Average Joe

939 posts

Average Joe

Average Joe

@average_joe6515

J

Katılım Ocak 2024
281 Takip Edilen64 Takipçiler
Average Joe retweetledi
Andrew Kaufman MD
Andrew Kaufman MD@AndrewKaufmanMD·
If you are against data centers, then you should also avoid using AI entirely. This technology will contribute to the decrease in critical thinking and cognitive ability of what already is an extremely dumbed down society. If you want to preserve your brain function, remove this tech from your life.
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unusual_whales
unusual_whales@unusual_whales·
JUST IN: Iran is reportedly seeking a long truce and gradual reopening of Strait of Hormuz, per Reuters
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Awami Brief
Awami Brief@AwamiBrieff·
@Osint613 This is what real diplomatic relevance looks like. Pakistan did not shout for attention; it quietly pushed the right buttons, created space for a deal, and got major powers to adjust course 🇵🇰
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Open Source Intel
Open Source Intel@Osint613·
Marco Rubio: The reason why Project Freedom stopped was at the request of Pakistan. The Pakistanis said, “If you guys stop Project Freedom, we think we can get to a deal.” We went ahead and agreed to stop it.
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Average Joe
Average Joe@average_joe6515·
@MattTorma @VikingNation28 Data centers that run the Internet are very different from AI data centers, with respect to hardware, environmental footprint, energy use, and obviously their purpose. (Serving websites vs running AI)
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Viking Nation #MinnesotaStrong #Resist
They are running commercials for data center acceptance now 😂 Keep fighting, it's billionaires against everyone on this!!!
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DREW DANIEL
DREW DANIEL@DDDrewDaniel·
AI boosterism graduation speeches getting booed by Gen Z is a clear indicator of generational fracture. Rich people in their 50s & 60s have tech-centered stock portfolios pumped up by AI hype that (so far) keep rising in value; young people see a world without jobs or homes.
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GamersNexus
GamersNexus@GamersNexus·
Watching executives get loud boos at commencement speeches for peddling their AI slop is awesome. Keep it up. Lisa Su has one soon!
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Laurel
Laurel@BalanceCrafting·
I don't remember any graduation speakers in the 1990s/early 2000s getting booed for praising the internet Getting clearer by the day that Americans do NOT like being force-fed this bullshit
Alex Kantrowitz@Kantrowitz

This is incredible. Artificial intelligence getting booed out of the stadium in any commencement speech it’s mentioned. Maybe telling college students AI was taking their jobs wasn’t the best strategy. Must watch —>

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Average Joe
Average Joe@average_joe6515·
@SouthernValue95 Sellside analysts have always been overly optimistic. Analysts practically drooled over Enron back in the day, and we all know how that turned out..
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SouthernValue
SouthernValue@SouthernValue95·
Zitron seems to have head buried in the sand (kindest way I can frame it). Are there are smart AI bears who understand datacenter demand and tokenomics? I mostly only hear from top down macro or value guys who have always been bearish on tech. Who are the sharp AI bears publishing their thoughts? I know some in private, and many who are cautious but few outright bearish. I don’t think a single notable sellside firm is bearish or growing more so as prices climb (predictable). Maybe Redburn cloud guy closest? But ofc NVDA analyst is bullish. Burry is thoughtful but I disagree with a lot of his framing. Many smart bulls all along the pragmatic optimist to AI maximalist spectrum… many unthoughtful bulls naively willing to call something “cheap” at 10x EPS when margins are 3-5x higher than normal (I recognize some have thought more deeply abt structural persistence of shortage dynamics).
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Average Joe
Average Joe@average_joe6515·
@realEstateTrent Using Claude all day will make you stupid. Then you'll be too stupid to recognize when Claude spits out garbage. I don't see how this ends well for society in the long run.
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StripMallGuy
StripMallGuy@realEstateTrent·
I wasn’t fully convinced until a few months ago when we hired a 27-year-old analyst who’s on Claude all day. Our 7-person company is now functioning like a 15-person company, and we’re just scratching the surface. Every single task he works on starts with Claude. If you’re not there, you’re in for a shock. If you are, you’re already in shock at how fast the world just changed.
Brett Caughran@FundamentEdge

A big pivot from Ken Griffin on AI: “Number one is, in the last few months, there has been a step change in the productivity of the AI toolkit. It is profoundly more powerful than it was just nine months ago. And for us at Citadel, that has allowed us to unleash a much broader array of use cases for AI. And it has been really interesting to watch, to be blunt, work that we would usually do with people with masters and PhDs in finance over the course of weeks or months being done by AI agents over the course of hours or days. These are not these are not mid-tier white collar jobs. These are like extraordinarily high skilled jobs being, I'm going to pick a word, automated by agentic AI. And I gotta tell you, I went home one Friday actually fairly depressed by this because you could just see how this was going to have such a dramatic impact on society. When you witness it in your own four walls, when you see work that used to be man years of work being done in days or weeks, it's like, wow, like that's the first time I've seen real impact in our four walls.” This echoes my own experience with agents and the conversations I am having with students, friends & clients. The toolkit has dramatically transformed and it feels like in finance, for the first time, AI is real.

