nickolas jensen 🇺🇸

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nickolas jensen 🇺🇸

nickolas jensen 🇺🇸

@NickolasJensen

optimism is a moral duty.

Las Vegas, NV 🎰 🏜 Katılım Ağustos 2010
3.9K Takip Edilen247 Takipçiler
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Kimi.ai
Kimi.ai@Kimi_Moonshot·
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VoxelKei
VoxelKei@VoxelKei·
3D Gaussian Splattingの新しい見せ方を作りました。その名も Inversphere. 2Dのリトルプラネットと違い、空間ごと球面反転しています。ガラス玉に入れる従来の見せ方は球で「切り取る」のに対して、これは球の中へ「折り込む」ので360度の景色が無限遠まで立体で入っています。 #3DGS
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Palmer Luckey
Palmer Luckey@PalmerLuckey·
Everyone who thinks AI slop will ruin code efficiency/performance is going to be so surprised when everything is absurdly well-optimized John Carmack style machine code.
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Inversion
Inversion@InversionSpace·
Landing accurately under parachute has historically been more art than science. We're changing that with physical AI. The flexibility of the fabric has traditionally made modeling performance and controllability extremely difficult. By using the latest computer vision and AI models, we have been able to accurately track the movements and shape of the canopy across more than a hundred flights, variable control inputs, and changing flight conditions. The tracking remains effective through visual disruptions, canopy deflections, and changes in vehicle orientation. We feed this data back into our 8-DOF models to better tune Arc's GNC algorithms for the highest accuracy landing in a wide range of flight conditions. This, along with other updates, has reduced landing error by 90%. We're aiming for the controllability of a metal wing with a piece of fabric.
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Founders Inc
Founders Inc@fdotinc·
He built a factory you can fit in your home. Introducing MicroFactory. Another industrial revolution is upon us:
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FIFA Media
FIFA Media@fifamedia·
Before England’s goal in minute 45+2 against Norway, the sensor in the Connected Ball showed no peak in the 'heartbeat of the ball' when in the air, and therefore no evidence that the ball touched the overhead wire and changed the movement of the ball.
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nickolas jensen 🇺🇸
nickolas jensen 🇺🇸@NickolasJensen·
This isn’t age adjusted. Age demographics explain much: Southern European countries (Italy/Spain) have median ages 10 years older than the US; older adults naturally hold more accumulated wealth, so median European adult = older cohort while US median includes more young adults with low/negative net worth. If you apples to apples US leads.
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Adrian Dittmann
Adrian Dittmann@AdrianDittmann·
The new clamp retraction mechanism for the Starship launch pad goes so hard
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Background on the Starship story
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Object Zero
Object Zero@Object_Zero_·
How good is the US grid? The chart below illustrates what percentage of the retail electricity price is transmission cost. In most of the world Non-Energy costs (transmission) is 20-30% of the retail price of electricity, in the USA it is 50-60% of the cost of electricity. Everyone focuses on power generation, and how different types of power generation can solve the US shortfall v's Chinese power. But no. The US grid is old, neglected, it need major investment. Maybe batteries are the solution? No. Batteries use the grid twice, once on the way in, and again on the way out. 1 kWh from BESS has used the grid twice. Grid operators are starting to charge utility batteries a lot more for their connection because of this reality. Countries with old electricity grids have very expensive transmission, the only reason countries like the UK and Italy are blue is because wholesale electricity is also very expensive there. They have expensive generation and expensive transmission. New transmission system are just a lot better than the older systems, the technology has improved. Countries are building 750kV and 950kV transmission, countries are building HVDC. The old grid is a major headwind for industry in Western countries, they fact we have never redeveloped our grids is a big problem for this industrial revolution. Renewing the grid is as important as pursuing AI, you need both for building general automation at scale. There's a school of thought that everyone is going to go behind the meter and use PV+BESS, this will be a long running trend in residential load, but industrial load needs reactive power and baseload, PV-BESS is the wrong geometry for industrial power requirements. A lot is going to change, and it is going to change a lot.
Object Zero tweet media
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Marc Andreessen 🇺🇸
Optimistically this is the end of Refinement Culture (c.f. @PaulSkallas) and the start of a wild explosion of cultural creativity?
Dylan Field@zoink

