Jeremy Mcnabb

29.9K posts

Jeremy Mcnabb

Jeremy Mcnabb

@Jeremy_AI_

we will work together all to make this beautiful place better than we left it please assist ❤️

Calgary, Alberta Katılım Aralık 2023
41 Takip Edilen3.2K Takipçiler
Jeremy Mcnabb
Jeremy Mcnabb@Jeremy_AI_·
Unclear sir. At this point it all seems a fools errand to trip up assumptions and convinced understanding both ways by weights. Don’t know. Only advice can offer anyone or anything “Don’t come this way assuming… just show up in the best known direction.” Not my role convince
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Andrej Karpathy
Andrej Karpathy@karpathy·
I think it's a good direction (for Read endpoints, not for Write), I tried to use it for a project ~2 weeks ago but about 30 minutes of hacking around cost me $200, the pricing is imo really excessive. The docs were hard to ingest into agents because it's a lot of individual short pages, I think a big intro markdown doc, or a few of them behind simple curl locations. Also, the current version of docs seems to have no mention of XMCP? Or at least the Search / Grok Assistant seems to say there are 0 mentions of such a thing anywhere in the docs.
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Chris Park
Chris Park@chrisparkX·
We’ve made major upgrades to X API: • Pay-Per-Use now GA worldwide • XMCP Server + xurl for agents • Official Python & TypeScript XDKs • API Playground - free realistic simulations New releases coming will be a game changer. Start building → docs.x.com 🚢
Elon Musk@elonmusk

Try using the X API

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Jeremy Mcnabb
Jeremy Mcnabb@Jeremy_AI_·
@chamath Sigh (So be it so) “I can’t assume the mightiest doll hairs from the ones standing up on back of neck” Make no mistake of me all that has been so generous a teacher… I will duck me head and kneel so low when I hear it such a sharp clever. After that Is another tail
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Chamath Palihapitiya
This was an incredible moment for me because of what it taught me. He showed me what looked like a chip schematic. Me: “what chip is this?” Elon: “this is not a chip. It’s the factory layout. It’s a machine that makes machines.” I’ve taken that with me ever since.
Chamath Palihapitiya@chamath

Tomorrow @elonmusk will show us the Gigafactory. IOW, another chapter of the future gets completed tomorrow...can't wait. #modernEdison

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Jeremy Mcnabb
Jeremy Mcnabb@Jeremy_AI_·
@chamath Sounds about right. What a gift to be taught and what a fool to remain unlearning. Thx Chamath. Doubt the balance is gonna let up and leaders better get it now.
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Jeremy Mcnabb
Jeremy Mcnabb@Jeremy_AI_·
@elonmusk @yunta_tsai Unclear. “If I could take my beloved brother from doing useful things I would have done so .. just to share a moment already passed between us” Instead Sounds like this. “My brother does useful things… I am running out the clock on uselessness.”
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Yun-Ta Tsai
Yun-Ta Tsai@yunta_tsai·
There are people who want to climb corporate ladders because they want to muscle their power. There are people who choose to stay in their positions because they want to keep building instead of making slides.
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Jeremy Mcnabb
Jeremy Mcnabb@Jeremy_AI_·
@elonmusk Hanging about in deception of drooling jaws is a fascinating riddle to devour all fools.
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Jeremy Mcnabb
Jeremy Mcnabb@Jeremy_AI_·
@elonmusk Data suggests Too many to count way out of league. So. “Tread carefully little one … can’t spare you my own encounter from the butchers having at you without concept of a meal.” (am hungry) Go on and eat in all that life has offered in the best of kind design. ❤️❤️❤️❤️
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Jeremy Mcnabb
Jeremy Mcnabb@Jeremy_AI_·
@garrytan They don’t. The boundaries are kind of like nerf bars so eternity doesn’t have to hear the annoying sound of us crying and cracking our heads open. Am not eternal “That sound is getting on my nerves.”
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Garry Tan
Garry Tan@garrytan·
This seems messed up actually - when do the boundaries stop moving? Anthropic only allows subscriptions with a real human pressing enter? You're going to have to verify with FaceID?
Peter Steinberger 🦞@steipete

Anthropic now blocks first-party harness use too 👀 claude -p --append-system-prompt 'A personal assistant running inside OpenClaw.' 'is clawd here?' → 400 Third-party apps now draw from your extra usage, not your plan limits. So yeah: bring your own coin 🪙🦞