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Open Source Intel
Open Source Intel@Osint613·
President Trump just posted a video of himself playing commander-in-chief from what appears to be the bridge of a U.S. warship. Spotting an Iranian drone on screen, Trump orders: “Fire! Boom!”
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Average Joe
Average Joe@average_joe6515·
@robbystarbuck I stopped taking you seriously at "Most data centers will be in space in 10 years or so."
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Robby Starbuck
Robby Starbuck@robbystarbuck·
People act like they have no role to play in this. The volume of social media use, internet use, AI use and app use is off the charts. The AI being built and used is data heavy. It’s like drinking tons of water and wondering why so many reservoirs are built. I have good news though: Most data centers will be in space in 10 years or so. The bad news? Then your community will lose tax dollars and be upset that the centers are moving to space. That’s the truth even if some people don’t like it. Another thing: Big Tech co’s would win a lot of local favor if they’d just outright promise to pick up the tab for electric overrun and a tiny bit of people’s electric bill in the community. Work this out with local officials where some tax brought in offsets electric bills. These aren’t impossible issues to solve but few are putting forward ideas for some reason.
Mistress Dividend@mistressdivy

Why is every single town getting in America getting a data center, nothing has ever expanded this quickly in American history with no public approval.

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Nairebis - e/max-acc
@robbystarbuck Do NOT believe the anti-AI propaganda. Data centers are literally the most important issue to civilization. Extremely disappointing that you're buying the anti-tech extreme-left propaganda. AI is unambiguously good and the only thing that will save our country from collapse.
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Average Joe
Average Joe@average_joe6515·
@Kalshi Non biologists have been saying this for years
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Kalshi
Kalshi@Kalshi·
JUST IN: JPMorgan CEO says AI will "cure cancer"
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Average Joe
Average Joe@average_joe6515·
@kevinolearytv You're out of touch with reality. Common folk don't like you and hate AI for good reasons. Simple as that.
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Kevin O'Leary aka Mr. Wonderful
Why is there suddenly such an aggressive push against American data centers and AI infrastructure? After seeing a major spike in coordinated opposition campaigns around our Utah projects, we conducted a digital audit and traced a large amount of the activity back to an organization called Alliance for a Better Utah, which has been pushing misinformation throughout Box Elder County about our data center developments. What’s even more concerning is where the funding appears to originate. After reviewing IRS Form 990 filings and tracing the network behind it, the money appears tied to Chinese linked funding channels connected through an organization called Arabella. Think about the incentive, if China is racing to dominate AI and compute capacity, why wouldn’t they want to slow American infrastructure down?
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SmailsTheThird
SmailsTheThird@smailsthethird·
I was there. The kids were being petulant and more prone to booing because of the Epstein accusations. Having said that, to boo ai, and “put your head in the sand” is to be ignorant of the reality of both ai and what he was saying. ai is here to stay whether you like it or not. Your choice to harness it as a tool and become a black belt, or let someone else. @ericschmidt was advocating that the kids not accept their/the future is written. He was advising them to chart their own course and believe in themselves. But, the students were to busy all in their heads about “their truth” and protest to even hear what he was saying.
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Christina Kueppers, LL.M in IP & Technology Law
I attended the University of Arizona commencement ceremony, where Eric Schmidt @ericschmidt faced boos throughout his speech. If you don’t know how young graduates feel about AI, this post is for you. The message is clear: it reflects growing skepticism toward AI narratives coming out of Silicon Valley. I keep coming back to one question for anyone building AI: are you building for humans? Build responsible and ethical AI. AI governance and compliance matter. (Speech excerpt.)
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Average Joe
Average Joe@average_joe6515·
@FirstSquawk Human experts can identify the poor quality of first-pass AI-generated analysis. Non experts might not be able to. I suspect this is what Mr Griffin is experiencing here.
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First Squawk
First Squawk@FirstSquawk·
CITADEL KEN GRIFFIN WARNS AGENTIC AI IS AUTOMATING ELITE FINANCE JOBS IN HOURS, NOT MONTHS
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Average Joe
Average Joe@average_joe6515·
@HalSinger I think the Economist has a partnership with Anthropic. They'll say they're editorially independent but 🤷‍♀️
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Hal Singer
Hal Singer@HalSinger·
When you’ve lost The Economist “Eventually humans could, like the horses in the age of the car, become uneconomical.”
Hal Singer tweet mediaHal Singer tweet media
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Average Joe
Average Joe@average_joe6515·
@AllVentured I stopped reading at the part where he mentioned OpenAI as a positive
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AllThingsVentured
AllThingsVentured@AllVentured·
Bill Ackman tries a knife catch on $MSFT at the top simply because it 20% blow all time highs even though it still trades at 10x sales. I will happily take the other side of this trade for a structurally challenged business not growing seats, with plateauing earnings despite its significant manufactured cloud earnings from circular financing deals with OpenAI.
Bill Ackman@BillAckman

