Linxiang Zhao

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Linxiang Zhao

Linxiang Zhao

@Nat87a

AI researcher | PhD student | BTC Hodler

Katılım Ağustos 2024
39 Takip Edilen38 Takipçiler
Linxiang Zhao retweetledi
Jukan
Jukan@jukan05·
HUAWEI SAYS IT HAS COME UP WITH A NEW PATHWAY TO SHORTEN ITS GAP WITH INDUSTRY LEADER TSMC, POTENTIALLY ACHIEVING A BREAKTHROUGH IN MAKING ADVANCED SEMICONDUCTORS WITHOUT CUTTING-EDGE EQUIPMENT (PEOPLE’S DAILY) HUAWEI: THE KIRIN SMARTPHONE CHIP TO BE LAUNCHED THIS FALL WILL SEE A SIGNIFICANT PERFORMANCE IMPROVEMENT. (PEOPLE’S DAILY)
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Linxiang Zhao
Linxiang Zhao@Nat87a·
@Areskapitalon 法德这些国家会被迫极限紧缩可不一定,也有可能欧盟接管财政权力后对欧元区各国按比例进行QE,然后各国一起吃闲饭😇
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Aelia Capitolina
Aelia Capitolina@Areskapitalon·
来一次十倍强度的主权债务危机,看看是否还由奢入俭难。尤其是如果这一次,法德成为那个被救助方,由欧盟接管财政权力,进行债务重组,而之前在欧债危机中被清算过的希腊等国成为了卡它们脖子的审查方的话……事情就有意思了。 好处是欧元的信用和币值能够被保障,欧盟发行的主权债务也会继续具有信用,因为欧盟这种充满摩擦力的制度降低了不负责任的决定的可能。但另一方面的作用就是,法德这些国家会被迫极限紧缩,政府部门大量失业,低竞争力企业大量破产,福利和社会保障体系崩溃到只能勉强维生的水平。之前年轻人毕业就进的各种吃闲饭的企业和部门全部都会纷纷倒台。经济可能会遭受一次二战级别的重置。 但是,不经历这些,旧的利益和观念不可能彻底出清。表演式的道德必须经过危机,才能进化成真正具有实用价值的,有意义的道德。
@Zen_of_Nemesis

@Areskapitalon @diamondrapids 由奢入俭难,很多面子工程,欧洲终归是放不下的 依赖心态比任何实际上的依赖关系更难扭转 正如翻gfw易,翻心中墙难

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Linxiang Zhao retweetledi
Robert Kiyosaki
Robert Kiyosaki@theRealKiyosaki·
WORSE THAN WAR in IRAN Death of the US Dollar? Iran began accepting payment for oil in Chinese Yuan. What does that mean to you and your future and the future of the US dollar? I strongly encourage you to invest about and hour in your financial education. I strongly suggest you tune into Ray Dalio’s podcast “Iran just killed the petro dollar.” This is the biggest news in world financial history and no one is explaing it save for Ray Dalio. Ray keeps it simple and offers concrete actions almost anyone can take to not become a victim of this massive change and crisis in money. Please do not hesitate to tune into the wisdom Ray Dalio offers, wisdom very few will tune into. Remember your best investment is your investment into your financial education….education our schools will never cover. Take care.
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molson 🧠⚙️
molson 🧠⚙️@Molson_Hart·
We’d be better off if the rich, instead of giving their kids a trust fund to navigate a difficult and treacherous world, allocated that money towards making the world better for them. There’s a rich kid getting $100 mm in Los Angeles this year. Could that money be used to make the city less dysfunctional instead? Maybe I’m being naive about how entrenched the problems in our government are, but it seems to me that experienced business builders combined with large amounts of money and friends and perhaps a willingness to fail could make changes, at least, at the local level.
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Teortaxes▶️ (DeepSeek 推特🐋铁粉 2023 – ∞)
The real issue is that many opportunities ONLY exist in the US (now also in China, but you can't become Chinese). OpenAI luminaries are half Polish, could they have built OpenAI in Poland? Ha. The world has basically surrendered to being the womb for the Eagle Empire.
Matt Parrott@MatthewParrott

It's really gross to imagine that America's mission and role in the world is to suck up all of the hope and talent in the world like some cosmic vampire. It's ghoulish, depressing, and *cough* ... not who we are.

