Reid Nicewonder

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Reid Nicewonder

Reid Nicewonder

@ReidN

Street Epistemology & Philosophy: @CordialCurious. SSE director for @PeterBoghossian. Treasurer for @501c3forSE. $TSLA investor. Eligible bachelor.

Katılım Mart 2008
1.1K Takip Edilen1.8K Takipçiler
Nic Cruz Patane
Nic Cruz Patane@niccruzpatane·
NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang in a new All-In Podcast on their NVIDIA’s Self-Driving Platform: “We believe everything that moves will be autonomous, completely, or partly someday. We don’t want to build self-driving cars. We want to enable every car company in the world to build self-driving cars. We build all three computers— the training computer, the simulation computer, as well as the car computer. We developed the world’s safest-driving operating system. We also created the world’s first reasoning autonomous vehicle. So it can decompose complicated scenarios into simpler scenarios that it knows how to navigate through, just like us. That reasoning system called Alpamayo has allowed us to achieve incredible results.”
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Brett Hall
Brett Hall@ToKTeacher·
“Project Hail Mary” - 5/5 ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Seen it twice and looking forward to speaking about it with @peterboghossian and @ReidN soon. My “geeky gripe” for now (spoiler!) is the technological synchronicity issue - long discussed in astrobiology 101. But that’s ~true ∀ such sci-fi.
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Colin Wright
Colin Wright@SwipeWright·
@ReidN I have been tempted to get one. How well does it work? I have trouble trusting reviews by strangers.
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Reid Nicewonder
Reid Nicewonder@ReidN·
@elonmusk Awesome. Although, can we get a third AI chip in our cars so it can do work while it drives autonomously? 😄
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Oh and it works in all AI4-equipped cars, so your car can do office work for you when not driving. We’re also deploying millions of dedicated Digital Optimus units in the field at Superchargers where we have ~7 gigawatts of available power.
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Macrohard or Digital Optimus is a joint xAI-Tesla project, coming as part of Tesla’s investment agreement with xAI. Grok is the master conductor/navigator with deep understanding of the world to direct digital Optimus, which is processing and actioning the past 5 secs of real-time computer screen video and keyboard/mouse actions. Grok is like a much more advanced and sophisticated version of turn-by-turn navigation software. You can think of it as Digital Optimus AI being System 1 (instinctive part of the mind) and Grok being System 2. (thinking part of the mind). This will run very competitively on the super low cost Tesla AI4 ($650) paired with relatively frugal use of the much more expensive xAI Nvidia hardware. And it will be the only real-time smart AI system. This is a big deal. In principle, it is capable of emulating the function of entire companies. That is why the program is called MACROHARD, a funny reference to Microsoft. No other company can yet do this.
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The Arbourist
The Arbourist@TheArbourist·
Where does “woke” come from? Not vibes. An epistemology. Three assumptions that change how truth works. 🧵
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Reid Nicewonder
Reid Nicewonder@ReidN·
Just chilling, recording a podcast. Nothing out of the ordinary about to happen. 😅
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Warren Smith
Warren Smith@WTSmith17·
This gave me flashbacks to graduate school… how students fly into a rage, thinking they are justified in targeting others in their pursuit of “absolute compassion.”
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🗣 Free Speech Union ✊
🗣 Free Speech Union ✊@NZFreeSpeech·
🚨 Parliament just announced it's leaving X - abandoning nearly 1 million New Zealanders on this platform in an election year. We've written to Speaker Gerry Brownlee. Parliament doesn't belong to Parliamentary Service. It belongs to the public. You don't get to decide 933,000 Kiwis don't matter because you dislike the platform. When Parliament leaves, the authoritative information disappears. The users don't. Full media release → fsu.nz/blog/parliamen… #FreeSpeechNZ #NZPolitics
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Peter Boghossian
Peter Boghossian@peterboghossian·
Turns out one way to get Leftists to talk with you is to go to Los Angeles and hire them as camera operators. Then speak honestly about immigration for an hour with a guest such as Raymond @RaymondIbrahim5. Here's what happened:
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Brett Hall
Brett Hall@ToKTeacher·
@elonmusk A critique of that exact kind of prescription (which, notice, itself is not a probabilistic kind of thinking. The claim isn't "Probably think in probabilities" but rather either one *should or should not* think in terms of probabilities!) youtu.be/AOK5aiASmKM?si…
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Think in probabilities
Math Files@Math_files

Bayes’ theorem is probably the single most important thing any rational person can learn. So many of our debates and disagreements that we shout about are because we don’t understand Bayes’ theorem or how human rationality often works. Bayes’ theorem is named after the 18th-century Thomas Bayes, and essentially it’s a formula that asks: when you are presented with all of the evidence for something, how much should you believe it? Bayes’ theorem teaches us that our beliefs are not fixed; they are probabilities. Our beliefs change as we weigh new evidence against our assumptions, or our priors. In other words, we all carry certain ideas about how the world works, and new evidence can challenge them. For example, somebody might believe that smoking is safe, that stress causes mouth ulcers, or that human activity is unrelated to climate change. These are their priors, their starting points. They can be formed by our culture, our biases, or even incomplete information. Now imagine a new study comes along that challenges one of your priors. A single study might not carry enough weight to overturn your existing beliefs. But as studies accumulate, eventually the scales may tip. At some point, your prior will become less and less plausible. Bayes’ theorem argues that being rational is not about black and white. It’s not even about true or false. It’s about what is most reasonable based on the best available evidence. But for this to work, we need to be presented with as much high-quality data as possible. Without evidence—without belief-forming data—we are left only with our priors and biases. And those aren’t all that rational.

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John Cleese
John Cleese@JohnCleese·
I'll say again... Criticism of Islam is not racist, it's culturalist For example, disapproving of Female Genital Mutilation is not racist Criticism of Islam is Islamosceptic. There is no phobia involved in criticising a religion. That's for spiders Life of Brian is not Christophobic. The Pythons did not have a phobia about Christianity. We were sceptical about some of its adherents Trying to win arguments by changing the meaning of words is a cheap debating trick
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