10X Everything

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10X Everything

10X Everything

@TimRichardsTN

Entrepreneur & Father of 5. Real Estate Investor, Advocate and Broker #LoverOfAllThingsFastPitchSoftball

Spring Hill, Tennessee Katılım Nisan 2009
2.1K Takip Edilen701 Takipçiler
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Planet Of Memes
Planet Of Memes@PlanetOfMemes·
Once you see it, you can't unsee it. The Virginia governor, Abigail Spanberger, is really the Wicked Witch 🧙‍♀️
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toddstarnes
toddstarnes@toddstarnes·
Chaos on Beale Street last night. 3-4 shots fired. At least one person hit. Multiple fights mostly involving teen thugs. Memphis Police completely overwhelmed. Parents are letting their predator kids roam the streets after curfew to cause mayhem.
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Thomas Sowell Quotes
Thomas Sowell Quotes@ThomasSowell·
“If borders don’t matter, neither does who ‘stole’ the land.”
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C3
C3@C_3C_3·
What Elon has offered to cover… ~65,000 TSA Employees. Average weekly gross pay is ~$1,000 per employee. Add in benefits and total taxpayer cost is ~$155 million per week. I never want to hear another Leftist talk about Elon’s money and what he should do with it ever again.
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StockMarket.News
StockMarket.News@_Investinq·
Sam Altman told the world exactly what skills will matter when AI takes over 30 to 40 percent of the global economy. He was asked what his own kids should do to survive it. His answer was surprisingly human. He said the single most valuable thing anyone can build right now is the meta-skill of learning how to learn. Not a degree or a certification but the raw ability to adapt when everything around you changes. He also said learning to understand what other people actually want and building useful things for them will be more valuable than almost any technical knowledge. That skill has never been automated and is not close to being automated. He said human creativity and the desire to express it are, in his words, limitless. Every major technological revolution increased the demand for creative, curious, and socially intelligent people, not decreased it. The Industrial Revolution is the clearest parallel. Machines replaced physical labor and people were terrified. The next generation took those machines and built industries, art forms, and institutions nobody had conceived of before. The people who thrived were not the ones who competed with the machines. They were the ones who learned to direct them toward something new. That dynamic is already playing out right now with AI. The practical implication is this, depth in a single rigid skill is becoming less valuable. The ability to move across domains, pick up new tools quickly, and apply judgment in ambiguous situations is becoming more valuable. Altman also pointed to something most career advice ignores entirely, learning how to interact with the world, build relationships, and earn trust from other people. Those are things AI can simulate but cannot replace. The honest opportunity in this moment is not to outrun AI. It is to focus on the things that make you irreducibly human. Curiosity, judgment, empathy and the ability to ask the right question before anyone knows what the right question is. The people who will matter most in an AI-driven economy are not necessarily the ones who understand the technology deepest. They are the ones who can figure out what the technology should actually be used for. Altman has spent his career betting on human potential in the face of technological disruption. Based on every historical precedent, that is still the right bet to make.
StockMarket.News@_Investinq

Mark Cuban just delivered the most important career warning of the decade. There are 33 million businesses in America right now. Almost none of them have an AI strategy. @mcuban has been saying it out loud for months. The companies that will dominate the next ten years are not the ones with the biggest tech budgets. They are the ones that figure out agentic AI first. Here is what agentic AI actually means. It is software that sets its own goals, takes its own steps, and finishes entire jobs without a human pressing a single button, The businesses that need it most have no idea it even exists. Cuban is not talking about Google or Microsoft. He is talking about the HVAC company on your street, the bakery downtown, the law firm with twelve employees. Those businesses are running on spreadsheets and gut instinct right now. Meanwhile, the technology to replace their most expensive, most repetitive work costs twenty dollars a month. Cuban told students directly, pick up Python, get inside Claude, learn how these agents work. Because thirty-three million small businesses are about to desperately need someone who can walk in the door and build this for them. He compared it to his own story at age twenty-four, walking into businesses that had never seen a PC and showing them what a computer could do. That moment minted a generation of millionaires. This moment is that again.

