True Vegas Life

273 posts

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True Vegas Life

True Vegas Life

@TrueVegasLife

Vegas Strip Club and Adult Nightlife. Publisher of The Ultimate Vegas Strip Club Guide (2025) available at the True Vegas Life website (Link Below).

Katılım Temmuz 2024
155 Takip Edilen26 Takipçiler
True Vegas Life
True Vegas Life@TrueVegasLife·
@wonderbondmma I don't want to say this, but it seems like acting. I've never seen that happen in any combat sport before.
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WonderBondMMA
WonderBondMMA@wonderbondmma·
Did she get KO’d then wake back up then go back to sleep?
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Ariel Helwani
Ariel Helwani@arielhelwani·
This is one of the wildest finishing sequences ever. You really need to see the 30 seconds or so after, too, because it’s absolutely terrifying
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True Vegas Life
True Vegas Life@TrueVegasLife·
@AriDavidPaul On one of the Blackjack YouTube channels, an ex-casino manager talks about how they did this even back in the 80's, but usually manually. They would send someone to check out the guy's house, car, etc.
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Ari Paul ⛓️
Ari Paul ⛓️@AriDavidPaul·
Went to Bellagio, wired money ahead of time. Went to cage to get it. They asked me to sign a contract with MGM that allows them to do background and credit check stuff (even in my case, just wanting to wire in advance and pick it up.) The wouldn’t budge on the contract so having them reverse the wire. Is this the same at every Vegas casino?
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True Vegas Life
True Vegas Life@TrueVegasLife·
@ns123abc If psychedelics give you Sam Altman's personality, then this may be the best anti-drug message ever. 🤣
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NIK@ns123abc·
Sam Altman says he used to be an unhappy, anxious man but his experiences with psychedelics at Burning Man saved him
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True Vegas Life
True Vegas Life@TrueVegasLife·
@Ric_RTP The problem is that all these clowns were chasing "superintelligence", and Anthropic realized they just needed to make tools that actually do something useful. It's funny all these "geniuses" like Zuckerberg and Altman never realized this.
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Ricardo
Ricardo@Ric_RTP·
OpenAI just admitted Anthropic is KILLING their business. Their own applications chief told employees it was a "code red." Said Anthropic was a "wake-up call." Then admitted OpenAI had been "spreading efforts across too many apps" and it was "slowing them down." This is an internal confession. Here's why Anthropic is eating up OpenAI: 12 months ago, OpenAI owned 50% of all enterprise AI spending. Today it's just 27%. Anthropic went from nearly ZERO to winning 70% of every first-time enterprise AI deal. Seven out of ten companies buying AI tools for the first time are choosing Claude over ChatGPT. A year ago, one in 25 businesses on Ramp paid for Anthropic. Today it's one in four. OpenAI just had its biggest single-month adoption decline ever recorded. And Anthropic literally charges MORE than OpenAI for roughly the same performance. And businesses are STILL choosing them. In enterprise software, that never happens. The cheaper product usually wins. But Claude became something OpenAI never figured out how to be: Cool. Celebrities publicly switched to Claude. Senators are tweeting about using it. Engineers are shipping entire products with Claude Code in hours that used to take weeks. It started to became an identity signal. Like blue bubble vs green bubble in iMessage. Choosing Claude says something about you now. Meanwhile OpenAI went the opposite direction: They took the Pentagon contract that Anthropic refused. Greg Brockman donated $25 million to fund wars. ChatGPT uninstalls jumped 295% in a single day. Reddit posts saying "Cancel and Delete ChatGPT" got 30,000 upvotes. Anthropic said no to mass surveillance and autonomous weapons. Got blacklisted by the Pentagon. Trump called them a "Radical Left AI company." And their downloads went to #1 on the App Store the next day. Turns out refusing to build weapons is good marketing. But the real damage isn't consumer downloads. It's the MONEY. Claude Code hit $2.5 billion in annual revenue in six months. OpenAI's competing product Codex just barely crossed $1 billion. And Anthropic literally cannot meet demand. They're turning away paying customers because they don't have enough compute to serve them. A company REJECTING revenue because it's growing too fast. While OpenAI scrambles to consolidate. Last week OpenAI announced they're merging ChatGPT, Codex, and their browser into one "superapp." But what this really means: "We launched too many products, none of them worked well enough alone, so now we're cramming everything together and hoping it sticks." And remember their video tool Sora? Launched standalone. Hit #1 on the App Store. Usage flatlined within weeks. Now they're forced to shut it down. Their browser Atlas? Still hasn't launched publicly. Their IPO? Polymarket odds dropped from 55% to 35%. OpenAI has 900 million users. Anthropic has maybe 10 million daily actives. But here's the thing... OpenAI won the consumer war. ChatGPT is where your mom asks about recipes and your cousin makes memes. Anthropic won the war that actually MATTERS. The developers. The engineers. The enterprises writing 7 figure checks. OpenAI built the biggest chatbot on Earth. Anthropic built the tool that companies can't stop paying for. This is Yahoo vs Google all over again. Yahoo had the users. Google had the product. And we all know how that ended. OpenAI has 12 months to prove the superapp works, land the IPO, and stop the enterprise bleeding. If they can't, the most valuable startup in history becomes the most cautionary tale in tech. 900 million users don't mean anything if the people who actually pay are walking out the door. What do you think?