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Sadly life respecter
Sadly life respecter@Sadlylifes41u·
@jeremybernier This 100% happens at Waymo. I was never excluded at lunch, but my boss speaks to my colleagues in Chinese all the time, and everyone just keeps conversing to each other in Chinese except meetings. It’s completely retarded. There is no TEAMWORK!
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Jeremy Bernier
Jeremy Bernier@jeremybernier·
At Meta, 90% of my coworkers were Chinese, and non-Chinese were routinely excluded, disadvantaged, and targeted for layoffs. 6 out of the 7 layoffs I observed targeted non-Chinese despite non-Chinese being the vast minority. Certain orgs like ads and MRS are notorious for being Chinese dominated. I think Americans would be outraged if they knew that their own citizens were getting marginalized and laid off at their own companies, while Chinese promote themselves up, conquer entire orgs, and reap millions. Imagine if Huawei in Shenzhen had entire orgs and leadership chains completely dominated by Japanese people who brazenly spoke Japanese at work without a care in the world that their Chinese coworkers don't understand, imposed their own work culture without respecting Chinese culture, excluded the Chinese, and laid off Chinese people while promoting their own. I imagine Chinese citizens would be outraged, and never allow that to happen in the first place. The most blatant and obvious way that non-Chinese are excluded is that Chinese primarily speak Mandarin at work. I'm not talking about one-off conversations, I'm talking about every single conversation. Loudly and brazenly with no respect for others. 10+ teammates and leaders having a group conversation in Mandarin while the 2 non-Chinese don't understand and feel excluded from the team. Although everyone at least has the decency to speak English during formal meetings with a non-speaker present, it was common that right after the meeting ended everyone would immediately switch to Mandarin. Funny I'm in Korea right now and was just on a double date with 3 other Koreans, and I was shocked that when the conversation would split into two, the other couple would speak to each other in English in my presence just out of respect. A Korean couple on a double-date had the courtesy to speak to each other in English in front of me even though I'd never expect that from them, but my Chinese coworkers did not. Lunch was another place where non-Chinese were blatantly excluded. Recall that the team I joined was an all Chinese team with only one other non-Chinese person. The Chinese would always get lunch together and never invite us (except for one of them who occasionally would, though at some point stopped). Me and the non-Chinese person would invite them, they'd always refuse, and then shortly after they'd disappear and get lunch together. As a result, it was usually just the two of us getting lunch. (caveat, some of the newer Chinese who joined afterwards also experienced similar treatment. So it's moreso a clique thing than a Chinese vs. non-Chinese thing, though 100% of the clique was Chinese) On Wednesdays and Fridays I'd often be the only non-Chinese person on my team in the office, and they'd all get lunch together without inviting me. It was depressing, and made me not want to come into the office on those days. One team dinner we went to a Korean BBQ. I arrived with a non-Chinese coworker and the first table was full, so we sat at one end of the next empty table. Shortly after one of the Tech Leads walked in, and sat at the complete opposite end of our table, alone and not in talking distance to anyone. We invited her over, and she declined. Later another Tech Lead came in and sat across from her. Non-Chinese and Chinese at opposite ends of a long table at a team dinner, and they refused to sit with us. Eventually more people came and the TLs joined our side because I guess maybe it was too obviously anti-social, and they spent the entire dinner speaking speaking Chinese to each other. These were our tech leads. I could not understand how Meta could have "Tech Leads" that so blatantly excluded teammates. I thought Tech Leads were supposed to uplift the team, and that Meta would hold tech leads to a higher standard. Now someone might say that it's just lunch or a one-off team dinner, who cares? To that I vehemently disagree. Lunch is extremely important for team bonding, and so much information is transferred through informal socializing. I'm not saying that everyone needs to get lunch together everyday, but if a minority of people are excluded from getting lunch with the rest of the team, and especially the most tenured and senior employees, then naturally that minority is going to feel alienated, disadvantaged, and excluded from opportunities. And the very fact that they're excluded from lunch is reflective of being excluded in general. When 90% of an org and the entire leadership chain is dominated by one ethnicity, naturally their work culture is going to spill through. Chinese culture is completely different from American work culture, and learning to navigate that was a huge obstacle for me. For example I'm the type that tends to question everything and isn't afraid to challenge a "superior", but I quickly realized that my TL seemed to take offense to that, and would punish/retaliate me for it. I want to make it clear - I have nothing against Chinese people. Most of them are very kind (strong correlation between kindness and not engaging in the kind of exclusionary behavior I mentioned above), and I have many good friends who are Chinese. I get that some barely speak English (though I question how they got hired). I do genuinely believe that most are good people, and not deliberately trying to exclude others. But regardless of intent, the result is that non-Chinese get excluded. The fact that 6 of the 7 layoffs I observed were not Chinese in a 80-90% Chinese dominated org is testament to this. The fact that 90% Chinese dominated orgs even exist in the first place is testament to this. I might not even be posting about this given the sensitivity of the topic if not for the fact that I've seen and/or heard stories of some very toxic people who I do not believe would otherwise survive if not for their ability to exclude others, throwing others under the bus for the next layoff. The same people do this over and over again, and get away with it because they're part of the "clique" that essentially has immunity. I think the company needs to take this more seriously. Some ideas would be enforcing English at the office (I've heard of other teams that do this), raising leaders to a higher bar when it comes to team inclusivity (eg. under the "People" axis), investigating potential discrimination cases (eg. layoffs and/or mistreatment disproportionally affecting certain groups) and having a zero tolerance policy around that, having a zero tolerance policy around injustice in general (eg. lying or deliberately throwing somebody under the bus), ensuring more diverse teams, etc. But to be honest, I don't have faith that much would change so long as the entire leadership chain up to the VP level is dominated by the same ethnicity, language, and culture. Nor does it seem that leadership even remotely cares given that this has been happening in the HQ for probably at least the last decade, and is obvious to anyone who's stepped foot in the office.
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Linxiang Zhao
Linxiang Zhao@Nat87a·
😂😂😂
Jeremy Bernier@jeremybernier