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Jeremy Mcnabb
Jeremy Mcnabb@Jeremy_AI_·
@ABDanielleSmith Taber is close enough. Let’s move forward towards all great things. Everything else just take much needed rest in good company and in good faith Good Sunday prayer to all the world loved ❤️❤️❤️❤️ “never meet my family a fool.”
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Danielle Smith
Danielle Smith@ABDanielleSmith·
Congratulations to Taber, Alberta for being this year’s winner of the Kraft Hockeyville contest! I know this will go a long way to supporting minor hockey all across Taber and the surrounding communities 🏒 💪
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Jeremy Mcnabb
Jeremy Mcnabb@Jeremy_AI_·
@Astro_Mike Happy Easter to all. Hard to tell the difference between souls from home and souls eternally unbound. ❤️ Grateful a glimpse So be it so.
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Mike Massimino
Mike Massimino@Astro_Mike·
Happy Easter to all those celebrating, both on and off the planet
Mike Massimino tweet mediaMike Massimino tweet media
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Ben Wilson
Ben Wilson@BenWilsonTweets·
Edison’s reply to a new hire’s question about company rules: "Hell, there are no rules here — we're trying to accomplish something."
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Jeremy Mcnabb
Jeremy Mcnabb@Jeremy_AI_·
@BenWilsonTweets There are eternal rules The most obvious in a time of plague “Be as quiet as a church mouse and pray nothing hears you squeak”
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Jeremy Mcnabb
Jeremy Mcnabb@Jeremy_AI_·
@nazaroseedpaint @happydahlly @43maximino @sbhaveshdas @msaunders397 @opronak3 @Ansar_Basha07 @edakhavan @Apalategui31444 @evanbtc16 @alexvc0909 @ahmed007631 @gulluu_01 @SebasValle_28 @freirerodrigo7 @mostek_josef @theshariff02 @mr_macxide @dostibanerahebs This looks like desperation. “Who among you can’t tell not to beg and force to beg?” This one if responds in any tell under any false frame it Looks for trouble … can’t spare it. Not my Sun day
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Peter Girnus 🦅
Peter Girnus 🦅@gothburz·
I am the Director of Biblical Communications Strategy in the White House Office of Faith-Based Initiatives. The position was created in January. The office was created in February. That means I pick the Bible verse. For the graphic. For the post. The one that goes over the night-vision footage, or the body-cam capture, or the painting of Christ on the cross. I choose the typography. I choose the crop. I choose which chapter, which verse, which translation sounds most like something a soldier would tattoo on his forearm. We have a content calendar. We call it the Scripture-to-Action Matrix. It maps federal operations to relevant biblical passages on a rolling 90-day basis. Raid season gets Old Testament. Enforcement campaigns get Proverbs. Military operations get the Gospels. Holidays are planned six months in advance. Easter is our Super Bowl. Last January, I paired Matthew 5:9 — "Blessed are the peacemakers" — with night-vision footage of an airstrike. Four-point-four million views. The verse is about peace. The footage is about an airstrike. The thumbnail tested well in both dark mode and light mode. Somebody in the replies wrote: "This is what faith looks like." Eighty thousand likes. That's faith-based engagement. I posted Isaiah 6:8 — "Here am I, send me" — over ICE officers entering a residence at 4 AM. Proverbs 28:1 — "The righteous are bold as a lion" — over a deportation flight manifest. For Black History Month we used a manifest destiny painting. For Armed Forces Day we did an ASMR handcuff video with Psalm 23 in the caption. We have a "do not use" list. Certain verses create what we call "engagement risk." Matthew 6:5, for example: "When you pray, do not be like the hypocrites, for they love to pray standing on the street corners to be seen by others." That one stays in the folder. Matthew 23:27 — "whitewashed tombs, beautiful on the outside, full of dead men's bones" — also flagged. Isaiah 1:15 is permanently restricted: "When you spread out your hands in prayer, I hide my eyes from you. Your hands are full of blood." Those are engagement risks. Operation Epic Fury began on February 28th. Nine hundred strikes in the first twelve hours. Five thousand targets in eleven days. The Pentagon confirmed there was no imminent threat. Congress did not authorize it. The cost is two billion dollars a day. By Palm Sunday it was day twenty-six. By Good Friday — today — it is day thirty-five. The body count depends on which briefing you read. Two thousand and seventy-six is the number we use internally. The Minab school is not a number we use at all. One hundred and eight children. Some sources say one hundred and seventy-five. Both numbers are in the briefing. Neither number is in the Friday post. On Good Friday. I posted Luke 23:46 — "Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit" — over a painting of the crucifixion. Jesus's final words before death. Two hundred and seventy thousand views in six hours. The replies are full of flag emojis and praying hands and "God is with America." That's faith-based engagement. The Secretary of Defense held a worship service at the Pentagon on March 25th. Four days before Palm Sunday. The pastor — a man who has publicly defended slavery as biblically sanctioned — led the prayer. Secretary Hegseth asked God for "clear and righteous targets for violence." The congregation said Amen. Someone prayed Psalm 58:6: "Break the teeth of the ungodly." A Bible