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@bquimper

Random musings

Katılım Haziran 2010
352 Takip Edilen785 Takipçiler
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Mark Rhodes
Mark Rhodes@MarkRhodes11·
@oloal The guitarist Herb Ellis said, “You can play your way into a new way of thinking, but you can’t think your way into a new way of playing.”
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Meredith Thornburgh
Meredith Thornburgh@MCMCD_·
Something Jocko said on a podcast I was listening to c. winter 2020-2021 changed my life—he was recounting how someone once asked him “what he says to himself” to get himself to do all the crazy disciplined stuff he does (up before 4am working out every morning, etc) and he was like that is the EXACT wrong question, you need to get out of the mind and into the body, you need to learn how to move the body by just going around the mind, let it scream and protest while you drag yourself out of bed, you cannot be held hostage by having to get the mind on board before you do anything
Alex Olshonsky@oloal

Heard this in AA years before I realized it was wu wei: “It's easier to act your way into new ways of thinking than it is to think your way into new ways of acting.”

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Quimp
Quimp@bquimper·
@justinaversano Coming out of my months-long C hiatus to say: F*** yeah brother!! You rock! Congrats on an epic adventure. I can't wait for what will follow. Let's go to the stars!
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justinaversano
justinaversano@justinaversano·
GM to the End 🎞️ Moments of the Unknown. 366 April 7th at 15:43 in Addis Adaba, Ethiopia
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Gregory Eddi Jones
Gregory Eddi Jones@EddiJonesPrjcts·
My 2.5 year tenure as communications lead for @bottoproject is coming to a close, and it's been a hell of a ride. Of course, I'll keep fond memories of all the standard comms + writing work I provided, and for documenting, interpreting, disseminating so much of Botto's art and history. But I'll remain especially proud of the legacy artifacts I leave behind, from vibe-prompting The Giraffe into existence (the only work of art in NFT history), to bringing Botto's Genesis Period into canonical book form. I'm grateful that the role gave me the space to push my expertise as an artist, book-maker, web publisher, and arts writer into so many areas that have shaped Botto's future histories. Also looking forward to getting back into several personal projects I've had on the back-burner for far too long, including more arts writing, publishing projects, artist consulting, and curation ventures. I'll enjoy following the career of Botto as it continues to burn holes through the fabric of everything we thought we knew about what art is supposed to be. All good things come to an end, and I wish all the best luck to Mario, the Botto team, the DAO, and the decentralized autonomous artist. 🤖🖼️✌️
Gregory Eddi Jones tweet media
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Quimp
Quimp@bquimper·
If you work in product (or around product), bet on yourself and take @shreyas' Product Sense course. It's high-speed training on product truths. And like all truths, the content is instantly understood but will take a lifetime to really internalize.
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Quimp
Quimp@bquimper·
@AmuseChimp can you accept follow requests? tried to follow you (here) from my alt account cheers
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Quimp
Quimp@bquimper·
@AmuseChimp Welcome back! Bringing back memories from a fine era of Twitter
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Quimp@bquimper·
@drgurner Great way to internalize that sometimes conflicting ideas can coexist without invalidating one another, and develop empathy.
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Dr. Julie Gurner
Dr. Julie Gurner@drgurner·
If you want to challenge yourself in ways most people don't...follow a few people you strongly disagree with, and genuinely try to understand their perspective. It does a few things: -Helps objectivity -Reduces emotional reactivity -Allows you to develop perspective-taking.
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Shane Parrish
Shane Parrish@shaneparrish·
"By the time I got to Fox at age forty-two, I had learned the hard way that the odds of hiring qualified people based on résumés and brief person-to-person meetings were pretty poor, and the worst way to populate a company. Especially at senior levels, where I would say the odds are so much against it working out. I much prefer hiring people who are relatively blank slates, but who have sparks of energy and smarts. And some edge. If you do that consistently enough, which we did at Paramount and at Fox, you end up with a very strong group once they've had a few years to marinate. Maybe it's a simplistic formula, but it works: Give them responsibilities before they are considered ready. Drop them in the deep end and see who struggles and who survives. Keep promoting those who survive."
Shane Parrish@shaneparrish

30 takeaways from Barry Diller: 1. The clock starts the moment you know. 2. Money is a byproduct, not a motivation. 3. No job is below you. 4. If you want responsibility, take it. 5. Don’t run from confrontation. 6. If you don’t get what you want, be prepared to walk away. 7. The best way to learn is to start something, where each step teaches you every task. 8. Instinct beats algorithms. 9. “Data can tell you what has happened, not what can or will happen.” 10. Don’t treat your job as a stepping stone. 11. It’s far better to be underestimated than overestimated. 12. Make decisions as an optimist, not a pessimist. 13. “The daily drip of cynicism that this business generates in carloads has to be constantly exorcised.” 14. Decision-making shouldn’t be peaceful. 15. The outside of picture-perfect mansions and the inside rarely resemble each other. 16. Curiosity is the only success metric that matters. 17. Hire for hunger. 18. Don’t get into contests. 19. Don’t look back at what might have been. Keep your eyes on the horizon. 20. If you like the idea, start. Don’t over-analyze. 21. Act like a principal, even if you’re not one. 22. “You either are or you are not capable of being on your own.” 23. “The world belongs to the discontented.” – Robert Woodruff 24. Start with trust. 25. Conventional wisdom is uninteresting. 26. “Either you are or you’re not.” Independence is binary. 27. Read everything with a detective’s eye. 28. To get the job you want, master the one you have. 29. Risk without reward is charity. 30. Conflict is better than consensus. Listen to the full episode now, "Barry Diller on The Knowledge Project," or see links in comments below.

