Chris Lewis

17.9K posts

Chris Lewis

Chris Lewis

@TenaciousCEEE

The demon is a liar. He will lie to confuse us; but he will also mix lies with the truth to attack us. His attack is psychological and powerful.

Warrington Katılım Mayıs 2014
617 Takip Edilen366 Takipçiler
Maxine Pye
Maxine Pye@LiveAncestral·
The government is adding folic acid to all UK flour by law this December. They call it a public health win. What they are not telling you is that folic acid is not folate. Folic acid is the synthetic oxidised form of vitamin B9. To become usable, the body has to convert it using an enzyme called DHFR into 5-methyltetrahydrofolate, the active form your cells can actually work with. A significant portion of the population carries variants of the MTHFR gene that impair this conversion. Enzyme activity can drop by up to 70 percent. Unmetabolised folic acid accumulates in the blood instead. I carry an MTHFR variant. Most people who do have no idea. They eat their fortified bread and assume they are getting folate. They are not. They are accumulating a synthetic compound their body cannot process efficiently. No screening. No individual consideration. No acknowledgement that the conversion pathway exists. Just mandatory fortification for every single person in the country. Real folate is found in food. Liver is the most concentrated source and it delivers folate already in the active 5-MTHF form. No conversion needed. No gene variant problem. They are adding a synthetic vitamin to a food that drives metabolic dysfunction and calling it progress. I don’t eat bread anymore but if you still eat bread, choose 100% wholemeal, rye, or ancient grain varieties like spelt or einkorn. These are exempt from the law. White and standard brown bread are not. Do you know if you carry an MTHFR variant?
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FarmerDave
FarmerDave@BestBritishBeef·
To all livestock farmers, particularly during this hot time, please remember to safeguard Barn Owls from drowning in your troughs! I put concrete blocks in mine! @BarnOwlTrust @SomersetLive
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Pop Base
Pop Base@PopBase·
Pride Month is one week away.
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RAF_Luton
RAF_Luton@RAF_Luton·
Fact of the Day: The Hurricane was the seaplane fighter jet, it was first flown on the 31st Feb 1926 when Sqn Ldr Mo Stash-Copp took off from Lake Windermere (Cotswolds) and flew a 800.85km flight to Lake Coniston (Cotswolds) Photographed from a Canberra
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Patrick G.
Patrick G.@PGilday45277·
@RAF_Luton that NOT a hurricane, its a Spit neither were Jets
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Dr Jennine Morgan
Dr Jennine Morgan@jemmm85517813·
Company I know of just fired new employee using Ai for all her work.. Was totally incompetent, luckily challenge by others who knew she was producing slop.
Ricardo@Ric_RTP

Microsoft just banned its own engineers from using AI. The tool was literally costing MORE than the humans it was supposed to replace. They lied to you about AI adoption and now the whole narrative is blowing up: Microsoft gave thousands of engineers access to Claude Code six months ago and encouraged them to use it. Engineers loved it and adoption exploded. But then the invoices arrived. Token-based pricing means every query, every code review, every debugging session costs money. At scale across 100,000 engineers, the numbers became so large that Microsoft issued an internal order to cancel nearly all Claude Code licenses by end of June and force everyone onto their own cheaper tool instead. The company that invested $5 billion in Anthropic just told its own people to stop using Anthropic's product because it costs too much. Uber's story is even worse... Their CTO Praveen Neppalli Naga told The Information that the budget he planned for the full year was "blown away already" by April. Uber had rolled out Claude Code in December 2025. By March, 84% of their 5,000 engineers were using it with 70% of all committed code coming from AI systems. Heavy users were burning $500 to $2,000 per month each. Naga himself spent $1,200 in a single two-hour demo session. The company had even built internal leaderboards ranking engineers by how much AI they used. They literally gamified the spending and then ran out of money. Now look at what Nvidia's own VP of applied deep learning Bryan Catanzaro said to Axios last month. Direct quote: "For my team, the cost of compute is far beyond the costs of the employees." This is a VP at the company that SELLS the chips saying that using AI is more expensive than paying humans. Think about what this means for the entire AI narrative. Every CEO on every earnings call for the past two years has said the same thing: AI will make us more efficient, reduce headcount, and cut costs. The stock market rewarded every company that said it. Fired workers, stock goes up. Announced AI adoption, stock goes up. But the actual companies deploying AI at scale are discovering the math doesn't work. The MORE employees use AI, the HIGHER the bill. Goldman Sachs forecasts a 24x increase in token consumption by 2030 as companies adopt AI agents. Gartner just published a report showing that even though individual token prices will drop 90% by 2030, total enterprise AI costs will go UP because agents consume exponentially more tokens per task than basic tools. Meta built an internal dashboard called "Claudeonomics" to track which employees use the most AI. Amazon started pushing engineers to "tokenmaxx," their internal term for consuming as many AI tokens as possible. Both companies are spending hundreds of billions on AI infrastructure this year alone. And Microsoft, the company that bet its entire future on AI, just told 100,000 engineers to stop using the tool they liked best because the per-token bills got out of control. The companies building AI are telling investors it saves money. The companies using AI are finding out it costs more than the humans it was supposed to replace. And even the company that makes the chips just admitted it through its own VP. This is the gap nobody on Wall Street is pricing in. $725 billion in AI infrastructure spending this year across Big Tech. And the first companies to actually deploy these tools at scale are already pulling back because the economics don't work. What do you think?

