TweetHyena

1.3K posts

TweetHyena

TweetHyena

@TweetHyena

Katılım Kasım 2022
227 Takip Edilen26 Takipçiler
The Waffle
The Waffle@GamboRecket·
@tech__unicorn We're totally NOT there. It cant design a proper logo (i mean, a conceptually and graphically interesting one), among other things. AI is dumb as fuck. It hallucinates way too often, like, always. It is incapable of recognizing its errors, etc. It's SILLY. Wake up.
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Delia Lazarescu
Delia Lazarescu@tech__unicorn·
the elites don't want you to know this but we've already achieved AGI - the labs know - the government knows the reason you're still getting "impressive but not quite there" announcements is because nobody has figured out what happens to markets, jobs, and governments the day the world actually believes it so we're in a managed disclosure buying time Anthropic please!
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TweetHyena
TweetHyena@TweetHyena·
@LackTact @RepJackKimble He didn't say he can't live. He said he could make more elsewhere. You people don't understand. If you want talented people, you have to pay them or they leave.
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I Lack Tact
I Lack Tact@LackTact·
@RepJackKimble I don't even make $40k per year and I work 261 days a year. You are truly and tremendously a retard if you can't live off $200k, even in this dogshit economy that you reprobates put us in.
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Rep. Jack Kimble
Rep. Jack Kimble@RepJackKimble·
Just a friendly warning. We don’t even make $200k per year in Congress despite working nearly 140 days. If we aren’t properly compensated, a lot of us will go to the private sector and you will be left with some real idiots in Congress.
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CHRIS
CHRIS@WAKINGAMERICA13·
@elonmusk It relies on this little thing called electricity that the government can shut down. If they choose to🤔 other than that, yeah, it's a great creation.
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Only when you drive the Cybertruck do you realize how incredible it is: a bulletproof tank that moves like a million dollar sports car! Reason for the angular shape is that the thick, ultra-hard stainless steel body panels cannot be stamped like the thin, feeble, paper-strength mild steel of other trucks. Cybertruck body panels would break 5000 ton stamping machines.
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal

One of Elon's most vocal critics just bought a Cybertruck. Brian Krassenstein, who has spent years publicly clashing with @elonmusk, announced the purchase yesterday. His reason had nothing to do with politics. He has a young family and the Cybertruck is the only pickup truck in America to hold both an IIHS Top Safety Pick+ award and a perfect 5-star NHTSA rating simultaneously. When your fiercest critics are buying your product because the data leaves them no choice, that's a different kind of win.

