Richard Carlucci

7.5K posts

Richard Carlucci

Richard Carlucci

@RCarlucci1983

Phoenix, AZ Katılım Eylül 2012
588 Takip Edilen288 Takipçiler
Richard Carlucci
Richard Carlucci@RCarlucci1983·
@CstmrDisservice @MattGlassman312 Great idea. Everyone who owns 1 share of Apple now gets sued by Google and has to pay their pro rata share of any judgement. Brilliant. Nevermind that we deliberately invented corporations to avoid this exact situation, and it gave us the industrial revolution.
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Matt Glassman
Matt Glassman@MattGlassman312·
"Corporations aren't people" sounds simple and reasonable until you go one step past stuff like campaign funding and consider things like whether the Washington Post has 1st and 4th amendment rights.
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Richard Carlucci
Richard Carlucci@RCarlucci1983·
@lukas_m_ziegler I suspect this is where the real limits of LLM training data expose themselves (and why predictions about imminent robopcalypse and a trillion humanoids by 2030 or whatever are not realistic). Eventually, but only after much suffering.
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Lukas Ziegler
Lukas Ziegler@lukas_m_ziegler·
Anthropic published about robotics. So let's check it. tl;dr version for the busiest human beings: → Robot control matters more than the model: same LLM scores wildly differently depending on interface, raw torque control mostly fails; supervising a pretrained policy actually works. → Direct joint/motor control is still bad across all models, but improving fastest at the higher-abstraction interfaces (code, RL, policy supervision), not at the raw torque level. → With a pretrained gait policy, models can navigate simple real/simulated environments; they still fail at tasks needing spatial memory, self-localization, or long open-loop plans. → Manipulation success (grasp-and-place) under direct control is rare: 0–5.5% task completion, even for the best models. → Pairing a model with a pretrained VLA (vision-language-action policy) massively boosts manipulation success versus direct control, but the combo still underperforms the VLA running alone. → Newer Claude models are better VLA supervisors: they defer less indiscriminately, catch bad proposed actions more often, and recover most (not all) of the VLA's standalone performance. → Extra "reasoning"/thinking budget barely helps robotics tasks and sometimes hurts, capability gains come from better vision and adaptive strategy, not more deliberation. → Simple tools beat fancy ones: a text compass (heading in degrees) or a cursor/crosshair tool helped every model; depth maps and segmentation overlays were mostly neutral or unhelpful. Link to full article: Linking the article here: anthropic.com/research/claud… ~~ ♻️ Join the weekly robotics newsletter, and never miss any news → ziegler.substack.com
Lukas Ziegler tweet media
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Richard Carlucci
Richard Carlucci@RCarlucci1983·
@ChefGruel I'm sure it has nothing to do with massive supply chain disruptions in the basic ingredients for normal industrial fertilizer...
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Chef Andrew Gruel
Chef Andrew Gruel@ChefGruel·
As I’ve said already, I don’t think it’s specific to a restaurant but a supply chain. Even if Taco Bell is one outlet, there are others. And my bet is still on lettuce. BUT why isn’t anyone asking why there is human poop in the soil of farms. This can ONLY come from human feces that’s been festering in soil. Cyclospora outbreaks originate from human fecal contamination of water or the agricultural environment. The parasite matures in the environment and can contaminate fresh produce that’s eaten raw.
The Washington Post@washingtonpost

Federal and state health officials are investigating whether Taco Bell played a role in one of the largest U.S. outbreaks of a gastrointestinal illness caused by a parasite that contaminates fresh produce, according to two individuals. wapo.st/3Tizwhs

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Richard Carlucci
Richard Carlucci@RCarlucci1983·
@mattwridley Best part of the replies to this comment is the ppl demanding even MORE regulation and bureaucracy to fix it. The fix is to replace ppl who would rather write reports or count screws with ppl who wake up every day burning with a passion to put concrete and steel into the Earth.
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Matt Ridley
Matt Ridley@mattwridley·
"This isn't a system accidentally strangled by red tape: it is a highly lucrative industry. A vast priesthood of consultants and lawyers is making a fortune they have no interest in the work being done." Yes. finally someone gets it.
The Heartlands Tribune@HeartlandsTrib

Westminster has built a country where we spend more money on the planning paperwork for a single road than it costs other nations to build an entire mountain tunnel. This isn't a system accidentally strangled by red tape: it is a highly lucrative industry. A vast priesthood of consultants and lawyers is making a fortune they have no interest in the work being done. It is corruption by bureaucracy, and working-class communities are footing the bill for projects that never even see a spade in the ground. The absolute paralysis of modern Britain was laid bare in a recent parliamentary committee. A single witness gave them the truth with both barrels, exposing the administrative vampires sucking public money dry while the work goes undone. The details are an insult to every community waiting for homes, decent transport, and cheaper energy. Take the Lower Thames Crossing. The planning application alone has swallowed more than a quarter of a billion pounds. For that exact same amount, Norway actually constructed the world’s longest road tunnel. We spent it on paper, and we have not even turned a sod of earth. This is a permission state eating itself alive. Look at HS2, the most expensive railway line on earth. Part of the reason it cost so much is that we are spending £121 million on a specific "bat tunnel" to protect a few hundred bats living in a nearby wood, a wood the line does not even pass through. Look at Hinkley Point C, the most expensive nuclear power station in human history. For eight years, developers locked in a multi-million-pound wrangle with regulators over installing an underwater "fish disco", an acoustic deterrent to stop fish swimming into the pipes. 20 years ago, we built nuclear fleets at a fraction of the cost. Today, we sacrifice national infrastructure to the gods of endless compliance. The final absurdity is the plan to reopen just 3.3 miles of an existing railway line between Bristol and Portishead, a route already built but closed during the Beeching cuts. The planning application is 80,000 pages long. Over one thousand of those pages are about bats. We have created a system that trades in paper while the real economy rots. The working class pay the price for this institutional cowardice. They pay for it in soaring energy bills, missing homes, broken transport links, and a country that cannot build the future it keeps promising. Protecting the environment is vital, but drowning ourselves in paper is not environmentalism. A system that takes 80,000 pages to clear three miles of existing track is broken. It is not governance: it is managed decline with a clipboard. It's the bureaucratic vampires drinking the country's wealth...