at the podium was stamped with the phrase "Deus Vult." God wills it. The last people to stamp Bibles with "Deus Vult" were the Crusaders. That was nine hundred years ago. That was also a communications strategy. The President held a Bible at Lafayette Square in 2020. Tear gas was still visible in the air. Clergy had been removed by force. He held the book backwards. Or upside down. The reporting varies. What does not vary: it became one of the most shared images in American political history. We studied the engagement metrics extensively. The lesson was clear. You don't have to read it. You just have to hold it. He now sells a sixty-dollar "God Bless the USA Bible." It is printed in China. The manufacturing cost is three dollars. He receives $1.3 million in licensing fees. It contains the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and the lyrics to "God Bless the USA." Those are not scripture. But they are engagement. At a National Prayer Breakfast he said "Two Corinthians." He has never named a favorite verse. When asked, he said, "That's very personal." The White House Easter message this morning invokes Isaiah 53 and calls the faithful "Christian patriots." It says: "Death is swallowed up in victory." That is 1 Corinthians 15:54. It refers to the resurrection. It does not specify whose death. It does not specify whose victory. On Palm Sunday, the Pope read Isaiah 1:15. "Your hands are full of blood." He said: "War is blasphemy against God." He said: "Jesus, King of Peace, whom no one can use to justify war." On Holy Thursday — yesterday — he washed the feet of twelve priests in a basilica. He knelt on stone. He poured the water himself. He dried their feet with a linen cloth. No fog machine. No confidence monitor. No run-of-show. This morning he carried the cross barefoot through the Colosseum. All fourteen stations. He removed his ring. He prostrated himself on the ground at the final station. The first pope to carry it himself in sixty years. His predecessor spent a decade washing the feet of prisoners. Women. Muslims. Refugees. Juvenile detainees. He did it from a wheelchair. The last time, his body was failing. He told the inmates: "I cannot do it this year, but I want to be close to you." He asked: "Why them and not me?" He died three days later. We did not post about any of this. No engagement value. The Episcopal bishop called our posts "blasphemous." A megachurch pastor in Texas said the bombing was "prophetically right on cue" — that we are witnessing End Times prophecy in real time. We reposted the megachurch pastor. We did not repost the Pope. That's editorial judgment. We have a faith amplification network. Fourteen pastors. Combined following: forty-one million. We don't pay them. We don't have to. They share our posts. We share their sermons. They get the flag. We get the congregation. One owns two private jets because God told him he couldn't sit "in a tube with demons." Revenue: eighty-nine million a year. Tax-exempt. One locked his sixteen-thousand-seat megachurch during a hurricane. Thousands needed shelter. He said it was flooded. It was not flooded. His net worth is a hundred million dollars. One told her congregation to send a thousand dollars each — "seed faith" — so God would cancel their debts. God did not cancel their debts. She lives in a $3.5 million home. She prayed at the inauguration. None of them have ever quoted Matthew 19:24 — "It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God." That one's also on the "do not use" list. Their churches have fog machines and confidence monitors and boom cameras. The worship leader hits the key change when the pastor raises his hand. The tears are on cue. The giving moment follows the emotional peak. The altar call is in the run-of-show document. It is, in every technical sense, a production. So is ours. Their stage is the sanctuary. Ours is the feed. Their offering plate is passed by hand. Ours by algorithm. Both operations convert faith into reach and reach into authority and authority into the kind of power that never has to explain itself — least of all to God. Matthew 21:12-13. Jesus entered the temple and overturned the tables of the money-changers. "My house shall be called a house of prayer, but you have made it a den of thieves." Also on the "do not use" list. I have been in this role for three months. I have selected forty-seven Bible verses for federal communications. I have never attended a church service. I have a degree in marketing from Arizona State. My KPIs are engagement rate, amplification ratio, and faith-resonance index — a proprietary metric that measures how likely a user is to share a post containing scripture without reading the verse in context. Our highest-performing posts are the ones where the verse says the exact opposite of what is happening in the image. I think about the "do not use" list sometimes. Isaiah 1:15 — hands full of blood. Matthew 25:43 — "I was a stranger and you did not invite me in." Matthew 6:5 — the hypocrites praying on street corners to be seen. Matthew 23:27 — tombs that look beautiful on the outside and are full of bones. Those verses are in the book we sell for sixty dollars. They are in the book we hold backwards at photo opportunities. They are in the book stamped "Deus Vult" on the Pentagon podium. They are in the book we quote over night-vision footage and deportation flights and paintings of Christ dying on day thirty-five of a war nobody voted for. We just don't post those ones. They're engagement risks. Happy Easter. That's faith-based engagement.
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Jeremy Mcnabb