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Wall Street Apes
Wall Street Apes@WallStreetApes·
American shows we are being robbed blind by Walmart He shows this bag of Walmart brand Great Value shrimp. The bag is 2 pounds, which is 32 ounces When he weighs the shrimp, it’s only 25.9 ounces He weighs each individual shrimp, each should be roughly 11.3 grams, shrimp after shrimp only weigh 6 grams and 8 grams We are being robbed. You’re paying for extra water frozen to the outside of the shrimps Just look how much water is in this bag
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True Vegas Life
True Vegas Life@TrueVegasLife·
@News3LV Fascism? Dude, there's prostitutes, gambling, and drugs all over the place in Vegas. Hardly the signs of a "fascist" government..lol
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KSNV News 3 Las Vegas
With a No Kings Protest on the way tomorrow, protesters are already out for Fight Fascism Fridays. The latest tonight on News 3 and news3lv.com.
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True Vegas Life
True Vegas Life@TrueVegasLife·
@BullTheoryio I like how Dario pretends to care about people, but then he happily releases all these free tools that wipe out billions of dollars in value per day. Does he think that money is just imaginary?
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Bull Theory
Bull Theory@BullTheoryio·
BREAKING: Anthropic accidentally leaked its next AI model and it just wiped out $14.5 billion from cybersecurity stocks in a single day. Claude Mythos was accidentally stored in a publicly accessible data cache and discovered before Anthropic could announce it. The model showed dramatically higher scores on cybersecurity tests, meaning AI can now detect and respond to threats at a level that traditionally required entire teams of security professionals and expensive enterprise software. Investors immediately started pricing in the question nobody in the industry wants to answer: if an AI model can do this, why does anyone need CrowdStrike? And the market answered immediately: - CrowdStrike is down 5.85%, wiping out $5.5 billion. - Palo Alto Networks is down 6.43%, wiping out $7.5 billion. - Zscaler is down 5.89%, wiping out $1.35 billion. - Tenable is down 9.70%, wiping out $185 million
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True Vegas Life
True Vegas Life@TrueVegasLife·
@PeterDiamandis If AI can actually do those things, why would it need humans to tell it what to do? I think that's what everyone is missing. If AI is actually as good as they say, it won't need people to sit around and type in prompts or babysit it. If it does, then it's just a productivity tool
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Peter H. Diamandis, MD
Peter H. Diamandis, MD@PeterDiamandis·
If AI can now solve math, discover physics and chemistry breakthroughs faster than human PhDs, why are we still training humans to be physicists? Serious question. Should education shift from 'learn to do X' to 'learn to direct AI doing X'? The wrong direction costs a generation their careers.
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True Vegas Life
True Vegas Life@TrueVegasLife·
@TMZ Man, he needs to start buying lower center of gravity cars that won't roll over all the time. If he drove sports cars he probably would have no arrests at all.
