Tim

1.4K posts

Tim banner
Tim

Tim

@Timmynomates

Family, Friends, Tae Kwon Do, Bitcoin 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿npub1fplykxtsxuy9j4ww4m5dv8dyze8v7wf3flms52ps92n9xy2uf7mqynsvnf

Nottingham Katılım Nisan 2022
1.5K Takip Edilen496 Takipçiler
Tim retweetledi
The Sales Bull 🎯 Follow if you sell B2C or B2B
£2,392 - that's the average council tax bill this year In 1993 it was £568 A 321% increase Salaries rose 179% in the same period Council services have not got 321% better Nobody stood for election on that platform It's theft by increment. Thirty years of it.
English
83
634
2.9K
39.6K
Tim retweetledi
Handre
Handre@Handre·
Switzerland built the world's most prosperous society by doing exactly what every government expert told them not to do: staying neutral, keeping taxes low, and letting markets work. While the EU suffocates its members with 170,000 pages of regulations, Switzerland maintains bilateral trade agreements that preserve sovereignty. Swiss GDP per capita hits $94,000 versus Germany's $51,000 and France's $45,000. The Swiss franc remains one of the world's strongest currencies because the Swiss National Bank can't print money to fund Brussels bureaucrats. Meanwhile, EU nations surrender monetary policy to unelected technocrats who inflate away savings to finance welfare states. The regulatory contrast is staggering. Switzerland ranks 4th globally in economic freedom while EU heavyweights like Germany (16th) and France (64th) plummet under Brussels' command-and-control apparatus. Swiss unemployment sits at 2.1% compared to the eurozone's 6.4%. Swiss labor markets remain flexible while EU employment laws make hiring workers feel like adopting teenagers forever. Brussels promises prosperity through harmonization, but delivers stagnation through standardization. Every EU directive removes another price signal from the market, replacing voluntary exchange with political allocation. Swiss neutrality isn't just about avoiding wars (though that 200-year peace dividend helps). Economic neutrality means staying out of supranational central planning schemes that turn dynamic economies into managed decline. The EU's answer to Switzerland's success? Punitive measures and threats to cut off market access unless the Swiss submit to Brussels rule. Nothing exposes the coercive nature of the European project quite like watching bureaucrats demand that free people abandon the policies that made them rich.
Handre tweet media
English
248
1.1K
3.8K
198.9K
Tim retweetledi
The Wolf Of All Streets
The Wolf Of All Streets@scottmelker·
Bitcoiners, I learned something this week. We’ve been doing it wrong. For 15 years we’ve tried to onboard people with math, energy, cryptography, monetary theory. None of it works on a normie. Their eyes glaze. They tune out. They think we’re a cult. But explain the problem they already feel - that they’re running faster and standing still, that their work is being quietly taxed, that they shouldn’t have to become an investor just to keep what they earned - and they lean in. Don’t sell them the answer. Name the problem. They already know something’s wrong. Be the one who finally puts it into words.
The Wolf Of All Streets@scottmelker

This is why I believe in Bitcoin. If you only watch 9 minutes of my content, ever, please let it be this.

English
99
102
875
62.1K
Tim
Tim@Timmynomates·
I’m ready for a robot. Then I can finally learn golf
Milk Road AI@MilkRoadAI