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Kanika
Kanika@KanikaBK·
🤯 Don't hire an engineer to SET UP OPENCLAW GREG ISENBERG & MORITZ KREMB just dropped a MASTERCLASS & taught you to do it yourself in 1 HOUR for $0. Setup consultant: $3K Greg's masterclass: FREE 26 billable hrs → 1 hour 🔖 Bookmark before it's gone.
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Clif Marshall
Clif Marshall@ClifMarshall·
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Harrison Floyd 🇺🇸
But if you call her unqualified or a “diversity hire” you are racist. It’s not always about race, some people just suck. She should loose her ability to practice law.
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The White House
The White House@WhiteHouse·
This is intentional. ⬇️ Democrats are holding American travelers hostage and denying federal workers their paychecks for political leverage. End the games. REOPEN DHS!
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高市早苗
高市早苗@takaichi_sanae·
Thank you, President @realDonaldTrump, for your warm hospitality today at the White House and at this evening’s dinner. We had substantive and forward-looking discussions across a wide range of issues, reaffirming the strength of the Japan-U.S. Alliance. It was a truly meaningful and productive day. I look forward to continuing close cooperation between Japan and the United States to make our two nations stronger and more prosperous. トランプ大統領、本日のホワイトハウス、そして今晩の夕食会での温かいおもてなしに感謝します。 幅広い分野について、内容の充実した前向きな議論を行い、日米同盟の力強さを改めて確認することができました。 大変実り多く、有意義な一日となりました。 強く豊かな国作りのために、今後も日米で緊密に協力していきたいと思います。
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Tim Young
Tim Young@TimRunsHisMouth·
Japan’s prime minister burst into laughter at the autopen picture for Biden at the White House. The world knew… 🤣🤣🤣
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Jesse Kelly
Jesse Kelly@JesseKellyDC·
Dear GOP: Democrats have created 3 hour wait times at the airport because they don’t want illegal aliens deported. There’s your messaging. Put it on repeat.
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Joey Jones
Joey Jones@Johnny_Joey·
Oh look, a Governor’s son who never had a job his daddy didn’t hand him thinks being honest about the struggles of poor white Appalachians and personal trauma is “insulting”. Boy, this guy sure does represent Kentucky.
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Andy Beshear@AndyBeshearKY

JD Vance got rich insulting the people of Appalachia. And though he pretends he’s from Kentucky, he’s actually from Butler County, Ohio — where I'll be on Saturday night in a room full of fired-up Democrats.

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U.S. Senator John Fetterman
U.S. Senator John Fetterman@SenFettermanPA·
Heading to vote, and I will remain the only Democrat that refuses to shut our government down. Pay TSA agents. Reopen DHS.
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Ian Miller
Ian Miller@ianmSC·
It's astonishing that the Democratic Party is so committed to dying on the hill of protecting illegal immigration that they're willing to subject people to this
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Senator Mazie Hirono
Senator Mazie Hirono@maziehirono·
I want to be crystal clear: Democrats SUPPORT funding TSA, FEMA, and the Coast Guard. In fact, we've tried to fund these agencies MULTIPLE times. But what we won't support is writing a blank check for ICE's unchecked lawless violence.
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Nick Sortor
Nick Sortor@nicksortor·
🚨 JUST IN: Chuck Schumer has ONCE AGAIN voted NO on re-opening DHS, all but guaranteeing the funding bill will FAIL, and TSA chaos will get worse Everyone standing in those 3 hour TSA lines should pass that time by repeatedly calling Chuck Schumer's office: (202) 224-6542
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Mr PitBull
Mr PitBull@MrPitbull07·
May 16, 1963. Gordon Cooper was orbiting Earth alone inside a capsule barely big enough to turn around in, moving at 17,500 miles per hour. He had been up there for over a day. Then the warnings started. First a faulty sensor screaming that the ship was falling — it wasn't. He switched it off. Then something far worse: a short circuit knocked out the entire automated guidance system. The one that kept the capsule steady. The one that was supposed to bring him home. Without it, reentry was nearly impossible. Too shallow an angle and the capsule would bounce off the atmosphere back into space. Too steep and it would incinerate. The margin for error was razor thin — and every computer that was supposed to hit that margin was dead. Down on the ground, NASA engineers watched the telemetry in silence. They could see everything going wrong. They could fix nothing. Cooper didn't panic. He uncapped a grease pencil and drew lines directly on the inside of his window to track the horizon. He looked up at the stars he had spent months memorizing and used their positions to orient the ship by eye. Then he set his wristwatch. Because when you have no computers left, you become the computer. At exactly the right moment — calculated in his head, confirmed by the stars outside — he fired the retrorockets. The capsule shook. The sky turned to fire. For several minutes, no one on Earth could reach him as plasma swallowed the ship whole. Then the parachutes opened. Faith 7 hit the water just four miles from the recovery ship — the single most accurate splashdown in the entire Mercury program. The man with a wristwatch and a few pencil marks on a window had outperformed every automated system NASA had. We talk a lot about technology saving us. And it often does. But Cooper's story is a quiet reminder that behind every machine, there still has to be a human being who can look out the window, think clearly under pressure, and decide what to do next. The final backup was never the software. It was him.
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