terence Tao is the greatest living mathematician. Fields Medal at 31. Solved problems that had been open for a century. Widely regarded as the sharpest analytical mind alive. And he just told you the thing your entire career is built on is now worthless. Tao: “AI has basically driven the cost of idea generation down to almost zero.” For five hundred years, the idea was the prize. The theory. The hypothesis. The flash of insight a physicist chased for twenty years in a lab before it landed. That was the bottleneck. That was what tenure rewarded. That was what Nobel committees were looking for. Gone. A model can generate a thousand candidate theories for a scientific problem in an afternoon. Not noise. Not garbage. Plausible, structured, publishable-grade hypotheses. A thousand of them. Before dinner. The idea used to be the scarcest resource in any room. Now it is the cheapest. But Tao went somewhere most people are not ready to follow. Tao: “Verification, validation, and assessing what ideas actually move the subject forward… that’s not something we know how to do at scale.” Sit with that. We automated creation. We did not automate truth. We can produce ten thousand explanations for a phenomenon. We cannot tell you which ones are real. That is not a gap. That is a chasm. And it is the most important unsolved problem on Earth right now. Tao: “Human reviewers… they’re already being overwhelmed actually.” The entire scientific apparatus was built for a world where a single paper took months to produce. Peer review. Journal boards. Consensus forged over years of replication and debate. That infrastructure was never designed for what just hit it. Journals are flooded. Reviewers are buried. The filters that separated signal from noise for decades were engineered for human-speed output. They are now absorbing machine-speed volume. And they are cracking under it. Tao compared it to the internet. The internet drove the cost of communication to zero. That did not produce clarity. It produced an ocean of noise with islands of signal buried somewhere inside. AI just did the same thing to knowledge itself. Infinite generation. Zero verification. The person who can produce ideas has never mattered less. The person who can prove which ideas are true has never mattered more. That is the inversion nobody is processing. Every company, every lab, every institution is racing to generate more. Faster models. Bigger outputs. More theories. More code. More content. Nobody is building the system that tells you which of those outputs are actually correct. And that is the only system that matters. Whoever solves verification at scale does not win a market. They become the filter that all of science, all of engineering, all of human discovery flows through. The bottleneck of the last five hundred years was producing the answer. The bottleneck of the next fifty is knowing whether the answer is real. And right now, according to the greatest mathematician alive, we do not know how to do that at the speed the machines demand. That is not a research problem. That is the race beneath the race. And almost nobody has entered it.

In 2012, an amateur attempt to restore a deteriorating 19th-century fresco in Borja, Spain, unexpectedly drew widespread attention after the image was dramatically altered during the process. The original artwork, Ecce Homo (“Behold the Man”), had been painted around 1930 by Spanish artist Elías García Martínez inside the Sanctuary of Mercy Church. Over time, moisture and age had caused the fresco to fade and flake, leaving the image in poor condition. Among the church’s regular visitors was Cecilia Giménez, an elderly local parishioner. She was not formally trained in restoration, though she had an interest in art and some experience as an amateur painter. Believing she was helping preserve the artwork she decided on her own initiative to try to restore it. Working with good intentions but limited technical skill, she began repainting parts of the face. Instead of restoring the delicate original features, her thick brushstrokes and simplified shapes dramatically altered the image. The once solemn depiction of Christ became blurred and rounded, with features that no longer resembled the original painting












@joshtweeterson Have to start adding the word, “measurable” to your prediction.


Hassett: "If the war were to be extended, it wouldn't really disrupt the US economy very much at all. It would hurt consumers, and we'd have to think about what we'd have to do about that, but that's really the last of our concerns right now."


What's the most athletic thing you've ever seen during a game?










