Jason Elsom

65.9K posts

Jason Elsom banner
Jason Elsom

Jason Elsom

@JasonElsom

Most companies want AI to read about them. Mine are the ones AI reads. 6M LLM hits/day across the What* family - and growing.

Global Katılım Nisan 2009
56.9K Takip Edilen99.1K Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
Jason Elsom
Jason Elsom@JasonElsom·
6M. That's how many times my websites were hit yesterday. >70% came from LLMs - ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity, Gemini - reading content in real time. Not last month. Yesterday. A few months ago I checked the server logs out of curiosity. Most of the traffic wasn't human. Every LLM you've heard of was quietly consuming the content as fast as it could be published. And growing. Here's what nobody's saying out loud: The web was built for humans clicking links. The next web is being built for AI reading at scale. Every question you ask ChatGPT is answered by some piece of content that exists somewhere. The companies that own those pieces will own the answers. I've been quietly building one... WhatSchool - currently the world's largest cradle-to-grave education corpus. 138 nations. 2.4 billion data points. It's #1... The What* family is in production. More verticals. Each becoming the authoritative knowledge layer for its space. Each consumed by AI before humans even notice it exists. I'm not selling AI. I'm building the thing AI uses. If you want to watch a category get built in real time - wins, scars, and "wait, did that just work?" moments - follow along. Say What*.
Jason Elsom tweet media
English
0
0
0
165
Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
On my way to Beijing in Air Force One
English
41.9K
43.5K
732.1K
94.5M
Jason Elsom
Jason Elsom@JasonElsom·
@heynavtoor $20 per month 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 … that’s all seven laughing at you when they give up work and go home at 9.10am on Monday morning because you ran out of tokens.
English
1
0
3
437
Nav Toor
Nav Toor@heynavtoor·
need a researcher? hire one for $90K need an editor? hire one for $85K need a PM? hire one for $110K need an analyst? hire one for $120K need a recruiter? hire one for $95K need an ops lead? hire one for $100K need a fractional CFO? hire one for $180K total: $780,000 a year. OR drop 7 markdown files in one folder Claude runs all 7 jobs on demand total cost: $20/month most founders are one bad hire away from running out of money. most operators are one folder away from never needing the hire. the article has all 7 files. copy them. paste them. ship. the team is the folder.
Nav Toor@heynavtoor

x.com/i/article/2052…

English
30
101
732
257.3K
Jason Elsom
Jason Elsom@JasonElsom·
@sama Significantly lower cost than Claude code?
English
0
0
0
159
Sam Altman
Sam Altman@sama·
what would you most like to see improve in our next model?
English
8.4K
307
9K
1.4M
Alex Imas
Alex Imas@alexolegimas·
Some news: This week I am starting at @GoogleDeepMind as Director of AGI Economics on @shanelegg’s team. I will be joining the other amazing cross-disciplinary scientists researching AGI there. My team will study how frontier AI could reshape the economy: what happens to work and labor, how wealth and power are distributed, how institutions adapt, how AI agents shape markets, and what kinds of models can help us reason clearly about futures that may look very different from the past. I’m incredibly excited to help build this research agenda. If AGI changes how society operates, economics is going to be critical for shaping our shared future. Many more announcements soon.
Alex Imas tweet media
English
482
200
4.5K
567.4K
Jason Elsom
Jason Elsom@JasonElsom·
@Rainmaker1973 It should return to the base to drop the core battery off and collect a new one.
English
0
0
0
150
Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
There's a flying security camera called Ring Always Home Cam. The drone patrols the premises when everyone leaves, periodically returning to the base to recharge.
English
148
226
1.6K
136.9K
bodila
bodila@51bodila·
Claude is officially almost dead - new agent LITERALLY does 99.9% of work for you Why is Roman Ai better than Claude? Essentially, roman is a wrapper around the same models (Claude, Gemini, Kimi), but with two key differences: > Claude is a separate tab where you go to ask questions. > Roman lives in Slack, where you already work. You write a message in the channel, it does the task, and responds right there. > Claude responds with text - then you copy, paste, and run it yourself. > Roman has its own ecosystem (a virtual machine); it writes the code itself, runs it itself, - connects directly to your tools (GitHub, Jira, HubSpot, Notion - 3,000+ integrations), and delivers the finished result. Plus, it retains context across sessions for weeks, rather than losing it like Claude does after a long conversation So, right now, this is the best Cowork agent, - which will save you a huge amount of time while building your product!
bodila tweet mediabodila tweet mediabodila tweet media
Yasser Drif@Yasser_Drif__

Roman AI is LIVE. IMAGINE: You message Roman in Slack It delivers a deployed app, a finished report, or a running automation 3,000+ tools. Every frontier model. $100 free credits at signup RT + comment "ROMAN" and we'll DM you 10 things Roman ships for your business ⬇️

English
14
28
250
1.7M
Jason Elsom
Jason Elsom@JasonElsom·
@elonmusk If it wasn’t for England, the United States would need Ai translation tools for everything.
English
2
0
4
193
Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
This is how an economy actually works
Brivael Le Pogam@brivael

