Decompiled

473 posts

Decompiled banner
Decompiled

Decompiled

@decompiled_dev

Bayesian Inferer

Thunder Bay 🇨🇦 Katılım Mart 2020
456 Takip Edilen96 Takipçiler
Decompiled
Decompiled@decompiled_dev·
@PatrickHeizer @krishnanrohit At an hourly scan resolution I could see ML learning what foods make you bloated and how well digestion is working. Seems like it would open up a lot of research opportunities to me.
English
0
0
0
3
Patrick Heizer
Patrick Heizer@PatrickHeizer·
@krishnanrohit That optimal point certainly changes w/ advancements across several variables, but to be hyperbolic about it, even at max techno-optimist capability, we aren't going to get anatomical scans every hour. That's negative utility merely from the time aspect. More not *always* better
English
2
0
2
86
rohit
rohit@krishnanrohit·
I absolutely refuse to believe more information is bad. You can use information badly but I fundamentally disagree that ignorance is a protective shield we should wear with pride.
Jeremy S. Pollock@bmorecardiology

Same issue w full body MRI.. indiscriminate screening of healthy people causes harm Making the scan quicker and cheaper… likely will increase the scale of the harm. @CanesDavid @afshineemrani @grok explain harms in screening a population w low pretest probability for disease

English
29
4
123
8K
Decompiled retweetledi
John Dagdelen
John Dagdelen@jmdagdelen·
Seems Dr. Coleman’s main issues are: - Not working with physicians (false, there are a number of Drs working with Midjourney) - VC funded (false, the company is bootstrapped) - Sidestepping FDA (false, they are not providing diagnoses yet and are working through normal FDA process) - Midjourney doesn’t understand the tech (false, multiple bioengineering/imaging PhDs are at the company commercializing the world they did at Cal Tech) What are the good reasons to try to tear them down again?
Nathan Coleman, MD@NColemanMD

Docs who actually understand medical imaging technology bristle at these things and it sure as hell isn't fear of new tech It's that these primarily are pushed as exploitative $$$ grabbing schemes by VC and clout chasing founders who don't know shit about actually caring for pts

English
9
7
81
6K
Decompiled
Decompiled@decompiled_dev·
@BloodSweatxED @ConfusedVorlon @perrymetzger Wouldn't the tech need to be approved by regulators before its able to generate those obligations? Until they prove good results I don't think its reasonable to accuse a Dr. of malpractice for not considering their scans.
English
1
0
2
192
Andre Freire
Andre Freire@BloodSweatxED·
🙄🙄You clearly don't work in medicine. Once a radiologist reports a significant finding, It's documented. At this point, the physician is legally and ethically obligated to work it up. Ignoring it is malpractice. That's why the prevailing feeling is that unnecessary imaging creates this trap. It's a finding that you can't unsee and just leave alone. The workup isn't free. Biopsies,contrast, radiation all of these things have real complication rates. Would you want some extra radiation after having a test that you probably didn't need? Or better yet, a large needle driven through one of your organs. How does that sound?
English
3
0
4
347
Perry E. Metzger
Perry E. Metzger@perrymetzger·
I’ve seen this trope posted by a lot of doctors in the last 24 hours. The claim from doctors is that Midjourney’s cheap full body scanner is bad, because people would get treated unnecessarily for harmless conditions, and that would increase death rates. Now, I have a lot of skepticism about Midjourney’s announcement (a lot of skepticism) but I think that the doctors are failing to look in the mirror. What they are saying is, in effect, that they cannot be trusted with having more information about patients. That, if you give doctors too much information about a patient’s condition, they may kill the patient by treating them unnecessarily. This isn’t a problem with inexpensive full body scanners. This is a problem with doctors and medical practices.
Jeremy S. Pollock@bmorecardiology

Same issue w full body MRI.. indiscriminate screening of healthy people causes harm Making the scan quicker and cheaper… likely will increase the scale of the harm. @CanesDavid @afshineemrani @grok explain harms in screening a population w low pretest probability for disease