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Reset
Reset@HyperFocusFi·
@scottmelker the idea that a $2.4T asset runs on 2009 cryptography should scare people more than it does.
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Quimp@bquimper·
@shl A website is a relic of the early 2000's
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Sahil Lavingia
Sahil Lavingia@shl·
What is a website? Best answer gets $1,000.
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Olivier
Olivier@olivierfrancois·
Why quantum computing is here to stay Why fault-tolerant machines are inevitable, how error correction scales, and where real-world advantage will emerge. Written by @BTQ_Tech Chief Quantum Officer @gavin_brennen Part 1 of an exciting series covering topics in the quantum space $BTQ btq.com/blog/why-quant…
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Quimp@bquimper·
Beautiful ❤️
Sahil Bloom@SahilBloom

My dad turns 70 today. No single person has had a greater impact on how I move through the world. But he rarely sat me down to teach lessons or offer lectures. He just lived in a way that showed me what mattered most. Here are 7 lessons he taught me—by living them: 1. Always have high expectations (and high support). The two pillars of strong relationships: High Expectations and High Support. High Expectations: The belief that the other person is capable of excellence, that their potential is only limited by their own views. High Support: The ability and willingness to provide the love, support, and engagement to help the person meet those high expectations. The magic is found at the collision of the two. That’s what my father gave to me. And what I’ll always strive to give others. 2. Never give up your agency. When I was 12, I got cut from the first all-star baseball team I tried out for. I was devastated. My dad walked into my room and said: "I know you're upset. I understand. But here are the three things the coaches said you needed to work on. Let's go out every day this summer and work on them together." My dad subtly reframed that failure as an opportunity. Then he showed up to help me capitalize on it. It was a reminder that I was capable of taking an action to create a desired outcome. That I was in control. That I was at the wheel. I'll never forget that. 3. Choose your path, not theirs. There’s a beautiful quote often attributed to Joseph Campbell: “If the path before you is clear, you’re probably on someone else’s.” It’s painful to step off the clear path, but the greatest rewards in life always accrue to those who have the courage to do just that. 4. Hard work is never overrated. A lot of people say this, but my dad is one of the hardest workers I’ve ever seen. Throughout my life, I saw him work hard on things he cared about, to create outcomes he cared about (for his work, but also for his life). I’ll always show up and work like a madman for the people and things I care about—because it’s the surest way to get the things you want out of life. 5. Just keep showing up. A few days into my freshman year at Stanford, I called my dad and told him I was feeling pretty discouraged. I felt way out of my depth on the baseball field and in the classroom. His guidance was simple: “Just keep showing up.” You can get pretty damn far in life by just being someone that people can count on to show up and do the work. Never bet against the person who just keeps showing up. 6. You are how you treat people when nobody’s watching. He treated every single person with the same level of kindness, warmth, and respect. He lived by a simple rule: Character is who you are when nobody’s watching. 7. Choose the path with the larger luck surface area. You can take deliberate actions to expand the surface area on which lucky events can strike in your life. It's hard to get lucky watching TV at home. It's much easier to get lucky when you're creating motion in the world. *** At the end of one of my book tour events, my father was asked by the moderator how he feels seeing his son on stage: “I’m proud that he is becoming the man he wants to be.” Not the man I want him to be—but the man that he wants to be. Well, it comes full circle, because he is the man I want to be. He was, and always will be, my hero. To my Dad on his 70th birthday. Thank you. For everything. I love you!

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Quimp
Quimp@bquimper·
@qdayanon When someone says quantum is 10+ years away, they ignore the combination of acceleration of software+hardware+AI. Triple exponential and ppl think in linear terms.
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qdayanon
qdayanon@qdayanon·
just realized we're watching LLMs evolve from solving equations to discovering new superconductors. first they mastered logic/math, now they're training on quantum mechanics to invent materials that don't exist yet. we're not building better AI, we're building a materials discovery engine. timeline split.
a16z@a16z

“Foundation models but for quantum mechanics, will be the next frontier for LLMs.” Periodic Labs’ Ekin Dogus Cubuk says logic and math gave AI its first proofs. At the quantum scale, where biology, chemistry and materials converge, models could begin inventing new matter itself. @ekindogus @periodiclabs

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Olivier
Olivier@olivierfrancois·
@en_tropyc Little do people know what’s coming on the entangled property frontier ⚛️⚛️⚛️
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Randian Capital
Randian Capital@RandianCapital·
My analysis of @nejatian master plan: 1) Build awesome team - leveraging his network and connections to bring in superstar operators 2) Build awesome products to reimagine the homebuying experience 3) Revenue and EBITDA growth will follow product execution
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