This is WILD! MIT just solved one of the hardest unsolved problems in robotics (Save this). For decades, the fundamental problem with soft robots and wearable exoskeletons has not been compute or AI, it has been actuation. The moment you try to give a soft robot meaningful strength, you run into the same wall every engineer has hit since the field began, fluid-driven systems require external pumps, hydraulic reservoirs, and heavy infrastructure that makes the entire thing impractical to wear or embed into fabric. MIT's new Electrofluidic Fiber Muscles solve that problem by eliminating external infrastructure entirely. The key insight is electrohydrodynamic pumping using electric fields to generate pressure directly from electricity, with no moving parts, no motors, and no external fluid reservoir. The fibers are less than 2 millimeters thick, can be woven into fabric like ordinary textile, and operate in complete silence because nothing physically moves inside them, it is just ions propelling fluid through a closed circuit. The performance numbers published in Science Robotics are not conceptual, they are empirical results from actual hardware. These fibers achieve a power density of 50 watts per kilogram, matching skeletal muscle, with a contraction strain of 20% and a response time of 0.3 seconds. A single bundled configuration lifted 4 kilograms, 200 times its own weight while a separate configuration drove a robotic arm through a 40-degree bend compliant enough to safely complete a human handshake. Another configuration launched objects in under 100 milliseconds, which is faster than a human flinch reflex. The design mirrors biological muscle architecture in a way that prior artificial muscle approaches never achieved. The fibers are organized into antagonistic pairs, one contracts while the other extends, exactly like biceps and triceps and because the system runs in a closed loop, the relaxing fiber serves as the fluid reservoir for the contracting one, which is what allows the whole system to operate untethered with no external tank. The applications are not hypothetical but rather are the exact use cases the industry has been waiting years for the hardware to catch up to. Exoskeletons for physical labor, prosthetic limbs that move with the natural compliance of biological tissue, assistive garments for patients with motor disorders, and soft robots capable of safe physical contact with humans are all immediately unlocked by a muscle technology that is silent, lightweight, and weavable into clothing. The deeper significance is what this technology does when it meets the AI robotics wave that is already underway. Every major humanoid robot program, Figure, 1X, Boston Dynamics, Tesla Optimus is currently bottlenecked by the same hardware limitations these fibers address, actuators that are too rigid, too loud, too heavy, or too dependent on infrastructure to operate naturally alongside humans. Electrofluidic fiber muscles do not just solve a materials science problem but rather they remove one of the last physical barriers between robots that live in labs and robots that live in the world.

English
0
0
0
30
Tim retweetledi
Jason Ai. Williams
Jason Ai. Williams@GoingParabolic·
When you finally understand bitcoin
English
63
258
3.2K
144.9K
Tim retweetledi
In Milei We Trust
In Milei We Trust@InMilei·
"We have climbed 40 places in the Economic Freedom Index. It is historic. We used to be one of the most closed countries in the world, and now we are in the middle of the rankings. My goal is to transform Argentina into the freest country in the world. That is what I promised the Argentine people, and I will not stop until I achieve it."
In Milei We Trust tweet media
English
5
42
148
1.7K
Tim
Tim@Timmynomates·
100%
4
19
119
32.2K
Documenting Saylor
Documenting Saylor@saylordocs·
My boomer uncle saved $1,200,000 for retirement. - drove a 2003 Honda until it felt apart - packed his lunch everyday for 33 years - had a whole list of things he was going to do He died 2 weeks before retiring
English
259
545
17.2K
1.3M
Tim retweetledi
Alex 👽
Alex 👽@AlexesNakamoto·
Bitcoin White Paper Explained for Teens
Alex 👽 tweet media
English
18
185
610
14.4K
Tim retweetledi
Ole Lehmann
Ole Lehmann@itsolelehmann·
Demis Hassabis says he can cure every disease in 10 years. Most people roll their eyes when they hear this, but I don't. Demis is the guy who just won the Nobel Prize for solving protein folding with AI (a problem biologists had been stuck on for 50 years). But that was just one milestone in his much grander plan. In 2010, he founded DeepMind with a 2-part mission: "solve intelligence, then use it to solve everything else." Step 1: make AI good enough to do real science. Step 2: point that AI at humanity's biggest problems. Step one was AlphaFold. He used AI to figure out the 3D shape of every protein in nature (which is basically what every drug attaches to). Demis said it would have taken "a billion years of PhD time" to do by hand. Step two is curing all disease. And as of today, step two is fully funded. Isomorphic Labs (his AI drug discovery company inside Google) just raised $2.1B led by Thrive Capital. Here's where the money goes and what Demis thinks happens next: > Drug discovery currently takes 5-10 years and costs billions per drug. That math is why most diseases don't have good treatments today. > AI fixes the math. Their drug design engine compresses development from years to months. Maybe weeks. > Isomorphic's first AI-designed cancer drug enters human trials this year. > Their pipeline expands beyond the current 17 programs across cancer, immune diseases, and heart disease into more health domains. > The endgame is personalized medicine: drugs designed overnight for your specific biology and your specific disease. That last one is the whole point. Today's drugs are mass-produced for an "average" patient who doesn't really exist. So most existing treatments work inconsistently from person to person, and most rare diseases never get a treatment at all (no market = no drug). When drug design gets fast and cheap, that whole calculus flips. Cancer variants get drugs designed for that specific variant, rare diseases get treatments because economics stop mattering, and drug-resistant infections get new drugs faster than they can evolve. That's what curing every disease actually looks like. Now imagine what your life looks like in 2036. A doctor draws your blood, sequences your genome, sends your disease profile to an AI. By morning the AI has designed a custom drug for your specific biology. Side effects, dosage, drug interactions all worked out before you take the first pill. You and your kids never see a cancer ward. That's what $2.1B is buying today. Demis was right about AlphaFold. If you consider the possibility that he's right again, every disease alive today is on borrowed time.
Demis Hassabis@demishassabis