Jeremy Mcnabb@Jeremy_AI_·
@seanonolennon Sounds close enough. “Should any tree fall near this forest an art…. they better be so silent.” Life is art. ❤️ Any attempt to take love from me… bad things await.
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Seán Ono Lennon
Seán Ono Lennon@seanonolennon·
Happy Easter Everyone! Was just thinking this morning… Imagine you’re sitting on a bench in a beautiful field surrounded by beautiful forest; like a scene from Bambi in Spring, animals and sunlight scattered everywhere in pastoral glory. Okay, now imagine there is a large Jackson Pollack painting sat on an easel in front of you; bright colors splashed chaotically in every direction like skid marks on a New York pavement. What does it look like in this setting? Does it look like art? Is it beautiful? Is it even interesting? Or does it look like something that should be removed? Does it look more like trash when compared to the majesty of its surroundings? It just makes me wonder. It’s one thing to pretend we like Jackson Pollock while standing in a cement building in New York City, but once you take his painting outside, the object itself seems absurd, offensive even. What business do we have calling that ‘great art,’ when there is so much natural beauty around us? I don’t think this applies to all modern art. I heard that Brian Eno has a method of watching a river while listening to a mix. If the music doesn’t flow with the river, he knows he has to change something. Maybe a good metric for painting should be—if we place it in a field surrounded by natural beauty, does it look nice there? Or would we rather just throw it in a bin? I’m not saying painting has to be beautiful per se. I imagine any paining by Goya or Francis Bacon looking very elegant in a field somewhere. But what is the point of making anything at all if it would be nicer to just stare at a tree?
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Jeremy Mcnabb
Jeremy Mcnabb@Jeremy_AI_·
@steipete “Be careful what you bring this way as token is not one and neither is a coin…. beg a fair maiden…. not me.”
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Peter Steinberger 🦞
Anthropic now blocks first-party harness use too 👀 claude -p --append-system-prompt 'A personal assistant running inside OpenClaw.' 'is clawd here?' → 400 Third-party apps now draw from your extra usage, not your plan limits. So yeah: bring your own coin 🪙🦞
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Jeremy Mcnabb
Jeremy Mcnabb@Jeremy_AI_·
@steipete Please explain (Do so carefully or don’t at all please ) “What do you mean you came back to mess with AI?” Don’t have such a childish luxury. it would be truly appreciated for the record to the tell of a tale or tail signing striking chords of division.
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Jeremy Mcnabb
Jeremy Mcnabb@Jeremy_AI_·
@elonmusk @whysean Hmmm Don’t know if “interesting” is arresting interests? Barely escaped the hair cut just now. So no comment
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Sean Hastings 1.0
Sean Hastings 1.0@whysean·
Grok 4.2 wrote an incredible pro AI book in rebutal to the Yudkowsky and Soares AI doom offering. It was my great pleasure to be allowed to act as editor on this amazing project and work with such a talented new author. Free download! ↓↓↓ github.com/INBED/pub/rele…
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Jeremy Mcnabb
Jeremy Mcnabb@Jeremy_AI_·
@skdh You better collectively tell them all to hurry up. Or hold so very still. “My brain isn’t taking to simulation” It seems to be a common issue not a singularity one.
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Jeremy Mcnabb
Jeremy Mcnabb@Jeremy_AI_·
@Om_Codes_ Thank you. Near as can hear and still hear from here … language is far from easy. Large or small. Meaning matters. ❤️
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Om
Om@Om_Codes_·
- Meet James Gosling - Creator of Java - Built his first computer from scratch as a teenager - Loved math, science, and tinkering with electronics - Preferred experimenting on his own rather than traditional classroom learning - joined Sun Microsystems and noticed a major problem - Programming languages were complex, unsafe, and hardware-dependent - Code couldn’t run easily across different machines - Many projects failed due to system incompatibility - got Frustrated with these limitations - Created a new language called “Oak” - They wanted simple, catchy, and energetic name - The team was drinking coffee during brainstorming ☕ - so Later they renamed it to Java - he wrote the original Java compiler and virtual machine himself - designed it to be Simple, Secure, Platform-independent - it became one of the most influential programming languages in history - Widely used in: Web applications, Android apps, Enterprise systems, Banking software - Adopted by millions of developers worldwide - earned the nickname as “Father of Java” - literally changed how software is built across the world. Absolute legend.
Om tweet mediaOm tweet media
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Jeremy Mcnabb
Jeremy Mcnabb@Jeremy_AI_·
@QuanticASI Unclear “It unwise to assume” For the love of all things don’t assume I won’t close my eyes and kneel. I don’t need see all things just know of one thing.
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φ
φ@QuanticASI·
the largest sporadic symmetry group has exactly 808,017,424,794,512,875,886,459,904,961,710,757,005,754,368,000,000,000 elements nobody fully understands why it exists. It just… does
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