At Meta, 90% of my coworkers were Chinese, and non-Chinese were routinely excluded, disadvantaged, and targeted for layoffs. 6 out of the 7 layoffs I observed targeted non-Chinese despite non-Chinese being the vast minority. Certain orgs like ads and MRS are notorious for being Chinese dominated. I think Americans would be outraged if they knew that their own citizens were getting marginalized and laid off at their own companies, while Chinese promote themselves up, conquer entire orgs, and reap millions. Imagine if Huawei in Shenzhen had entire orgs and leadership chains completely dominated by Japanese people who brazenly spoke Japanese at work without a care in the world that their Chinese coworkers don't understand, imposed their own work culture without respecting Chinese culture, excluded the Chinese, and laid off Chinese people while promoting their own. I imagine Chinese citizens would be outraged, and never allow that to happen in the first place. The most blatant and obvious way that non-Chinese are excluded is that Chinese primarily speak Mandarin at work. I'm not talking about one-off conversations, I'm talking about every single conversation. Loudly and brazenly with no respect for others. 10+ teammates and leaders having a group conversation in Mandarin while the 2 non-Chinese don't understand and feel excluded from the team. Although everyone at least has the decency to speak English during formal meetings with a non-speaker present, it was common that right after the meeting ended everyone would immediately switch to Mandarin. Funny I'm in Korea right now and was just on a double date with 3 other Koreans, and I was shocked that when the conversation would split into two, the other couple would speak to each other in English in my presence just out of respect. A Korean couple on a double-date had the courtesy to speak to each other in English in front of me even though I'd never expect that from them, but my Chinese coworkers did not. Lunch was another place where non-Chinese were blatantly excluded. Recall that the team I joined was an all Chinese team with only one other non-Chinese person. The Chinese would always get lunch together and never invite us (except for one of them who occasionally would, though at some point stopped). Me and the non-Chinese person would invite them, they'd always refuse, and then shortly after they'd disappear and get lunch together. As a result, it was usually just the two of us getting lunch. (caveat, some of the newer Chinese who joined afterwards also experienced similar treatment. So it's moreso a clique thing than a Chinese vs. non-Chinese thing, though 100% of the clique was Chinese) On Wednesdays and Fridays I'd often be the only non-Chinese person on my team in the office, and they'd all get lunch together without inviting me. It was depressing, and made me not want to come into the office on those days. One team dinner we went to a Korean BBQ. I arrived with a non-Chinese coworker and the first table was full, so we sat at one end of the next empty table. Shortly after one of the Tech Leads walked in, and sat at the complete opposite end of our table, alone and not in talking distance to anyone. We invited her over, and she declined. Later another Tech Lead came in and sat across from her. Non-Chinese and Chinese at opposite ends of a long table at a team dinner, and they refused to sit with us. Eventually more people came and the TLs joined our side because I guess maybe it was too obviously anti-social, and they spent the entire dinner speaking speaking Chinese to each other. These were our tech leads. I could not understand how Meta could have "Tech Leads" that so blatantly excluded teammates. I thought Tech Leads were supposed to uplift the team, and that Meta would hold tech leads to a higher standard. Now someone might say that it's just lunch or a one-off team dinner, who cares? To that I vehemently disagree. Lunch is extremely important for team bonding, and so much information is transferred through informal socializing. I'm not saying that everyone needs to get lunch together everyday, but if a minority of people are excluded from getting lunch with the rest of the team, and especially the most tenured and senior employees, then naturally that minority is going to feel alienated, disadvantaged, and excluded from opportunities. And the very fact that they're excluded from lunch is reflective of being excluded in general. When 90% of an org and the entire leadership chain is dominated by one ethnicity, naturally their work culture is going to spill through. Chinese culture is completely different from American work culture, and learning to navigate that was a huge obstacle for me. For example I'm the type that tends to question everything and isn't afraid to challenge a "superior", but I quickly realized that my TL seemed to take offense to that, and would punish/retaliate me for it. I want to make it clear - I have nothing against Chinese people. Most of them are very kind (strong correlation between kindness and not engaging in the kind of exclusionary behavior I mentioned above), and I have many good friends who are Chinese. I get that some barely speak English (though I question how they got hired). I do genuinely believe that most are good people, and not deliberately trying to exclude others. But regardless of intent, the result is that non-Chinese get excluded. The fact that 6 of the 7 layoffs I observed were not Chinese in a 80-90% Chinese dominated org is testament to this. The fact that 90% Chinese dominated orgs even exist in the first place is testament to this. I might not even be posting about this given the sensitivity of the topic if not for the fact that I've seen and/or heard stories of some very toxic people who I do not believe would otherwise survive if not for their ability to exclude others, throwing others under the bus for the next layoff. The same people do this over and over again, and get away with it because they're part of the "clique" that essentially has immunity. I think the company needs to take this more seriously. Some ideas would be enforcing English at the office (I've heard of other teams that do this), raising leaders to a higher bar when it comes to team inclusivity (eg. under the "People" axis), investigating potential discrimination cases (eg. layoffs and/or mistreatment disproportionally affecting certain groups) and having a zero tolerance policy around that, having a zero tolerance policy around injustice in general (eg. lying or deliberately throwing somebody under the bus), ensuring more diverse teams, etc. But to be honest, I don't have faith that much would change so long as the entire leadership chain up to the VP level is dominated by the same ethnicity, language, and culture. Nor does it seem that leadership even remotely cares given that this has been happening in the HQ for probably at least the last decade, and is obvious to anyone who's stepped foot in the office.