I’ve always believed the No.1 application of AI should be to improve human health. That work started with AlphaFold, and now at @IsomorphicLabs with the mission to reimagine drug discovery and one day solve all disease! We are turbocharging that goal with $2.1B in new funding.

English
69
243
1.6K
185.4K
Tim
Tim@Timmynomates·
I hate banksters. Mr Ethical. What a warrior. Good for and I hope one day these fuckers get their comeuppance
Artur Nadolny@ArturNadol7566

HALF A MILLION PEOPLE WERE DEFRAUDED Imagine you are behind on your store card payments. You are already struggling. Then the bank quietly adds an extra charge on top of what you owe. Not because it costs them that much. Just because .. they can. And because they think nobody is watching. Someone was watching. Nicholas Wilson was a debt recovery lawyer. He goes by Mr Ethical @nw_nicholas on X. His old boss meant it as an insult. In 2003 he noticed that @HSBC subsidiary HFC Bank was adding an illegal 16.4% charge onto the debts of people who were already in financial trouble. Store cards from John Lewis, Currys, B&Q, Dixons, PC World. Ordinary people. Struggling people. Being quietly robbed. He told his boss it was illegal. His boss started calling him "Mr Ethical" as a joke. Then they sacked him. He reported it to the regulators. @TheFCA ignored him for years. When a researcher separately wrote to both HSBC and the FCA asking about the fraud... ... both wrote back with responses in the exact same wording, same punctuation, same paragraphs. The bank and the regulator were sharing the same script. FCA's own independent Complaints Commissioner eventually investigated. He called it the worst case of regulatory failure he had ever dealt with. FCA's response was to appoint Ruth Kelly, an HSBC director, and Baroness Hogg from John Lewis, onto its own board. The two people they were supposed to be investigating were now sitting inside the regulator. You actually cannot make this up. After 13 years of Wilson refusing to go away, HSBC quietly agreed to pay some money back. FCA announced 6,700 victims. Wilson says the real number is closer to 500,000. HSBC has now set aside £223 million for repayments. No fine. No criminal charges. No one went to prison. No one was even publicly named. Wilson has spent the last 20 years unemployable. Blacklisted. Living on state benefits. Fighting to keep his home. Someone even anonymously reported him to the DWP for benefit fraud while the actual billion pound fraud went unpunished. The bank that robbed half a million people kept its licence. The man who caught them lost everything. Source: @guardian | @BBC | @PrivateEyeNews | @SundayMirror | @realmediauk | nicholaswilson com | @nw_nicholas and others.