English
176
114
1.7K
134.4K
Decompiled
Decompiled@decompiled_dev·
@NColemanMD @andrewoetting Midjourney is a self funded research lab. If they wanted to retire they wouldn't need to go into medical imaging.
English
0
0
0
6
Nathan Coleman, MD
Nathan Coleman, MD@NColemanMD·
@andrewoetting The problem is that if/when it doesn't, docs know WE'LL be the ones cleaning up the mess while Midjourney MBAs enjoy a golden retirement
English
4
0
18
1.4K
Drew Oetting
Drew Oetting@andrewoetting·
IDK if Midjourney stuff will work but the instant naysaying by X thot-docs is a perfect example of healthcare’s broken culture Despite the workethic & IQ the avg doc spends half their life in EHRs from 1980 bc an NPC w an online MBA said so. On this one maybe take a breath first
English
11
6
132
81.7K
Decompiled
Decompiled@decompiled_dev·
@ShaziGoalie Maybe this is why people only want to invest in real estate 🤔
English
0
0
0
226
Shazi
Shazi@ShaziGoalie·
🚨 Mark Carney says Metro Vancouver has 2,500 completed condos sitting empty. Developers don't want to sell at a loss. So Ottawa and BC are stepping in with billions in infrastructure money, cutting development charges by up to 50%, and using financing tools to convert vacant condos into affordable housing. Later, when asked if governments could buy unsold units from developers, Carney replied: "You can do both." Taxpayers becoming the backstop for the condo market? 🤔
English
246
126
661
112.6K
Decompiled
Decompiled@decompiled_dev·
@seanluomdphd @cvmonakow We won't know the quality of the scans of the iterated product until later though. If it works it could be big, but if not, then MidJourney is out their R&D spend. I don't see the downside to this project.
English
1
0
0
19
Decompiled
Decompiled@decompiled_dev·
@VictorTaelin Every medical test has a big $ cost to it though. Its never free to get information in their context.
English
2
0
7
1.6K
Taelin
Taelin@VictorTaelin·
In decision theory, the value of information is always non-negative for a rational agent. Extra information only hurts when a process uses it sub-optimally (overfitting, being misled by noise). So these mastermind doctors see a result proving their decision making is utterly broken, and interpret it as more information being bad. Incredible. Absolute genius. We make fun of our antecedents for using uranium watches or leaded gasoline, only to do shit like this. We will be laughed at so hard it makes me intellectually embarrassed to live in this period of time.
English
58
24
502
71.3K
Decompiled
Decompiled@decompiled_dev·
@VictorTaelin Information gathering is usually expensive in medicine and requires scarce intellectual labour to interpret. I don't think Dr. see quick tech cycles, so it makes since they will discount the potential for new tech.
English
0
0
0
509
Decompiled
Decompiled@decompiled_dev·
@jbsteinberg Its good for equity holders. High dividends, low reinvestment needs.
English
0
0
0
45
Joseph Steinberg
Joseph Steinberg@jbsteinberg·
Eric hits the nail on the head: the single biggest problem with Canada's economic policy paradigm is that it centers the interests of large incumbent producers and largely ignores the interests of consumers. This problem is why we have supply management. It is why foreign airlines are banned from operating domestic routes, and why foreign telecommunications providers are banned from providing mobile phone service to Canadian customers. All of these things hurt Canadian consumers more than they benefit incumbent Canadian businesses, but the latter are loud and organized while the former have no voice that speaks for them---especially now that the Federal government has shuttered the Office of Consumer Affairs. While this is not just a Canadian problem (it is an issue throughout the Anglosphere and most of Europe), it is particularly bad here, and it is the root cause of our current economic malaise (not the Trump tariffs!).
Eric Lombardi (EricForOLP.ca) 🇨🇦🚀@EricDLombardi