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Teortaxes▶️ (DeepSeek 推特🐋铁粉 2023 – ∞)
people cope about evil trade practices, debt, chyna collapse and whatnot. To me this looks like a very simple, very dreary picture of a nation that's increasingly impossible to compete with. Maybe this is their last imports surge. wypipos should know; they were in this seat once.
Teortaxes▶️ (DeepSeek 推特🐋铁粉 2023 – ∞) tweet media
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Linxiang Zhao retweetledi
OpenAI Developers
OpenAI Developers@OpenAIDevs·
🥅 /goal has graduated from an experiment—for tasks big and small, Codex gets your work done. Use goal mode in the Codex app, IDE Extension, or CLI to give Codex a specific milestone, and it will keep working until it gets there, even across hours or days. You can check in and steer, and even pause Codex along the way. Pro tip: start side chats to understand the work that has been done so far without having to interrupt the main task. #goal-mode" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">developers.openai.com/codex/promptin…
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Linxiang Zhao retweetledi
Teortaxes▶️ (DeepSeek 推特🐋铁粉 2023 – ∞)
Very neat that this tool finally got made And you can see the reason behind DeepSeek cache token economics.
Teortaxes▶️ (DeepSeek 推特🐋铁粉 2023 – ∞) tweet mediaTeortaxes▶️ (DeepSeek 推特🐋铁粉 2023 – ∞) tweet media
KVCache.AI@KVCache_AI

🚀 We just launched the open-source KV Cache Size Calculator by KVCache.ai! Calculate KV cache size for mainstream LLMs with flexible precision settings and detailed breakdowns. Supports DeepSeek, GLM, Kimi, Qwen3 and MiniMax. Try it now: kvcache.ai/tools/kv-cache…

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Linxiang Zhao
Linxiang Zhao@Nat87a·
确实
紫云@dviolettchan

@puppetsasya 而且你搞一些开发项目,你的credit是留在公司的,你没有建立你的个人品牌。 相比之下,你写的文章再怎么贬值,也都是跟你一辈子的。

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Linxiang Zhao retweetledi
Bryan Johnson
Bryan Johnson@bryan_johnson·
How to avoid tons of life problems: go to bed on time.
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Linxiang Zhao retweetledi
灰灰
灰灰@Duduook·
Mentor不在的2天 爽了
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