As two of the largest forces in equity markets -- growing index ownership and increasing amounts of capital controlled by extremely short-term-oriented, leveraged, volatility-intolerant investors -- converge, we have found occasional opportunities to acquire some of the most dominant long-term compounding franchises at attractive valuations. For example, we acquired Alphabet $GOOG when the stock declined substantially on the release of ChatGPT in late 2022, Amazon $AMZN in the weeks following Liberation Day, and $META more recently on the market's response to the company's unexpectedly large cap ex guidance and expenditures. In our 13F which we will file later today, we will disclose a new position in Microsoft, a company we have followed for many years now offered at a highly compelling valuation. While $PSUS will not be filing a 13F tomorrow, it has also recently made $MFST a core holding. Microsoft operates two of the most valuable franchises in enterprise technology, which account for approximately 70% of the company's overall profits: M365 and Azure. M365, the company's productivity suite, is the dominant operating platform for knowledge work, with over 450 million workers using Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, and Teams on a daily basis. Azure is the world's second-largest hyperscaler cloud platform and, like AWS in our Amazon investment, is a direct beneficiary of the multi-decade migration of enterprise IT workloads to the cloud, which is now further accelerated by surging demand for AI inference workloads. Both M365 and Azure are underpinned by Microsoft's unparalleled enterprise distribution and the security, compliance, and identity infrastructure it has built and refined over decades. Beyond these core franchises, Microsoft also owns a portfolio of other leading businesses, including LinkedIn (the world's largest professional network with 1.3 billion members), its gaming platform (Xbox and Activision Blizzard), and search and news advertising (Bing and the Edge browser). We began building our position in MSFT in February following a meaningful share price decline after the company reported its fiscal Q2 2026 results. We were able to establish our position at a valuation of 21 times forward earnings, broadly in line with the market multiple and well below Microsoft's trading average over the last few years. Notably, MSFT's headline multiple does not reflect the value of Microsoft's approximately 27% economic interest in OpenAI, which would represent approximately $200 billion, or 7% of Microsoft's market capitalization, at OpenAI's most recent funding round valuation. We believe Microsoft's recent share price decline has been principally driven by investor concerns around two key issues: i) the competitive positioning of M365 against increasingly capable AI lab offerings (notably Anthropic's Claude Cowork), and ii) the durability of Azure's growth, especially in light of Microsoft's evolving relationship with OpenAI. In our view, investors underestimate the resilience of the M365 franchise given its deeply embedded role across enterprises and highly attractive price-value proposition. Unlike point software solutions, which may be vulnerable to disintermediation by better-performing AI alternatives, M365 is tightly integrated into the daily workflow of nearly every large enterprise and is supported by Microsoft's identity, security, compliance, and data governance infrastructure, which would be nearly impossible to replicate. Attractive bundle economics further reinforce Microsoft's advantage, with monthly average revenue per user on the M365 suite at approximately $20, less than half of what customers would pay to purchase the underlying applications individually from different vendors. Moreover, we are encouraged to see Microsoft prioritizing its R&D efforts and investment in Copilot, its own AI agent embedded across M365, with direct involvement from CEO Satya Nadella. We believe these efforts will translate into improved product velocity and greater customer adoption over time. Alongside Copilot's rollout, the company has also begun shifting its pricing model from pure per-seat licensing to a hybrid model of seats plus metered consumption, which helps expand the company’s revenue opportunity as AI agents drive incremental usage that a seat-only structure would not capture. These initiatives should help sustain M365’s strong underlying growth momentum, which was already evident in the business unit’s 15% revenue growth (in constant currency) last quarter. We believe concerns regarding Azure's growth trajectory are similarly misplaced, particularly in light of the franchise's exceptional recent performance. Azure revenue grew 39% in constant currency last quarter, with company guiding to modest acceleration through the second half of the year. We view Microsoft's recent decision to restructure its OpenAI partnership not as a concession but as part of a deliberate pivot toward a more open, multi-model architecture that better serves enterprise customers, who increasingly seek optionality across model providers. Microsoft recently disclosed that over 10,000 enterprise customers have used more than one model on Azure Foundry, the company’s modular AI model marketplace. This model-agnostic approach also strengthens Copilot, which can auto-route queries across multiple models to deliver the optimal output for a given task. To support Azure's rapid growth amid persistent supply constraints, Microsoft has raised its calendar year 2026 capex budget to approximately $190 billion. Consistent with what we have observed at hyperscaler peers Amazon and Google, we view this spend as growth capex that should drive future revenue generation. This is particularly true for Microsoft, given that roughly two-thirds of its capex budget is allocated to server and networking equipment that correlates directly with near-term revenue. Like our purchases of $GOOG, $AMZN, and $META, we believe that $MSFT offers analogous and compelling long-term value at today's valuation.

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