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TweetHyena
TweetHyena@TweetHyena·
@JJEnglert I am creating apps with Code and Codex daily. Cowork makes no sense to me. What do you mean employees are using it? How? Claude has done a terrible job with this.
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JJ Englert
JJ Englert@JJEnglert·
10 things I'm seeing on the frontlines of AI adoption in the enterprise: 1. Chat is where 90% of employees still live. It's the gateway drug. Everything else is downstream of getting people comfortable here first. 2. Power users discover Cowork and lose their minds. It's the "wait, it can actually do the work?" moment. 3. Claude Code has very little penetration with non-technical users in the enterprise still. 4. Microsoft being the "approved" tool doesn't matter. Employees route around Copilot and pitch their managers for Claude access on their own. 5. Artifacts in Claude are a breakout feature. People don't want to view them — they want to deploy them, connect them to Snowflake, etc., ship them as internal MVPs for their org to actually use. 6. Cowork is crossing the line from "demo" to "real work." Legal teams redlining contracts. Ops teams running workflows. Then immediately asking: how do I automate this for production? 7. The next unlock → automated cloud workflows that leverage an agent like Claude while keeping non-technical users within the tools they're already using and in a chat interface. The demand is screaming. 8. Terminology is major blocker. Projects vs. skills vs. plugins vs. agents. I've explained "what is a skill" 200+ times. The moment it clicks, people get excited — but the path there is too long. 9. Enterprise IT restrictions (locked connectors, no browser access) quietly strip Cowork of its superpowers. The features that make it magical are the first ones IT disables. 10. There is a high level of "AI insecurity". For the first time in a long time, people at all levels (even C-Suite) need to signifcantly upskill in order to stay world class in their positions, and this is causing people to be insecure about their skill set across the org. General note on Microsoft: I spent a lot of this past week deep in Power Automate and Copilot Studio trying to build an automated solution in the cloud — given it's the native tool with sanctioned access to their org's data. It's ~90% there. But the final 10% is riddled with terrible UX, inconsistent behavior, and a generally poor experience. Honestly feels like Microsoft is fumbling the biggest moment in their company's history with software that has all the features on paper but lacks the magical "just works" moment for non-technical team members. The gap is wide open and they're letting others "eat their lunch" right now.
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Kenshi
Kenshi@kenshii_ai·
Sam Altman is walking the tightest financial tightrope in tech history and OpenAI is the one about to fall. The New York Times exposes how he is slashing projects and forcing discipline on a company that made roughly 13 billion dollars last year but faces over 100 billion in spending ahead. Now he is pushing ads into ChatGPT just to survive. This is not the AGI revolution. It is a cash burning machine propped up by hype and endless investor handouts. OpenAI reeks of desperation with sky high valuations and unprofitable growth. The burn rate is swallowing them whole. OpenAI will go down as the biggest corporate fraud of the decade, a hollow hype machine that collapses and drags the entire AI bubble with it, leaving only broken promises behind. The emperor has no clothes and the bill is coming due.
Kenshi tweet mediaKenshi tweet media
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TweetHyena
TweetHyena@TweetHyena·
@aronprins @dotta @papercliping These are always so vague. I wish AI apps would give SPECIFIC EXAMPLES. "It will launch a company and make decisions." Yeah? Ok it can run a concrete company? What. Are. We. Actually. Talking. About? Info products?
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Aron Prins
Aron Prins@aronprins·
Paperclip Docs: officially landed! I'm happy and proud to announce that my documentation for Paperclip is now officially available at docs.paperclip.ing Thanks @dotta for trusting me with this, and I look forward to helping more people get started with @papercliping 🔥
Aron Prins tweet media
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TomT ✞ ن
TomT ✞ ن@VRWCTexanTwo·
Pure garbage bluster from Ghalibaf (Parliament Speaker). The latest best estimate(s) indicate Zero Crude Storage Capacity within 12 to 20 days. Wells do not "explode" Iran cannot safely wait until the "last day" and shut in 3500+ wells simultaneously. That would be technically reckless and economically/self-damaging on a massive scale. #Critically Reservoir and well damage risks are real — Especially in Iran's mature, carbonate-heavy fields (many limestone formations). Sudden pressure changes can cause: Water intrusion/coning. Clay swelling and chemical instability are real risks. Fines migration, sand/debris settling, corrosion in wells/pipelines - Is likely once shut-in for a period of 30+days. #Permanent drops in crude recovery rates (some analysts warn 25–50% long-term loss in affected wells if prolonged).
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Open Source Intel
Open Source Intel@Osint613·
Iran’s Ghalibaf: 3 days in, no well exploded. We could extend to 30 and livestream the well here. That was the kind of junk advice the US admin gets from people like Bessent who also push the blockade theory and cranked oil up to $120+. Next stop: 140. The issue isn't the theory, it's the mindset.
Open Source Intel tweet media
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TweetHyena
TweetHyena@TweetHyena·
@Diplomatt42 @GreekTweeterV2 @LadyNimby You are a moron. Many other extremely complex industries operate without government and provide line item bills with low prices. The government created closed monopolistic markets.
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Matt 🌐🇺🇸🇺🇦
Matt 🌐🇺🇸🇺🇦@Diplomatt42·
For all the people criticizing me in this thread, no one has put forth any convincing argument that removing government involvement would solve the problems that the OP is facing. The healthcare market fails to meet many of the requirements for efficient functioning of a free market (voluntary participation, price, transparency, competition, etc.). Therefore, you need government intervention to address these deficiencies such as requiring healthcare providers to have transparent prices. Yes, there are many ways in which government intervention has been co-opted by the companies to make it worse for consumers (e.g. certificate of need laws). But removing government protection of consumers instead of improving it will leave patients far worse off
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Lady Nimby
Lady Nimby@LadyNimby·
Recently took my 15mo to urgent care bc she obviously had an ear infection and it was Friday evening, bc of course it was. They tested for the flu and billed $500 for that nose swab. We were responsible for $258. Called about it like, those tests cost $20 at Walgreens? “Well that’s our price, your insurance approved it” “Insurance paid less than half of it, they can approve gouging me?” “That’s the price” “What’s the price if we are uninsured and pay cash?” “Prices change.” “Ok then bill me that” “We can’t if you’re insured.” Madness. Imagine going to a restaurant, ordering a coffee, drinking it, getting the bill for $500 and being told you’ll be sued if you don’t pay it. And you have zero recourse. Thanks Obama
Riley Gaines@Riley_Gaines_