Elon Musk avait dit un truc qui m'avait marqué sur l'allocation de ressources. En substance : passé un certain niveau de richesse, l'argent n'est plus de la consommation, c'est de l'allocation de capital. Cette phrase change tout. L'économie, dans le fond, c'est juste un problème d'allocation. Tu as des ressources finies et des usages infinis. Qui décide où va quoi ? Imagine une cour de récré. 100 enfants, des paquets de cartes Pokémon distribués au hasard. Tu laisses faire. Très vite, un ordre émerge. Les bons joueurs accumulent les cartes rares, les collectionneurs trient, les négociateurs trouvent des deals. Personne n'a planifié. Et pourtant chaque carte finit dans les mains de celui qui en tire le plus de valeur. Le système maximise le bonheur total de la cour. C'est ça, la main invisible. Maintenant fais entrer la maîtresse. Elle trouve ça injuste. Léo a 50 cartes, Tom en a 3. Elle confisque, redistribue, impose l'égalité. Trois effets immédiats. Les bons joueurs arrêtent de jouer, à quoi bon. Les mauvais n'ont plus de raison de progresser, ils auront leur part. Les échanges s'effondrent. La cour est égale, et morte. Elle a maximisé l'égalité, elle a détruit le bonheur. Le problème de la maîtresse, c'est qu'elle ne peut pas avoir l'information que la cour avait collectivement. C'est le problème du calcul économique de Mises, formulé en 1920. L'URSS a essayé de le résoudre pendant 70 ans avec le Gosplan. Résultat : pénuries, queues, effondrement. Pas parce que les Soviétiques étaient bêtes, parce que le problème est mathématiquement insoluble en mode centralisé. Quand Musk a 200 milliards, il ne les consomme pas, il les alloue. SpaceX, Starlink, Neuralink, xAI. Chaque dollar est un pari sur le futur. Et lui a un track record. PayPal, Tesla, SpaceX. Il a démontré qu'il sait identifier des problèmes immenses et y allouer des ressources avec un rendement spectaculaire. L'État aussi a un track record. Hôpitaux qui s'effondrent, éducation qui décline, dette qui explose, services publics qui se dégradent malgré des budgets en hausse constante. Le marché identifie les bons allocateurs, la politique identifie les bons communicants. Le profit n'est pas une finalité, c'est un signal. Il dit : tu as alloué des ressources rares vers un usage que les gens valorisent suffisamment pour payer. Plus le profit est gros, plus la création de valeur est grande. Quand Starlink est rentable, ça veut dire que des millions de gens dans des zones rurales ont enfin internet. Quand un ministère est en déficit, ça veut dire qu'il consomme plus qu'il ne produit. L'un crée, l'autre détruit, et on appelle ça redistribution. Dans nos sociétés il y a deux catégories d'acteurs. Les entrepreneurs et les bureaucrates. L'entrepreneur prend un risque personnel pour identifier un problème, mobiliser des ressources, créer une solution. S'il se trompe il perd. S'il a raison, ses clients gagnent, ses employés gagnent, ses fournisseurs gagnent, l'État collecte des impôts. Il est la cellule de base du progrès humain. Le bureaucrate ne prend aucun risque personnel. Son salaire est garanti. Au mieux il maintient une rente existante. Au pire il la détruit par excès de réglementation, mauvaise allocation forcée, incitations perverses qui découragent ceux qui produisent. Mais dans aucun cas il ne crée. Regarde les 50 dernières années. iPhone, internet civil, SpaceX, Tesla, Google, Amazon, Stripe, mRNA, ChatGPT. Toutes des inventions privées, portées par des entrepreneurs, financées par du capital risque. Pas un seul ministère n'a inventé quoi que ce soit qui ait changé ta vie au quotidien. La France est devenue le laboratoire mondial de la dérive bureaucratique. 57% du PIB en dépenses publiques, record absolu. Une administration tentaculaire, une fiscalité qui pénalise la création de richesse. Résultat : décrochage face aux États-Unis, à l'Allemagne, à la Suisse. Fuite des cerveaux. Désindustrialisation. Dette qui explose. Et le pire c'est que la mauvaise allocation s'auto-renforce. Plus l'État prélève, moins les entrepreneurs créent. Moins ils créent, moins il y a de base fiscale. Plus l'État s'endette et taxe. Boucle de rétroaction négative parfaite. La maîtresse pense qu'elle aide, et chaque année la cour produit moins. Dans nos sociétés, ce sont les entrepreneurs, toujours, qui font avancer la civilisation. Les bureaucrates au mieux maintiennent une rente, au pire la détruisent. Aucune société n'a jamais progressé en taxant ses créateurs pour subventionner ses gestionnaires. La question n'est jamais qui a combien. C'est qui alloue le mieux la prochaine unité de ressource pour maximiser le futur de l'humanité. La réponse depuis 200 ans n'a jamais changé. Ce ne sont pas les fonctionnaires.