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TMZ
TMZ@TMZ·
🚨 BREAKING: Tiger Woods has been arrested for DUI after his rollover crash in Florida. Details: tmz.me/qY0U3uc
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True Vegas Life
True Vegas Life@TrueVegasLife·
@elonmusk But for some reason, humans got e-scooters and AI at roughly the same time. You would think those would be centuries apart. 🤣
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True Vegas Life
True Vegas Life@TrueVegasLife·
@r0ck3t23 The problem is that everybody on both sides is just cherry-picking examples. None of these prove anything, and nobody knows how jobs will all shake out.
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Dustin
Dustin@r0ck3t23·
Jensen Huang just gutted the AI job panic with one profession. Radiology. The field AI was supposed to kill first. Jensen Huang: “Computer vision was superhuman in 2019. And yet, the number of radiologists grew.” Not competitive. Not close. Superhuman. Every forecast said radiologists were finished. Every forecast was wrong. Not slightly wrong. Directionally wrong. There are now fewer radiologists than the world needs. A global shortage. In the exact specialty AI was supposed to erase. Why? Because the task was never the job. Huang: “The purpose of your job and the tasks and the tools that you use to do your job are related. Not the same.” Reading a scan is a task. Diagnosing disease is a purpose. AI handled the task. The purpose didn’t shrink. It compounded. Faster reads meant more patients seen. More patients seen meant more disease caught. More disease caught meant more demand for the people who decide what to do about it. The tool did not kill the job. It fed it. Then the fear did what the technology never could. Huang: “The alarmist warning went too far and it scared people from doing this profession that is so important to society. It did harm.” People heard radiologists were finished and walked away from the field. Medicine bled talent it could not afford to lose. Not because the work vanished. Because the panic said it would. The prediction was wrong. The damage was real. Huang: “The number of software engineers at Nvidia is going to grow, not decline.” Not hold steady. Grow. The company building the infrastructure that automates code is hiring more of the people who write it. Huang: “I wanted my software engineers to solve problems. I didn’t care how many lines of code they wrote.” Nobody ever hired an engineer to type. They hired them to think. When the machine handles syntax, the engineer does not become obsolete. The bottleneck just moves upstream. To architecture. To edge cases. To the kind of reasoning no model handles alone. The world was never short on unsolved problems. It was short on people free to chase them. That is the part the fear narrative misses every single time. 340,000 women once worked as telephone switchboard operators. That job is gone. Nobody mourns it. What replaced it created millions of roles that nobody in 1920 had the vocabulary to describe. The losses are always visible. The gains are always invisible until they arrive. That pattern has survived every technological shift in history. It is surviving this one. The people forecasting mass displacement are making the same mistake as the people who forecasted the end of radiology. They can see the task being automated. They cannot see the purpose expanding underneath it. That blindness is not just wrong. It is expensive. Every person scared out of a career that AI will actually make more valuable is a cost the economy absorbs for nothing. Not because of the technology. Because of the story told about it.
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True Vegas Life
True Vegas Life@TrueVegasLife·
@GrantCardone But won't all the displaced white-collar workers flood into trades, which will suppress wages? Supply and demand, dude. If history is any guide, the promise of tech usually backfires. Not on purpose, but remember when social media was going to unite us all?
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Grant Cardone
Grant Cardone@GrantCardone·
AI will create a blue-collar super boom bigger than the Industrial Revolution; technicians, electricians, welders, hvac, plumbers, construction, roofers and new businesses will be created to manage it all resulting in a further expansion of our middle class wealth. Get ready! Expansion follows in the wake of all breakthroughs & the bigger the breakthrough the bigger the expansion. What am I missing?
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True Vegas Life
True Vegas Life@TrueVegasLife·
@VitalVegas I think the answer is decriminalization of prostitution, but a drastic increase in penalties for pimping. If a woman wants to be a prostitute, she should be free to do so. The problems start when pimps start getting involved.
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Vital Vegas
Vital Vegas@VitalVegas·
Escorts are prevalent in Las Vegas, but prostitution is illegal. How does that work? Paying someone for their time and companionship is legal. Paying someone specifically for sex is illegal.
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True Vegas Life
True Vegas Life@TrueVegasLife·
@Ric_RTP Eventually, you guys will realize that many tech CEOs of the biggest companies are just fronts. They're meant to be the "face" and are just puppets. Look at Mark Zuckerberg. Everything he invests in fails and none of his visions come true, yet he gets a pass for some reason.