It's been 7 months since we had our baby and we're still receiving unexplained hospital bills in the mail. Hardly ever an adequate description of services. Just a QR code to pay online. It feels intentionally confusing and difficult to get answers. We want price transparency.

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TweetHyena
TweetHyena@TweetHyena·
@DeepTechTR What are you supposed to do with it? Doesn't say anything about having conversation with humans.
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DeepTechTR 🇹🇷
DeepTechTR 🇹🇷@DeepTechTR·
🚨 SON DAKİKA: Yapay zekâ ses araçları için bir daha asla para ödemeyin! MICROSOFT, yapay zekâ ses aracını açık kaynaklı hale getirdi. Bir zamanlar güvenlik kontrolleri için filigranlı olan en güçlü yapay zekâ ses aracını ücretsiz olarak yeniden yayınladılar. > 10 saniyelik sesten herhangi bir sesi kopyalayın > 90 dakikalık ses oluşturun > 50'den fazla dili destekler > Gerçek zamanlı akış > Yerel olarak çalışır %100 Açık Kaynak ve Ücretsiz. github.com/microsoft/Vibe…
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AE River
AE River@ChinaPR_57·
Will someone at the WH please tell the Narcissist-in-Chief that it’s tweets like this one that are losing him support. Going off the deep end is a sign of weakness and foolishness. It says that a person is driven by emotions, not by reason or logic. Offending a whole group of people to get back at one person for expressing their beliefs is immature and asinine. This is one of reasons a vast majority of Americans, me included, don’t like Trump. He’s out of control!!
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Commentary Donald J. Trump Posts From Truth Social
𝗗𝗼𝗻𝗮𝗹𝗱 𝗝. 𝗧𝗿𝘂𝗺𝗽 𝗧𝗿𝘂𝘁𝗵 𝗦𝗼𝗰𝗶𝗮𝗹 𝗣𝗼𝘀𝘁 𝟬𝟵:𝟬𝟯 𝗣𝗠 𝗘𝗦𝗧 𝟬𝟰.𝟭𝟮.𝟮𝟲 Pope Leo is WEAK on Crime, and terrible for Foreign Policy. He talks about “fear” of the Trump Administration, but doesn’t mention the FEAR that the Catholic Church, and all other Christian Organizations, had during COVID when they were arresting priests, ministers, and everybody else, for holding Church Services, even when going outside, and being ten and even twenty feet apart. I like his brother Louis much better than I like him, because Louis is all MAGA. He gets it, and Leo doesn’t! I don’t want a Pope who thinks it’s OK for Iran to have a Nuclear Weapon. I don’t want a Pope who thinks it’s terrible that America attacked Venezuela, a Country that was sending massive amounts of Drugs into the United States and, even worse, emptying their prisons, including murderers, drug dealers, and killers, into our Country. And I don’t want a Pope who criticizes the President of the United States because I’m doing exactly what I was elected, IN A LANDSLIDE, to do, setting Record Low Numbers in Crime, and creating the Greatest Stock Market in History. Leo should be thankful because, as everyone knows, he was a shocking surprise. He wasn’t on any list to be Pope, and was only put there by the Church because he was an American, and they thought that would be the best way to deal with President Donald J. Trump. If I wasn’t in the White House, Leo wouldn’t be in the Vatican. Unfortunately, Leo’s Weak on Crime, Weak on Nuclear Weapons, does not sit well with me, nor does the fact that he meets with Obama Sympathizers like David Axelrod, a LOSER from the Left, who is one of those who wanted churchgoers and clerics to be arrested. Leo should get his act together as Pope, use Common Sense, stop catering to the Radical Left, and focus on being a Great Pope, not a Politician. It’s hurting him very badly and, more importantly, it’s hurting the Catholic Church! President DONALD J. TRUMP
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Mario Nawfal
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal·
Trump and Iran WILL accept some form of ceasefire/delay tonight, and WILL end the war this month. Here's why... What most people don't realize, but the markets know very well: Trump has no choice but to end this war very soon Simple reason: 'It's the economy stupid' Trump is not 'insane', as some are saying. He went too far with his posts, but he did the same with Greenland, and with Canada, to name a few The Trump posting right now is the same Trump that tried hard to end the war in Ukraine, 'ended' the Gaza war (in theory), and credits himself with ending many other wars The Iran war is a tragic miscalculation: Was meant to be a Venezuela 2.0, but failed miserably Since then, Trump has abandoned all his initial objectives: Regime change, regime modification, controlling the Strait When he realized and accepted this new reality, Iran realized how much leverage they have by controlling the Strait of Hormuz, and they weren't gonna let that go unless they get concessions that make up for the massive destruction they faced But here's the reality: Iran doesn't want to keep getting bombed, and Trump doesn't want to crash the global economy Both parties want to end the war as soon as possible. They are currently going through a process in which each side realizes how much (or little) leverage they have, and what concession they need to make. Pakistan's request for a 2-week ceasefire likely came at Trump's request, with Iran hinting they will accept it. The ceasefire decision has already been made by both sides, and we will know about it shortly. And in relation to the war, I expect the war to end this month. Both Iran and Trump, no matter what you think of them, are rational actors