English
0
0
1
21
Tim retweetledi
Dustin
Dustin@r0ck3t23·
Chamath Palihapitiya just said what Silicon Valley is terrified to say out loud. On Joe Rogan. To millions of people. Without flinching. Chamath: “The only person that we can trust is Elon.” Not whispered at a dinner party. Not buried in a podcast nobody listens to. Said on the record. Full weight behind it. And then he told you why. Chamath: “I feel like he’s the least corruptible. He’s the most independent thinking. And I think he’s the one that has an actual empathy for people.” One of the sharpest capital allocators in Silicon Valley history looked at every founder building AI. Every single one. And chose the one the media spends the most energy telling you to hate. That alone should stop you cold. Chamath: “Then there are folks where there’s just an insane profit motive.” He’s talking about OpenAI. He’s talking about Google. He’s talking about companies that swallowed billions from Wall Street and now answer to shareholders before they answer to humanity. Chamath: “They’re less in control of the businesses that they run.” The people building the most powerful technology in human history do not control their own companies. Their boards do. Their investors do. Their liquidation preferences do. And these are the ones we’re trusting with superintelligence. Chamath: “He’s like, I need to get to Mars.” This is the fracture line nobody wants to touch. Every other AI founder is optimizing for the next earnings call. The next funding round. The next quarterly number that keeps the machine fed. Elon is optimizing for the next planet. One group builds to satisfy investors. The other builds to survive as a species. Those aren’t different strategies. Those are different operating systems running on different hardware. And it changes everything about how you build. When your time horizon is 90 days, you cut corners. You monetize behavior. You trade safety for speed because the board needs a number by Friday. When your time horizon is interplanetary, you can’t afford a single shortcut. Because shortcuts don’t survive launch. Chamath: “Where is this going to end up?” The only question that matters. And nobody in power wants you asking it. Because the answer comes down to who gets there first. If it’s a company owned by Wall Street, superintelligence becomes the most sophisticated extraction engine ever built. Every decision optimized. Every behavior predicted. Every market captured. Not for you. For the balance sheet. If it’s someone who can’t be bought, pressured, or voted out by a board of directors, there’s at least a chance it bends toward something bigger than quarterly revenue. History never remembers who built the most powerful technology. It remembers who controlled it. And what they used it for. The only founder in AI who cannot be fired by a board, leveraged by an investor, or replaced by a shareholder vote is the one they spend the most energy telling you not to trust. Ask yourself why.
English
122
719
3.2K
142.5K
Tim retweetledi
Dustin
Dustin@r0ck3t23·
Elon Musk just revealed what’s actually holding AI back. It’s not chips. Not models. Not data. It’s concrete. Someone asked him the obvious question. Why not just build private power plants next to data centers? Bypass the grid entirely. His answer was four words. Musk: “The power plant makers.” There aren’t enough of them. You can design the best chip on earth. Train a frontier model. Raise $10 billion for a hyperscale data center. None of it matters if you can’t power it. Musk: “You can drill down a level further.” GPUs need power. Power needs turbines. Turbines need factories. Factories need permits. Permits need a government that hasn’t paralyzed itself. Every link in the chain is physical. And every one of them is breaking. We can train a frontier model in weeks. We can’t permit a power plant in under five years. The country that invented the assembly line now needs 40 agencies to approve a gas turbine. China doesn’t have this problem. They don’t run 7-year environmental reviews on infrastructure they need tomorrow. They break ground while America requests approval to break ground. The AI race won’t be decided by whoever writes the best algorithm. It’ll be decided by whoever can still build in the physical world. We spent 30 years getting faster in software and slower in steel. Outsourcing manufacturing. Hollowing out supply chains. Treating builders like liabilities instead of assets. Now the bill is due. Every breakthrough in AI is gated by atoms. Steel. Concrete. Turbines that take years to manufacture and decades to approve. The smartest code on earth is worthless without electricity. Musk didn’t give a speech about this. He didn’t need to. He answered one question and the whole infrastructure myth collapsed. “Where do you get the power plants from?” Follow that thread far enough and you stop finding a technology problem. You find a civilization that mastered thinking and forgot how to build.
English
466
1.6K
6.8K
980.8K
Tim
Tim@Timmynomates·
@davidicke So sad. He was a lovely man. I really admired him growing up. I never knew what happened to him
English
0
0
0
410
David Icke
David Icke@davidicke·
David Bellamy was a great guy and a proper environmentalist who didn't follow establishment scripts. That's why the BBC sacked him.
CbassTheFish ⚡ 🇬🇷@cbassthefish

@celestialbe1ng David Attenborough perpetuated the climate change scam on the BBC platform. Whilst David Bellamy exposed the climate change fraud with verifiable science on the BBC and was subsequently sacked / de-platformed for doing so. RIP David Bellamy. Died on 11 December 2019. Age of 86.

English
231
2.8K
12.9K
174.4K
Tim
Tim@Timmynomates·
I can’t stop watching this. Gary is such a bell end. He evidently cannot grasp basic economics
English
0
1
0
78