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Ricardo
Ricardo@Ric_RTP·
This AI whistleblower just EXPOSED Sam Altman for manipulating his way into becoming OpenAI’s CEO. Everyone who helped him build it has left because they felt used. Karen Hao interviewed 300 people including 90 current and former OpenAI employees. And she just told Steven Bartlett what she discovered: In 2015, Altman needed Elon Musk to co-found OpenAI. Problem was, Musk was obsessed with AI as an existential threat. So Altman wrote a blog post calling AI "probably the greatest threat to the continued existence of humanity." Before that blog post? Altman's biggest fear was engineered viruses. Not AI. He literally rewrote his worldview overnight to mirror Musk's language word for word. Musk bought in. Donated millions. Co-founded the company. Then Altman stabbed him in the back. When OpenAI needed a CEO for its new for-profit arm, the co-founders Ilia Sutskever and Greg Brockman initially chose Musk. Altman went directly to Brockman, a personal friend, and said: "Do we really want someone this erratic and unpredictable to control a technology that could be super powerful?" Brockman flipped. Then convinced Ilia to flip. Musk found out he wasn't getting the role and left. That's how the biggest rivalry in tech actually started. Not over ideology... Over a backroom power play. But here's where it gets darker: Every single person who built OpenAI alongside Altman eventually felt the same thing Musk felt. Used. Manipulated. Discarded. Dario Amodei, VP of Research, thought Altman shared his vision. Over time he realized Altman was on "exactly the opposite page" and had used his intelligence to build things he fundamentally disagreed with. He left and founded Anthropic. Ilia Sutskever, co-founder and chief scientist, tried to get Altman fired. He told colleagues: "I don't think Sam is the guy who should have the finger on the button for AGI." He was pushed outounded Safe Super Intelligence. That name alone tells you everything. Mira Murati, CTO, left and started Thinking Machines Lab. No other tech company in history has had every single co-builder leave and start a direct competitor. Not Google. Not Meta. Not Apple. NOBODY. 300 interviews exposed one consistent pattern: If you align with Altman's vision, you think he's the Steve Jobs of AI. If you don't, you feel like you were manipulated by someone who will say whatever is needed to whoever is listening. When talking to Congress? AGI will cure cancer and solve poverty. When talking to consumers? It's the best digital assistant you'll ever have. When talking to Microsoft? AGI is a system that generates $100 billion in revenue. Three completely different definitions of the same technology sold to three completely different audiences. And if you publicly disagree with any of it? OpenAI subpoenaed 7 nonprofit organizations that criticized them. Sent a sheriff to a 29yo nonprofit lawyer's door during dinner demanding every text, email, and document he'd ever sent about OpenAI. A one-man watchdog nonprofit got papers demanding all communications with anyone who questioned the company. OpenAI's own head of mission alignment publicly said "this doesn't seem great." That's the guy whose literal job is making sure OpenAI BENEFITS humanity. Former employees who spoke up about secret non-disparagement clauses that threatened to strip their equity described the psychological pressure as "crushing." This is the company that tells us it's building technology "for the benefit of humanity." Same company that mirrors whatever language gets them funded. Same company where every builder eventually walks away feeling deceived. Same company sending law enforcement to silence critics. The biggest AI company on Earth wasn't built on technology. It was built on one man's ability to tell everyone exactly what they needed to hear. And the scariest part is that it worked.
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True Vegas Life
True Vegas Life@TrueVegasLife·
@VitalVegas Somebody watched that Alex Hormozi guy and got carried away. Sell one meal for $1 million and you'll be a millionaire.
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True Vegas Life
True Vegas Life@TrueVegasLife·
@FOX5Vegas She said the NBA is a hot commodity right now. Hasn't the NBA had some of its worst viewing numbers in years recently? Not sure this woman is an expert.
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FOX5 Las Vegas
FOX5 Las Vegas@FOX5Vegas·
Will the Las Vegas community support its own NBA team? 🏀🤔 FOX5's Jaclyn Schultz spoke to Dr. Amanda Belarmino of the College of Hospitality at UNLV. “Men’s professional basketball is such a hot commodity right now, not just within the country, but globally." Story: fox5vegas.com/2026/03/25/tou…
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Gain of Fauci
Gain of Fauci@DschlopesIsBack·
I still have so many unanswered questions…
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