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Clay Horner
Clay Horner@clay7825·
@jackunheard He refunded the deposit they made for weapons that weren’t delivered. That is law. If you make a deposit and don’t get the product do you get the money back?
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Jack
Jack@jackunheard·
🚨This is BY FAR the most IMPORTANT part of President Trump's address to the nation tonight. He completely exposed Barack Hussein Obama live in front of millions for shipping Iran billions in cash that funded global terror. "Hussein Obama gave them $1.7 billion in cash, green, green cash! Took it out of banks from Virginia, D.C., and Maryland." "They LAUGHED at our President and went on with their mission to have a nuclear bomb!" "His Iran deal would have led to a colossal arsenal of massive nuclear weapons for Iran, and they would have had them years ago, and they would have used them, would have been a different world."
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Cole Ruud-Johnson
Cole Ruud-Johnson@coleruudjohnson·
I built an army of AI agents that pull the most motivated seller leads daily for me. Probates, fire damage, real-time condition ranking using satellite images, & more. It took me 4 hours to build & is a cheat code. Comment "Scrape" & I'll DM you a step-by-step sheet on building your own.
Cole Ruud-Johnson tweet media
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TweetHyena
TweetHyena@TweetHyena·
@vrexec Why do you guys always talk about 20% down? Why would anyone do that? Invest the money and put the minimum down. Avoiding PMI has a terrible ROI and it will appreciate out after 5 years. It's like you can't do basic math.
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VEO
VEO@vrexec·
I'm doing some back of the envelope math on buying vs renting. Say you buy a $1M house with 20% down at about 6% mortgage rate and plan to stay there for five years. Your principal paydown in the first five years is about $57,000, but you've paid about $230,000 in interest. You've also paid roughly $100,000 in property taxes, insurance, and maintenance. Say the house appreciated 2.5% every year — so when you sell it's worth about $1.13 million. Your all-in costs to sell are about 7.5% — brokerage commissions, transfer taxes, attorney fees, title insurance, and the inevitable post-inspection negotiation. On a $1.13M sale that's about $85K in fees. So you net about $1.046M. You still owe $743K on the mortgage. You walk away with about $303K in cash — your $200K down payment back, your $57K in principal, and about $46K in net profit from appreciation. Your non-recoverable costs — interest, property tax, insurance, maintenance — were about $330K over five years, or about $5,500/month. That's your effective rent. But you "made" $46K selling, or about $770/month — so your effective rent was about $4,700/month. Not bad, but you tied up $200K for five years to get there. And if appreciation was 1.5% instead of 2.5%, that net gain basically disappears and you're paying $5,400+/month in effective rent. And this assumes there's appreciation at all — and that something doesn't go wrong with your house that needs a major remodel or repair. On a five-year horizon at 6% rates, you need everything to go right on appreciation just to make ownership competitive with renting. The transaction costs eat most of your upside. What am I missing? Anything?
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Mazi okwuoma
Mazi okwuoma@MaziEzike_Nedu·
The ultimate game of 'Whack-a-Mole' at a 1,500-foot depth. When you're dealing with automated railways and vertical shafts drilled into solid granite, 'air superiority' meets its match. The Pentagon is finding out that you can’t bomb a problem that’s literally buried under a mountain. It’s a total strategic deadlock.
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Mario Nawfal
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal·
🇮🇷🇺🇸 The U.S. owns the sky over Iran. Iran owns everything underneath it. Yazd got bombed repeatedly. Then it launched missiles anyway. Welcome to the problem the Pentagon can't solve with air superiority. Iran spent twenty years building "missile cities" inside solid granite mountains, up to 1,500 feet deep. Automated railways move warheads through underground networks. Missiles fire through vertical shafts drilled through the rock ceiling and the blast door seals behind them. The weapon is never exposed until the moment it's already flying. America's heaviest bunker buster, the 30,000 pound GBU-57, detonates before reaching the main chambers. So the coalition resorted to bombing tunnel entrances instead, hoping to seal the missiles inside. Iran anticipated that too. Dozens of redundant exits and engineering crews inside the mountain clearing rubble within hours. Source: Reuters, WSJ, Axios
Mario Nawfal tweet mediaMario Nawfal tweet media
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal

🚨🇮🇷 BREAKING: Reports that Amirkabir University of Technology in Tehran was allegedly struck, footage showing smoking rubble. One of Iran's most prestigious engineering universities.

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No Buddy
No Buddy@NoBuddy2014·
@teslaeurope I'd get one if they had a Military Discount.
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TweetHyena
TweetHyena@TweetHyena·
@jspeiser You can use Codex to directly control openclaw and fully set it up. It is amazing. I am sure Claude can do the same thing. I am not technical at all but I can fully control openclaw with codex.
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Joe Speiser ⚡️
Joe Speiser ⚡️@jspeiser·
I've been using all three AI agents. OpenClaw, Perplexity Computer, and Claude Cowork. Here's what I've found so far: OpenClaw is the most powerful if you're technical, love tinkering and have a ton of time to mess around. Open source, self-hosted, you pick your models. You can make it do basically anything. But you're also the one building and maintaining all of it (as its always breaking). Claude Cowork feels the most like having an actual coworker (for 1 specific task). It runs on your Mac, works with your local files, and the plugins for legal, finance, and HR are legit. Downside is it only uses Anthropic models and your laptop has to stay open. Perplexity Computer is the easiest one to actually get work done (imo) with tons of models running behind the scenes, plugs right into Gmail, Slack, Notion, and it runs in the cloud so it keeps going while you sleep. Tradeoff is you're living in their ecosystem. (oh and their local browser control needs major work, it's unreliable) so: Want full control? OpenClaw. Want a desktop co-pilot? Cowork. Want to hand off real tasks and walk away? Perplexity Computer. These tools are changing weekly though, im just trying to keep up. What did I miss?
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Marc Van Ranst
Marc Van Ranst@vanranstmarc·
@thehealthb0t Why do you think so few people get tetanus nowadays? It almost seems as though something is automagically protecting them. It would be interesting to investigate this further!
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healthbot
healthbot@thehealthb0t·
Exposing the tetanus hoax - In the last decade 13 died from tetanus in the US. - It's a vaccine that can be taken at the time of injury. Yet babies are given 5 shots. - The risk is that 1 in 154 million will die from tetanus. Another Big Pharma scam!
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