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Richard Carlucci
Richard Carlucci@RCarlucci1983·
@captgouda24 Nobody ever proposed that we give lifetime, tax free pensions to all veterans. We did not do this intentionally. It seems to have happened by accident - first there was disability fraud, which then became so widespread that ppl now just insist this is the way it was meant to work
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PicoCreator - AI builder @ 🇸🇬 🔜 🌉
Surprised we have yet to see a robotics startup pitching a household rail system, which skips all the current hardware problems of batteries and legs This lets it focus on the MVP, doing chores (in house), and hands.
PicoCreator - AI builder @ 🇸🇬 🔜 🌉 tweet media
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Richard Carlucci
Richard Carlucci@RCarlucci1983·
@dieworkwear That one crossed from conspiracy into accepted truth a long time ago, I thought.
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derek guy
derek guy@dieworkwear·
the one conspiracy i believe is that this place is full of bots programmed to say insane, incendiary things and they're funded by foreign organizations who want to divide americans and destabilize US society
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Richard Carlucci retweetledi
WarMonitor🇺🇦🇬🇧
European intelligence reports Russia is actively facilitating illegal migration into Europe via destablising African countries with mercenary groups and then strategically using social media campaigning to encourage migrants to fly to Belarus in order to head west to Europe.
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Richard Carlucci retweetledi
clara the urbanist
clara the urbanist@SlopHq·
every data center story says it uses "as much power as 100,000 homes" like that's a scandal. an aluminum smelter pulls five times that and it's why airplanes are cheap. measuring industry in homes is how you train a country to believe building things is a crime
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Richard Carlucci
Richard Carlucci@RCarlucci1983·
@jbarro They hate ppl like Buttigieg more than anyone else (even more than billionaires), because deep down they know that the only thing preventing them from being as successful as him is their own lack of ambition. He reminds them of their failure.
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Josh Barro
Josh Barro@jbarro·
The flip side of the left’s hardon for slovenly fuckups like Fetterman and Platner is their pathological hatred of Mayor Pete because of his clean-cut style and youthful achievement of conventional success.
Megan McArdle@asymmetricinfo

Platner is a private school screwup, of a type familiar to people who went to private school. The fact that he was cast as a man of the people by elites, while the working class rejected him, seems kind of emblematic of the whole progressive project right now.

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Richard Carlucci
Richard Carlucci@RCarlucci1983·
@JHWeissmann These DSA cranks always rail about billionaires, but their solution is a blood-letting of the upper middle class. I honestly think they hate people making 500k/yr more than they hate billionaires (note: I think they shouldn't hate either).
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Jordan Weissmann
Jordan Weissmann@JHWeissmann·
The fact that leftist candidates are talking about how nobody but billionaires should have to pay more taxes while Elizabeth Warren is saying we're gonna have to eliminate the payroll tax cap to fund Social Security is some serious cognitive dissonance.
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Richard Carlucci
Richard Carlucci@RCarlucci1983·
@michaeljmcnair I always suspected that studies supposedly showing ESG outperformance were really just the "G" part, and even then primarily reflecting improvements associated with basic procurement and hiring reforms I.e. don't hire your unqualified brother as CFO of your rural mining operation
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Michael McNair
Michael McNair@michaeljmcnair·
You know what bubble doesn’t get talked about/hated on enough? The ESG bubble. I think you could make a case for it being the dumbest bubble of the past 30 years. Full disclosure, it was the worst performance of my career. Water utilities that never traded more than like a 3x premium went to 30x premiums. I still don’t even understand how they were considered ESG stocks. But that was the entire game. ESG ratings were completely arbitrary. If you were a water user…then bad. But if you supplied water users…then good? NextEra with the worst governance I’ve ever seen was an ESG darling. It was all narrative. So much so that I think the most important asset during the ESG bubble was having a good IR team. A company could be a massive polluter, but if it had a target to reduce emissions, or could show progress off a high base, it could suddenly qualify for ESG mandated capital. But during the bubble I had a lunch with the CEO of a certain company. And I joked that maybe he should have a bumper pollution year, then roll out a big ESG push and announce aggressive reduction targets that would be easy to hit. I was obviously kidding, but he seemed genuinely intrigued. When we walked out my colleague was convinced he that he took it serious. Anyways, a few quarters later the company came out with a major carbon reduction plan/ESG campaign. This was one of the biggest polluters in the country. But the ESG ratings firms upgraded the stock and the ESG funds, Scandinavian SWFs with strict ESG mandates, ect all piled in. And of course it ripped my face off.
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Richard Carlucci
Richard Carlucci@RCarlucci1983·
@anders_aslund I don't like the guy by any stretch, but "rule of law?" My brother in Christ... we talkin about FIFA!
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Anders Åslund
Anders Åslund@anders_aslund·
Trump's interference in FIFA's decision making shows that the US under Trump is unable to host a major international competition. Trump does not respect any rule of law. The rest of the world needs to figure out the consequences.
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Jerusalem
Jerusalem@JerusalemDemsas·
FIFA is a corrupt organization???
GIF
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