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Carson 🧢 ⬆️

Carson 🧢 ⬆️

@Carsonlam

engineer | scientist | physician. views are my own

Earth Katılım Haziran 2009
2.1K Takip Edilen969 Takipçiler
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Stanford Medicine
Stanford Medicine@StanfordMed·
Stanford Medicine researchers and their colleagues invented a new vaccine that shows potential to protect against respiratory viruses, bacteria and allergens — the closest yet to a universal vaccine. brnw.ch/21x2yuK
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Carson 🧢 ⬆️
Carson 🧢 ⬆️@Carsonlam·
@nypost If this upsets you, remember, nobody is stopping you from picking up a book and studying
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Catherine Liu
Catherine Liu@CLiuAnon·
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Paul Graham
Paul Graham@paulg·
If Steve Jobs were still alive, he would have the moral authority to face and maybe even to solve this problem. But I doubt anyone in the phone business now does.
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Alan Wong
Alan Wong@alankennywong·
Thank you to the residents who spoke up and helped make this improvement happen. We’ll continue working on practical solutions that improve daily life for our communities.
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Alan Wong
Alan Wong@alankennywong·
This new signal will help improve traffic flow, reduce risky turning movements, and make the intersection safer and more predictable for westside families, commuters, and neighbors who rely on this corridor every day.
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Alan Wong
Alan Wong@alankennywong·
For months, Sunset residents raised concerns about difficult turning conditions, traffic backups, and safety issues at this intersection. Our office pushed and worked with city agencies for review and move forward a near-term solution.
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Alan Wong
Alan Wong@alankennywong·
The new protected left-turn signal that my office has been pushing for is now active at Lincoln Way & Chain of Lakes — a practical improvement driven directly by community feedback.
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Carson 🧢 ⬆️
Carson 🧢 ⬆️@Carsonlam·
@petergyang You kinda have to be a D2 at FAANG to afford to get married and raise kids in the Bay Area so that should help most of you avoid the divorce and neglected kids problem.
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Peter Yang
Peter Yang@petergyang·
If you're stuck in the Bay Area tech rat race / psychosis, make time to travel to other places. Go to a small town in Europe or visit Asia - you'll see that life can be about much more than whether you're IC7 or IC8 or what company you work for. Don't be the person to put on your tombstone: "He got divorced and neglected his kids but at least he made D2 at FAANG"
Deedy@deedydas

The vibes in SF feel pretty frenetic right now. The divide in outcomes is the worst I've ever seen. Over the last 5yrs, a group of ~10k people - employees at Anthropic, OpenAI, xAI, Nvidia, Meta TBD, founders - have hit retirement wealth of well above $20M (back of the envelope AI estimation). Everyone outside that group feels like they can work their well-paying (but <$500k) job for their whole life and never get there. Worse yet, layoffs are in full swing. Many software engineers feel like their life's skill is no longer useful. The day to day role of most jobs has changed overnight with AI. As a result, 1. The corporate ladder looks like the wrong building to climb. Everyone's trying to align with a new set of career "paths": should I be a founder? Is it too late to join Anthropic / OpenAI? should I get into AI? what company stock will 10x next? People are demanding higher salaries and switching jobs more and more. 2. There’s a deep malaise about work (and its future). Why even work at all for “peanuts”? Will my job even exist in a few years? Many feel helpless. You hear the “permanent underclass” conversation a lot, esp from young people. It's hard to focus on doing good work when you think "man, if I joined Anthropic 2yrs ago, I could retire" 3. The mid to late middle managers feel paralyzed. Many have families and don't feel like they have the energy or network to just "start a company". They don't particularly have any AI skills. They see the writing on the wall: middle management is being hollowed out in many companies. 4. The rich aren’t particularly happy either. No one is shedding tears for them (and rightfully so). But those who have "made it" experience a profound lack of purpose too. Some have gone from <$150k to >$50M in a few years with no ramp. It flips your life plans upside down. For some, comparison is the thief of joy. For some, they escape to NYC to "live life". For others still, they start companies "just cuz", often to win status points. They never imagined that by age 30, they'd be set. I once asked a post-economic founder friend why they didn't just sell the co and they said "and do what? right now, everyone wants to talk to me. if i sell, I will only have money." I understand that many reading this scoff at the champagne problems of the valley. Society is warped in this tech bubble. What is often well-off anywhere else in the world is bang average here. Unlike many other places, tenure, intelligence and hard work can be loosely correlated with outcomes in the Bay. Living through a societally transformative gold rush in that environment can be paralyzing. "Am I in the right place? Should I move? Is there time still left? Am I gonna make it?" It psychologically torments many who have moved here in search of "success". Ironically, a frequent side effect of this torment is to spin up the very products making everyone rich in hopes that you too can vibecode your path to economic enlightenment.

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Garry Tan
Garry Tan@garrytan·
Saturday morning and it’s a good time to think a bit about how our functional systems are being torn down by a mind virus by two philosophers: Foucault and Derrida Foucault: His framework tells you that every institution claiming to know something is really just exercising power. Medicine, engineering, law, science. Apply that at civilizational scale and you get exactly what Dan Wang warns about: a society that lost the will to build. Process knowledge — the tacit know-how that only exists in the hands of people who actually make things — dies when a culture decides that all knowledge claims are suspect. America went from building the Interstate Highway System and the Apollo rockets to being unable to build a train from LA to SF. That didn't happen because we forgot the engineering. It happened because we built an entire intellectual class whose job is to interrogate every system rather than improve one. Derrida: His move is that every commitment contains its own contradiction, so you can never land on firm meaning. Run that as societal firmware and you get the bureaucratic paralysis we now live in. Infrastructure projects stuck in 15 years of environmental review because every statement of purpose deconstructs under the next round of stakeholder input. Institutions that can't say what they're for because every draft mission statement gets wordsmithed into mush by people trained to find the hidden hierarchy in any clear sentence. Derrida is the OS behind a civilization that can write a 4,000 page environmental impact report but can't pour concrete. The real damage is these ideas escaped the lab. Every institution that adopted this operating system stopped trying to discover truth and started managing narrative. DEI bureaucracies, academic hiring committees, media editorial standards. All running on Foucault and Derrida whether they know it or not. The antidote is building. The physical bridge across a river holds or it doesn’t. The code compiles or it doesn't. Reality keeps score and it doesn't grade on a curve. Foucault and Derrida gave a generation a sophisticated excuse to never build anything. Their followers inherited the sophistication and the impotence. It’s time to build again.
Armond Boudreaux@armondboudreaux

Good morning to everyone whose brain hasn’t been infected by Foucault, Derrida, et al.

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Andrew Yang🧢⬆️🇺🇸
Not every day you meet an Oscar winner! 😀🙏❤️
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Neil Stone
Neil Stone@DrNeilStone·
Vaccine Anti vaccine research research
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Craig Brogden
Craig Brogden@craigbrogden·
@marcportermagee But all those jobs above the 0 line were barely earning above poverty wages so who cares. The others who were crushing it getting a 5% drop are still making way more than those non earning degrees. Don’t get a degree in a bad field to begin with.
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Marc Porter Magee 🎓
Marc Porter Magee 🎓@marcportermagee·
The Economist: “We found that graduates in fields more exposed to AI have suffered markedly worse outcomes.”
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ibtisem 𓂆🕊️
The back of a Namibian laborer covered in scar tissue from years of whipping by a German farmer named Ludwig Cramer, (1912–1913). Taken by the Rhenish missionary Johann Jakob Irle.
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