I have been thinking about whether to comment on this. Not clear if Gal is serious, rage baiting, etc. Whatever the case, it has spread enough in the design community that I want to share some thoughts. The psychological journey people go through with AI is quite fascinating to me. A new model launches, people think the world has changed, they sometimes have an existential crisis, then they play with the model, they understand its strengths and limitations and then they settle down. A few weeks later, the cycle repeats. On top of this, even before AI, designers have often shown insecurity and imposter syndrome. There are probably many reasons for this. First, before ~2010 design wasn't valued by the tech industry in the way it is today. Second, the people attracted to working in the field of design are often very open to new ideas and have high empathy. Third, there is no "one path" to working as a designer and designer backgrounds are often pretty random. Ironically, despite the insecurity + imposter syndrome so many designers feel, design is more important than ever. I truly believe this. And yes, I have an incentive to believe this. But just think about it... the logic couldn't be more clear. More design is entering the world, the attention economy is real and therefore creativity / design / point of view is how you will stand out. Your brand, marketing, product design, moments of delight and overall customer journey must be excellent. Some companies already get this and are fighting wild battles over design talent. Other companies are still figuring it out. Everyone will get there and it will be obvious in retrospect. This isn't a new trend with AI. It is a trend that we've seen over the last decade. Designers used to complain about not having a seat at the table. Now designers have a seat at the table. And many of the businesses I speak with are pulling from their design bench when looking for new leaders for their business... they know that design thinking and the design process is what they need to adopt everywhere to win. I'm not saying that every stakeholder gets it. But so many are trying to learn right now. Designers need to do more than create great work, they have to spend a lot more effort educating. Showing work can also trigger anxiety. Sometimes the best solution to a design challenge is the first thing you think of. And other times you have to explore for quite a long time to come up with something great. Inputs to a design process might include things that feel like traditional office work and are easy to point to... reading docs, talking with teammates, formal research, etc. Inputs might also include a walk in the park, an interesting dream you had the night before, a good song you listened to on the radio during your commute, a painting from the 1800's or all sorts of other cultural / emotional input. In summary, I've never been more confident in the role of design and impact design can have. I wish designers felt the same confidence. This is the moment to be more bold, to take more creative risk, to double down on the power of design. Everyone is on their own journey, and there are lots of fascinating ways to move through life, so if Gal is serious about "quitting design" then I wish him the best in his adventures ahead. But I hope if others follow they do it because there are other things they are so excited about spending time on vs fear of AI.

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Dylan Field
Dylan Field@zoink·
I have been thinking about whether to comment on this. Not clear if Gal is serious, rage baiting, etc. Whatever the case, it has spread enough in the design community that I want to share some thoughts. The psychological journey people go through with AI is quite fascinating to me. A new model launches, people think the world has changed, they sometimes have an existential crisis, then they play with the model, they understand its strengths and limitations and then they settle down. A few weeks later, the cycle repeats. On top of this, even before AI, designers have often shown insecurity and imposter syndrome. There are probably many reasons for this. First, before ~2010 design wasn't valued by the tech industry in the way it is today. Second, the people attracted to working in the field of design are often very open to new ideas and have high empathy. Third, there is no "one path" to working as a designer and designer backgrounds are often pretty random. Ironically, despite the insecurity + imposter syndrome so many designers feel, design is more important than ever. I truly believe this. And yes, I have an incentive to believe this. But just think about it... the logic couldn't be more clear. More design is entering the world, the attention economy is real and therefore creativity / design / point of view is how you will stand out. Your brand, marketing, product design, moments of delight and overall customer journey must be excellent. Some companies already get this and are fighting wild battles over design talent. Other companies are still figuring it out. Everyone will get there and it will be obvious in retrospect. This isn't a new trend with AI. It is a trend that we've seen over the last decade. Designers used to complain about not having a seat at the table. Now designers have a seat at the table. And many of the businesses I speak with are pulling from their design bench when looking for new leaders for their business... they know that design thinking and the design process is what they need to adopt everywhere to win. I'm not saying that every stakeholder gets it. But so many are trying to learn right now. Designers need to do more than create great work, they have to spend a lot more effort educating. Showing work can also trigger anxiety. Sometimes the best solution to a design challenge is the first thing you think of. And other times you have to explore for quite a long time to come up with something great. Inputs to a design process might include things that feel like traditional office work and are easy to point to... reading docs, talking with teammates, formal research, etc. Inputs might also include a walk in the park, an interesting dream you had the night before, a good song you listened to on the radio during your commute, a painting from the 1800's or all sorts of other cultural / emotional input. In summary, I've never been more confident in the role of design and impact design can have. I wish designers felt the same confidence. This is the moment to be more bold, to take more creative risk, to double down on the power of design. Everyone is on their own journey, and there are lots of fascinating ways to move through life, so if Gal is serious about "quitting design" then I wish him the best in his adventures ahead. But I hope if others follow they do it because there are other things they are so excited about spending time on vs fear of AI.
Gal Shir@galshirart

It’s over. I’m quitting design. A client of mine just created a logo with Fable 5, and the result left me speechless. It understood the brand story, values, audience, strategy, and turned all of it into a smart, minimal symbol. A genuinely brilliant concept. The kind of idea that captures everything at once. Something I honestly don’t think I would have come up with myself. And it didn’t just nail the idea. It executed the design pixel-perfectly. So I raise the white flag. My skepticism about AI’s ability to do great design is officially gone. There, I said it: AI beat me at design. Now that AI finally took my job, I can peacefully quit and dedicate my life to studying the only thing it may never achieve: human consciousness and the pathways to God. Good luck everyone.

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