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dkirk

@DK1RK

Katılım Ekim 2010
1.1K Takip Edilen315 Takipçiler
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Milb Central
Milb Central@milb_central·
Colt Emerson in today’s game: 4-4 | 1 1B | 3 2B | 1 R | 1 RBI #TridentsUp
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David Sacks
David Sacks@DavidSacks·
Q: How are job postings for software engineers rising rapidly despite AI agents automating coding? A: Because there’s far more code to manage than ever before. We’re already seeing a 14x YoY increase in GitHub commits, and it’s accelerating. AI has dramatically lowered the cost of writing code, so it’s now being used across far more businesses, applications, and use cases. We’re at the beginning of a massive productivity boom driven by the proliferation of bespoke software throughout the entire economy. Coding has been AI’s breakout use case this year. The fact that it’s increased demand for software engineers — rather than decreased it — should call into question the entire “AI will cause mass job loss” narrative.
David Sacks tweet media
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Justin Robert
Justin Robert@JustinWeRchange·
I confronted @JayCollinsFL over his aggressive response to a recent question from a 17 yr old. He got in my face and tried to intimidate me with the same tactics. Not today Jay. Take your anti free speech, Israel first, bullying campaign somewhere else. Not welcome in Florida.
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ZTB
ZTB@zachary_t_bravo·
@signulll Terrible take. They are the most fun team to watch by far and it’s mainly about their defense, which the rest of the NBA stopped doing a while ago.
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signüll
signüll@signulll·
the thunder encapsulate all that is wrong with modern basketball. how can anyone enjoy watching & rooting for this team? clearly playing dirty again with holding wemby, & foul baiting too. ridiculous.
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dkirk@DK1RK·
@CorySwan NBA just needs to tell the refs to swallow their whistle for 2 or 3 games. No fouls called for SGA period. He'll learn real quick
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Cory 🦢 Real Bitcoin @ Swan.com
The NBA needs to make flopping a technical foul. The teams and players would make SO much more money with one rule change to improve the game. Imagine Jordan or Magic acting like a little b**** all the time. Gross.
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Mari
Mari@mari1million·
Terrence Ross is finally saying what we these media people should say.
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Colin McCarthy
Colin McCarthy@US_Stormwatch·
Insane stat of the day: California almonds use roughly 3–5.5 million acre-feet of water per year, depending on methodology. That's ~4-7x more water than all data centers in North America used combined in 2025.
Colin McCarthy tweet media
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dkirk
dkirk@DK1RK·
@JoeCarlasare what about the students that used GPT tutor vs no ai at all?
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Joe Carlasare
Joe Carlasare@JoeCarlasare·
Those who learn to walk on their own two feet will outperform those who depend on crutches.
Rimsha Bhardwaj@heyrimsha

A Wharton economist ran a randomized controlled trial on almost a thousand high school students in Turkey. The result was so brutal for the AI-in-education narrative that it had to be peer-reviewed by PNAS before people would believe it. Her name is Hamsa Bastani. She teaches operations and information at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, and the study she published in 2025 alongside her co-authors is one of the cleanest experiments anyone has run on what AI actually does to learning when you remove it from the equation and check what is left. The setup was a randomized controlled trial, the same methodology used in clinical drug trials. Nearly a thousand high school math students in Turkey were split into three groups and put through four sessions of ninety minutes each. One group practiced with GPT Base, a standard ChatGPT-4 interface that could answer any question directly. One group practiced with GPT Tutor, a version of the same model that had been prompted to guide students with hints rather than hand them the answer. One group practiced with nothing but their textbook and their own head. During the practice sessions, the AI groups looked like a miracle. The GPT Base group solved 48% more problems than the students working alone. The GPT Tutor group solved 127% more. Every administrator looking at those numbers would have written a press release about the transformative power of AI in education and moved on. Then the actual exam came, and AI was not allowed. The students who had practiced with GPT Base scored 17% worse than the students who had practiced alone. Seventeen percent worse, despite having solved nearly half again as many problems in the sessions leading up to it. The students who had struggled the most, who had sat with the confusion and worked through it without a tool to rescue them, were now the only ones who could actually do the math when it counted. Bastani's team read through the chat logs to understand what had actually been happening during the practice sessions, and the answer was exactly what the exam results had already implied. The GPT Base group had not been learning. They had been extracting answers and moving on, and every moment that felt like understanding was actually the model doing the cognitive work while the student's brain waited for the next problem to arrive. The paper describes it precisely: without guardrails, students attempt to use GPT-4 as a crutch during practice, and subsequently perform worse on their own. The detail that should follow every conversation about AI in education is the one buried in the post-test survey results. The students who had relied on AI the most during practice were also the most confident they had understood the material. The tool had not just failed to teach them. It had convinced them they had learned something they had not, which is a different kind of failure entirely and a much harder one to correct because the student has no idea it is happening. The crutch had made them confident and weak at the same time.

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dkirk@DK1RK·
@petergyang I just use noteblookLM for deck generation
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Peter Yang
Peter Yang@petergyang·
My biggest problem with making slides via html and Codex/Claude Code is it's a pain to paste in images. You have to export the image files into a folder and then have the agent recognize it. afaik you can't just paste the image in chat and ask it to build the slide. Or am I doing something wrong?
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dkirk@DK1RK·
@HoodHusky yup. 2 different realities x.com/a16z/status/20…
a16z@a16z

.@pmarca on the divergence between online and offline culture: "There's two ways to live life right now. It's either you're too online or you're too offline. And those are the two choices." "At least everybody I know, they're one or the other... And as consequence they live in two totally different worlds." "It's almost impossible for somebody who's too online to talk to somebody who's too offline and have a productive conversation because the too offline person has no idea what they're talking about." "I think that's actually a big part of what's happening in the culture, independent of left versus right, or independent of whatever. It's just simply two completely different mediated realities." @joerogan

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B1G Hood Husky
B1G Hood Husky@HoodHusky·
@DK1RK There’s a reason the government moves so arrogantly and it’s because they know no matter how bad it gets the new young adults are still ultimately under their control. There are pre internet society and a post internet society. Those born in this society are simply pawns.
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