Jordan Bass
153 posts

Jordan Bass
@JT_Bass
CEO, co-founder @hopwtr, dad to 👯♀️, husband, love learning, constant pursuit of growth
Los Angeles, CA Katılım Kasım 2011
160 Takip Edilen37 Takipçiler

Things have come a long way since the delivery of the DGX-1 9 years ago; amazing to see...
Greg Brockman@gdb
Thanks Jensen for the hand delivery of DGX Spark. Best delivery service ever. Amazing to see so much compute (1 petaflop!) in such a tiny form factor.
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@Carlossainz55 Congrats. Well earned by the whole team. Took a risk and it paid off.
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🇦🇿 Amazing podium in Baku! Super solid race! We kept pushing through ups and downs and this makes it all worth it. Thank you to the entire team and our fans. I’m sure this is just a taste of what’s to come. Vamos!
👉carlossainz.es/en/carlos-sain…
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#CarlosSainz

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In my own life, what I want to give to people, most importantly to people I love, is the power to deal with reality to get what they want. In pursuit of my goal to give them strength, I will often deny them what they "want" because that will give them the opportunity to struggle so that they can develop the strength to get what they want on their own. This can be difficult for people emotionally, even if they understand intellectually that having difficulties is the exercise they need to grow strong and that just giving them what they want will weaken them and ultimately lead to them needing more help.
Of course most people would prefer not to have weaknesses. Our upbringings and our experiences in the world have conditioned us to be embarrassed by our weaknesses and hide them. But people are happiest when they can be themselves. If you can be open with your weaknesses it will make you freer and will help you deal with them better. I urge you to not be embarrassed about your problems, recognizing that everyone has them. Bringing them to the surface will help you break your bad habits and develop good ones, and you will acquire real strengths and justifiable optimism. #principleoftheday

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@mrgroowth @grok did Sam Altman write this or someone else? Is this accurate?
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I came across a timeless list by Sam Altman, and it hit me hard.
Not because it’s new advice — but because it’s the kind of wisdom we often know yet rarely practice.
Here are a few gems that stood out to me:
Talk to people more. Real conversations beat endless scrolling every time.
Have clear goals every day, every year, and every decade.
Freedom often comes from needing less, not having more.
Do new things often. Growth starts just outside your comfort zone.
The whole list is a reminder that life isn’t a dress rehearsal. This is it.
Ten years from now, most of us will regret the risks we didn’t take, the words we didn’t say, and the connections we didn’t make.
So, call your parents.
Start the project.
Love deeply.
And remember: The days are long, but the decades are short.
Which of these resonates most with you?

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Most people make bad decisions because they are so certain that they're right that they don't allow themselves to see the better alternatives that exist. Radically open-minded people know that coming up with the right questions and asking other smart people what they think is as important as having all the answers. They understand that you can't make a great decision without swimming for a while in a state of "not knowing." That is because what exists within the area of "not knowing" is so much greater and more exciting than anything any one of us knows.
#principleoftheday

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Independence Day is a reminder that America is not the project of any one person. The single most powerful word in our democracy is the word ‘We.’ ‘We The People.’ ‘We Shall Overcome.’ ‘Yes We Can.’ America is owned by no one. It belongs to all citizens. And at this moment in history—when core democratic principles seem to be continuously under attack, when too many people around the world have become cynical and disengaged—now is precisely the time to ask ourselves tough questions about how we can build our democracies and make them work in meaningful and practical ways for ordinary people.
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"This isn't a fad, it's a trend...".
Read about some of my predictions for beverage in 2025 and beyond.
forbes.com/sites/alexande…
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Yes.
A massive strategic error is being made right now to damage solar/battery that will leave America extremely vulnerable in the future.
Peter H. Diamandis, MD@PeterDiamandis
By 2030, China could have the ability to produce enough solar and storage infrastructure each year to match the entire electricity generation capacity of the United States.
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