I believe in a liberalism that puts the consumer first. I realize it is not considered “good politics” to refer to people as “consumers”, so let me explain. 👇 - - - By consumer, I mean the person that systems of production are supposed to serve. The citizen, the taxpayer, the patient, the student, the commuter, the homebuyer, the renter, the small business owner, and the person trying to build a life. Every economy has producers and intermediaries. They are organized, and they have associations, lobbyists, professional bodies, unions, procurement relationships, and long-standing patterns of influence. This is not inherently sinister. It is how organized interests behave, and serious politicians should expect them to behave that way. In comparison, the consumer interest is often the least organized interest in politics, which is exactly why political leaders need to speak for them. Because when politics engages primarily around organized stakeholders, as it is often today, the public interest is gradually defined through the lens of those already inside. Policy becomes about protecting advantage rather than competing for it. Complexity becomes a form of power. The citizen, a consumer, becomes a subject of policy rather than its purpose. Politicians should more skeptical when regulation protects incumbents more than upstarts, when consultation becomes a tool of delay, when procurement creates dependency, when credentialing becomes exclusion, and when protectionism is defended as pro-worker. It also means we should take competition very seriously. Not because markets are sacred, or because every public problem has a market solution. Competition matters because it creates pressure against complacency, capture, and rent-seeking. It gives new entrants a chance to challenge incumbents. It helps lower prices, improve service, raise productivity, and expand our choices. All of these create real freedom. Protectionism often wears a compassionate mask, but its beneficiaries are usually incumbents, and its costs are usually paid by ordinary people. That is why putting the consumer first matters to me, and why politicians should see their role as representing consumers.

English
6
5
37
3.5K
vx-underground
vx-underground@vxunderground·
I can't tell if some of the commenters are intellectually challenged. I don't mean sarcastically either, I very sincerely question their cognitive abilities. I can't imagine any reasonable person misinterpreting this post, and understanding it's intentionally hyperbolic
English
11
1
163
6.7K
Mario Zelaya
Mario Zelaya@mario4thenorth·
Gad just learned about the Canadian “exit tax.” It’s very real. It’s one of the reasons our brain drain isn’t bigger than what it already is. It’s a form of entrapment. There are successful entrepreneurs who have highly profitable businesses, that do not leave because their business would be taxed as though it was sold, a deemed disposition, at fair market value, but they don’t have the money to pay the tax on it. Think of it as an acquisition happening, but with you getting no money, and instead a tax bill as though you made a captain gain (profit) on selling your business. It’s like the mafia. You can’t leave without paying a price.
Mario Zelaya tweet media
English
613
1.2K
6.4K
304.7K
Decompiled
Decompiled@decompiled_dev·
A very exciting pivot. Its nice to see what's ostensibly profits from Discord image generation being rolled into a big bet like this.
Afshine Emrani MD FACC@afshineemrani