English
5.6K
18.4K
130.3K
79.9M
@jason
@jason@Jason·
We started an AI founder twitter group... reply with "I'm in" if you're a founder and want to be added
English
10.8K
135
4.6K
903.2K
Jason Elsom
Jason Elsom@JasonElsom·
A little tool I developed that lets you watch 10,000 neurons fire in real time - then compare it to how an LLM actually works (LLM link top left). Drop a thought in, and see what happens. One spontaneous, recurrent, alive. The other is matrix multiplication that stops the moment the prompt ends. Quietly one of the best things on the internet? elsom.com @Plinz @tegmark
English
0
0
0
160
Jason Elsom retweetledi
Viktor Oddy
Viktor Oddy@viktoroddy·
Claude Design is insane. ❤️‍🔥Just recorded a 18-min tutorial on how to build animated, award-winning websites with Claude Design + Opus 4.7!
English
334
2.1K
25.6K
3.1M
Jason Elsom
Jason Elsom@JasonElsom·
@davidsenra Bill did say that nothing would come of the Internet, right?
English
0
0
0
238
David Senra
David Senra@davidsenra·
Marc Andreessen on why Starlink may be the most misunderstood success story in tech right now: “Elon’s not the first guy who said we’re going to do satellite-based internet access. There was Bill Gates, Craig McCaw. Complete catastrophe, total bankruptcy, complete disaster. Elon’s like, ‘I know, I’m going to do another three of those. We’re starting as a side project at the rocket ship company.’ If the rockets are reusable, we’re going to be launching them all the time. What’s going to go in the rockets? I could wait for the customers to come to me, or I could just put up my own satellites. Anybody who knew anything about the history of satellites knew that was the craziest idea in the world. And of course it’s like this giant success. It’s the side project. It’s clearly the least studied and understood thing I know of in the world right now.”
English
335
1.7K
16.4K
12M
Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Yes
Dustin@r0ck3t23

Elon Musk thinks the entire education system is built on a broken assumption. That every student should learn the same thing. At the same speed. In the same order. At the same time. Musk: “Everyone goes through from like 5th grade to 6th grade to 7th grade like it’s an assembly line. But people are not objects on an assembly line.” The model was designed for a factory economy. Standardized inputs. Predictable outputs. That economy is gone. The assembly line is gone. But the education system still runs on its logic. A student who masters algebra in two weeks sits through eight more weeks because the calendar says so. A student who struggles gets dragged forward because the schedule doesn’t wait. Neither is being served. Both are being processed. Musk: “Allow people to progress at the fastest pace that they can or are interested in, in each subject.” AI doesn’t teach a classroom. It teaches a student. One at a time. Every time. It skips what a student already knows. It finds where they’re stuck and approaches it from a different angle. It adjusts in real time. Not at the end of a semester when the damage is already done. A student obsessed with basketball learns fractions through shooting percentages. A student who builds in Minecraft learns geometry through architecture. The subject doesn’t change. The entry point does. No teacher with thirty students can do this. Not because they lack skill. Because the math doesn’t work. AI doesn’t have that constraint. Musk: “You do not need to tell your kid to play video games. They will play video games on autopilot all day. So if you can make it interactive and engaging, then you can make education far more compelling.” The brain isn’t broken. The format is. Kids learn complex systems and strategic thinking for hours voluntarily. Then walk into a classroom and can’t focus for twenty minutes. That’s not a discipline problem. That’s a design problem. Musk: “A university education is often unnecessary. You probably learn the vast majority of what you’re going to learn there in the first two years. And most of it is from your classmates.” Four years. Six figures of debt. And the real value comes from the people sitting next to you. Not the institution charging you. The degree doesn’t certify knowledge. It certifies endurance. Musk: “If the goal is to start a company, I would say no point in finishing college.” The system was built to train employees. If you’re not trying to be one, it has nothing left to offer you. Every lecture. Every textbook. Every curriculum. Now available instantly. Personalized to any learner. Adapted to any pace. The question isn’t whether the old model survives. It’s how long we keep forcing students through it while the replacement already exists.

QST
4.2K
14.2K
87.8K
20.3M
Jason Elsom
Jason Elsom@JasonElsom·
@suni_code Just pay for a higher proportion of the value you are using. Pretty much everyone’s riding on various LLM massively subsidising ther service atm and complaining that they are being subsidised less because they can’t keep up with demand at the subsidised rates. 🤷‍♂️
English
0
0
0
203
Jason Elsom retweetledi
Jason Elsom
Jason Elsom@JasonElsom·
Reading won't solve your problems. But then again, neither will housework.
Jason Elsom tweet media
English
1
31
32
0
Jason Elsom
Jason Elsom@JasonElsom·
I hope…
English
0
0
2
563
Jason Elsom retweetledi
Alex Volkov
Alex Volkov@altryne·
"Every software company in the world, needs to have an @openclaw strategy" - Jensen at @NVIDIAAI GTC Framing OpenClaw as one of the most important open source releases ever, they have announced NemoClaw - a reference platform for enterprise grade secure Openclaw, with OpenShell, Network boundaries, security baked in.
English
123
554
3.9K
560.4K
Jason Elsom retweetledi
Jason Elsom
Jason Elsom@JasonElsom·
Valentines @bridgerton by candlelight… delightful!
English
0
1
2
1.2K