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Chris Lewis
Chris Lewis@TenaciousCEEE·
@FUDdaily So not 01010111011010010110110001100110011100100110010101100100
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Chris Lewis
Chris Lewis@TenaciousCEEE·
@Deathisreal99 Christ! We only started getting ice in our drinks 20yrs ago ! 🤣 Can you imagine anyone in UK considering air considering air conditioning in the 70s? 🙄
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Pete North
Pete North@FUDdaily·
Winding down the Red Arrows is part of a broader retreat of the armed forces from public life. The Royal Tournament was once a pillar of British culture, as was the great British airshow. There used to be a dozen RAF station open days, but now there is only one official RAF airshow - at which the F35 makes only a cursory appearance, and most of the line up is classic aircraft in private hands. We have stopped showcasing our military. It plays no real part in boyhood anymore - and then the same pinheaded accountant class wonder why nobody wants to join the forces and any sense of national unity is collapsing. They stopped the Royal Navy's Yeovilton Air Day because of Covid and then never re-started it, and I struggle to think of any military events north of the M62. The BBMF seldom ventures north of Bradford, and the main RAF presence is RIAT which is hundreds of miles away for most people, and costs £70 per adult. The airshow tradition is mainly upheld by small independent events, and though they are excellent, young people don't get the experience of being on an active military base. By the time I was of military age, I'd already been to RAF Valley, Cosford, Leeming, Culdrose, Alconbury, Finningley and Waddington. Because of this, while I never joined the armed forces, I have maintained a lifelong appreciation for the armed forces and take a keen intertest in defence affairs. Politically, we suffer from defence illiteracy, and we're making it worse because defence of the realm is not integrated into public life. cc: @thinkdefence @UKDefJournal
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Chris Lewis
Chris Lewis@TenaciousCEEE·
@Carl__P_ Is that from the urban / airport weather stations perchance? The UHI is extremely convenient for presenting warming trends.
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Jack Palance
Jack Palance@shiningfourth·
Rupert Lowe, trying to be a big brave man, talking like a little fucking twat.
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Burnside
Burnside@BurnsideWasTosh·
Restore shouldn't exist, but Farage thought that Zia Yusuf and Nadhim Zahawi were a better fit for his politics and ego than Rupert Lowe. Reform should be romping it, but because they became the Tories they offer nothing particularly different that Kemi's Tories if anything they're more left wing. If the lesson Reform learned from the last 29 years is that the public want more mainstream sloppery they are in for a rude awakening.
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Chris Lewis
Chris Lewis@TenaciousCEEE·
@ScotNational That can't be possibly because there is no such thing as a transgender person.
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The National
The National@ScotNational·
Transgender people have been left with 'less rights' following the publication of the UK equalities watchdog’s guidance on single-sex spaces, an advocacy group has said 🗣️ 'We will keep fighting this discriminatory approach'
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Chris Lewis
Chris Lewis@TenaciousCEEE·
@g_gosden Why should women be imune from verbal abuse? It's not illegal. Are you a sexist?
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