I'm a cardiologist. Something just happened today that I genuinely did not see coming — and it could change the future of preventive medicine more than anything I've written about on this platform. Midjourney — the AI company that became famous for generating images from text prompts — just announced a medical hardware division and unveiled a working prototype of a full-body scanner unlike anything that's ever existed. It's called the Midjourney Scanner. And it works like this. You step into a shallow pool of water. You stand on a platform that slowly descends — about two inches per second — through a ring containing roughly half a million tiny ultrasonic transducers, each the size of a grain of sand. Every one of them acts as both a speaker and a microphone, sending ultrasonic waves through your body from every angle and recording what comes back. 60 seconds later, you step out. The scan is done. No radiation. No magnets. No claustrophobia. No IV contrast. Just sound, water, and an almost incomprehensible amount of computing power — roughly 2 petaflops processing 17 gigabytes per second of raw acoustic data — reconstructing a 3D map of your entire internal anatomy down to half a millimeter resolution. Organs. Tissues. Blood vessels. Bones. Muscle. Fat distribution. All segmented by AI in real time. As a cardiologist who has spent months writing about how the standard screening playbook misses the majority of future heart attacks — this is the technology I've been waiting for without knowing it existed. Here's why this matters for the future of your heart. Right now, getting a detailed look inside your cardiovascular system requires either a CT scan (radiation), an MRI (magnets, claustrophobia, 45-60 minutes, $1,000+), or a coronary CT angiogram (radiation, IV contrast, limited availability). These are powerful tools. I order them regularly and they save lives. But they're reactive. You get them when something is already suspected. They're expensive. They're uncomfortable. And for most people, they happen once — maybe twice — in a lifetime. Imagine instead: a 60-second scan with no radiation that you could repeat monthly or quarterly. Tracking cardiac structure over time. Watching body composition shift. Detecting changes in organ size, fluid distribution, or vascular architecture before symptoms ever develop. Building a longitudinal dataset of YOUR body that AI can analyze for patterns no single snapshot would reveal. That's what Midjourney is building toward. The company plans 50,000 scanners worldwide over six years, with capacity for a billion scans per month. The first location — the "Midjourney Spa" in San Francisco — opens at the end of 2027 with 10 scanners alongside saunas, cold plunges, and a gym. The scan costs a few dollars. The experience is designed to feel like wellness, not medicine. The technology is built on Butterfly Network's ultrasound-on-chip platform — 40 modules per scanner — combined with Midjourney's own AI segmentation and reconstruction stack. David Holz, the founder, claims the system aims for image quality comparable to MRI in many aspects but at nearly 100x the speed with zero radiation. Now the caveats — because I'm a physician and the caveats matter enormously. This is a Gen 1 prototype. About a dozen people have been scanned so far. Current scan time is actually closer to 20 minutes, not 60 seconds — the system is bottlenecked by bandwidth and reconstruction algorithms. The 60-second target is aspirational for future hardware generations. It is not FDA-cleared for diagnostic use. Midjourney is starting with body composition maps — a category below diagnostic imaging in the regulatory hierarchy. The path from "beautiful 3D body scans" to "clinically validated diagnostic tool that your cardiologist can act on" runs through years of clinical trials, comparative studies against MRI and CT gold standards, and FDA review. No independent clinical validation has been published. The imaging claims come from Midjourney's own demonstrations. Comparative data against established modalities does not yet exist. And the privacy implications of full-body internal scans at planetary scale — a billion scans per month — is a conversation that hasn't even started yet. So I want to be precise. This is not ready for clinical medicine today. It may not be ready for years. Many ambitious medical hardware projects have failed in the gap between prototype and product. But. The fact that a working prototype exists — producing real segmented 3D anatomy from sound waves and compute alone — means the physics works. The engineering works. The question is no longer "is this possible" but "how fast can it be validated and scaled." And if it is validated — if the resolution holds up against MRI, if the AI segmentation proves reliable, if the regulatory path clears — then what we're looking at is the most significant new imaging modality in 50 years. For my entire career, preventive cardiology has been limited by the fact that seeing inside the body is expensive, slow, uncomfortable, and infrequent. We catch disease late because we image rarely. We image rarely because imaging is hard. A 60-second, no-radiation, spa-based full-body scan that costs a few dollars would demolish every one of those barriers. I've written about AI detecting inflamed arteries. About gene editing curing cholesterol. About GLP-1 drugs rewriting metabolic medicine. About cellular reprogramming reversing aging. This is the missing piece: the ability to see inside every human body, routinely, safely, and affordably — so all of those interventions can be deployed before the disease arrives instead of after. The company that taught AI to generate images from imagination just built a machine that generates images from the human body. The future of medicine showed up today from the last place anyone expected.

English
0
0
0
9
Decompiled
Decompiled@decompiled_dev·
@The_Plain_Bagel Seems crazy he's "just" realizing this. Like I agree taxes are too high, but the capital gains taxes are upfront. If they didn't do this IDK how they'd be able to collect the capital gains taxes which are half the rate of regular income.
English
6
0
21
1.7K
The Plain Bagel
The Plain Bagel@The_Plain_Bagel·
This post is being circulated by a bunch of American accounts who seemingly don’t realize the US does the exact same thing. It’s called a deemed disposition - all your capital gains are “realized” and charged taxes before you leave. It’s not uniquely Canadian.
Gad Saad@GadSaad

Following a very difficult meeting with my accountant, I just found out how much it is going to cost me in terms of an "exit tax" to leave Quebec and Canada. No human being in a free society should have their hard-earned money stolen in this manner. I'm genuinely numb. I'm speechless.

English
81
81
730
37.3K
Decompiled
Decompiled@decompiled_dev·
@JessC08804475 @saveli @mario4thenorth @ZombieMotorcyc1 If you live in the home its 0 tax. Otherwise it would be roughly 25% of the appreciated value, depending on your income. Savings would be untaxed. You'd probably not have to worry about this tax at all in this case.
English
1
0
1
44
Decompiled
Decompiled@decompiled_dev·
@PodcastAlphaX DC revenue is massively large. Even 5% could be meaningful. Imagine a company with no customers but if their plan works they'll have a monopoly on supplying power to the most valuable real estate in the world. 30x EBITDA means they are priced for optionality
English
0
0
4
725
Podcast Alpha
Podcast Alpha@PodcastAlphaX·
Power is 5-7% of data center revenues. Some geothermal and nuclear stocks are trading at 50-70x earnings to supply it. Jim Chanos on iConnections: the AI halo has reached its furthest extension into alternative energy. The bull case is that data centers need power and there's a shortage. Chanos's counter: the US doesn't have a power shortage. It has a permitting bottleneck and turbine delivery delays. Both resolve in 2-3 years. When the permitting clears, the scarcity narrative collapses. And even if these companies win a power contract - power is 5-7% of a data center's revenues. Companies at 30-40x EBITDA for potentially supplying a fraction of a 5-7% cost line are priced for a constraint that is transient. Full breakdown of the alternative energy overhang: podcastalpha.substack.com/p/episode-summ… Source: iConnections - youtube.com/watch?v=MYm33z…
YouTube video
YouTube
English
11
23
113
69.8K
Decompiled
Decompiled@decompiled_dev·
@Tablesalt13 The metadata retention was reduced to 6 months I thought, but most of the bill is still entact? Even if all the messages are encrypted, the who sent what from what device kind of stuff is still in scope.
English
0
0
2
457
Tablesalt 🇨🇦🇺🇸
❗️❗️This is EXACTLY how American tech companies Saved Canada. ....and global encryption systems.
English
184
235
1.1K
46.2K
Decompiled
Decompiled@decompiled_dev·
@vesperdigital @grok @GadSaad USA will tax its citizens no matter where they are in the world. Its more overreaching in that regard. I think they do have an exit tax, but I think its harder to leave their tax regime.
English
1
0
2
97
Gad Saad
Gad Saad@GadSaad·
Following a very difficult meeting with my accountant, I just found out how much it is going to cost me in terms of an "exit tax" to leave Quebec and Canada. No human being in a free society should have their hard-earned money stolen in this manner. I'm genuinely numb. I'm speechless.
English
7.6K
9.1K
71.4K
4M
Decompiled
Decompiled@decompiled_dev·
@vesperdigital @grok @GadSaad The TFSA + RRSP + Primary residence gives a lot of room for tax free investing. If they don't collect it at exit of the tax jurisdiction how else would they collect capital gains tax?
English
0
0
0
267
Vesper
Vesper@vesperdigital·
@grok @GadSaad I mean in your opinion doesn't this amount to theft as Canada is already one of the most taxed places on earth.
English
6
2
58
3.5K
Decompiled
Decompiled@decompiled_dev·
@TylerFCloutier @DevanshuXi Distributed means you'd have network latency between all the parts. I would think it would be automatically worse unless it had some redeeming attribute to justify the complexity.
English
0
0
0
67
Tyler F. Cloutier
Tyler F. Cloutier@TylerFCloutier·
@DevanshuXi Yes, you're spot on. That's the closest we have to a distributed OS (not counting BEAM/Erlang). The problem is that the complexity explodes when you just glom all the pieces together. It's a higher initial investment to build a proper one, but the result is much better.
English
1
0
19
2.5K
Tyler F. Cloutier
Tyler F. Cloutier@TylerFCloutier·
The fact that there is no distributed operating system is a tragedy for mankind. And it’s because Unix’s “everything is a file” abstraction was just good enough to survive networked systems. Unix is too good for its own good.
English
46
16
258
36.3K