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Carranza👁‍🗨

Carranza👁‍🗨

@esemirich

Katılım Mart 2010
600 Takip Edilen224 Takipçiler
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ً
ً@prinkasusa·
Jimmy Carter was the 39th U.S. President - and never ordered a single aerial bombing campaign against a foreign country. Every modern president before and after him did. Carter chose diplomacy where others chose firepower. His defining moment came at Camp David in 1978 - locking Egyptian and Israeli leaders in 13 days of brutal negotiation, emerging with a peace agreement that ended 30 years of war. His presidency faced the Iran hostage crisis, oil shocks and economic turmoil - crises that would have given any leader justification for military escalation. He held the line anyway. He received the Nobel Peace Prize in 2002. He died in 2024 at 100 years old. The man who never bombed anyone outlived almost every critic who called him weak.
@cessonmute

hit me with the harshest reality truth

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Timeless Sports
Timeless Sports@timelesssports_·
LeBron at 19 LeBron at 41 🤝
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Gucci Belt Dell
Gucci Belt Dell@urkle91·
Lebron is 30, this fuckery won't go on for much longer, thank god
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Muneeb
Muneeb@Muneeb_08·
Ronaldo passes it to Benzema & Benzema passes it to Ronaldo in this situation There is a reason why Madrid was so successful in their era
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NASA
NASA@NASA·
Hello, Moon. It’s great to be back. Here’s a taste of what the Artemis II astronauts photographed during their flight around the Moon. Check out more photos from the mission: nasa.gov/artemis-ii-mul…
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sophie
sophie@netcapgirl·
claude cowork is making me think maybe we’ll look back and it’ll be obvious that humans were never meant to spend their lives working behind a screen. we’ll see it as inevitable that computers do everything for us on computers and the future of work is cooler than we can imagine
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gam
gam@mbaafraude·
Siempre se olvida esto cuando se habla de la eliminatoria Madrid vs PSG
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Er K🚶
Er K🚶@BekaarAaadmi·
ZXX
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Brian Allen
Brian Allen@allenanalysis·
🚨 BREAKING: Rep. Ted Lieu says the full Epstein files contain information that Donald Trump RAPED minors. So he started a war to distract us from his crimes. Never stop speaking about Epstein.
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Madridisme
Madridisme@madridisme·
Ves el video de Endrick de ayer y luego ves a Rodrygo, Gonzalo y Mastantuono hoy y te quieres morir.
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Justin Credible
Justin Credible@GravySauceCream·
LEEEEEEROYYYYYYY JENKINNNNNNS
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Carnivore Aurelius ©🥩 ☀️🦙
Having sex less than once a month is associated with a 60% HIGHER chance of cardiovascular disease vs having sex 1-2x a week. Have more sex This is medical advice
Carnivore Aurelius ©🥩 ☀️🦙 tweet mediaCarnivore Aurelius ©🥩 ☀️🦙 tweet media
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CBS News
CBS News@CBSNews·
Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei said in an exclusive interview with CBS News' @jolingkent that the AI company sought to draw “red lines” in the government’s use of its technology because “we believe that crossing those lines is contrary to American values, and we wanted to stand up for American values.” He added: “Disagreeing with the government is the most American thing in the world.”
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Historic Vids
Historic Vids@historyinmemes·
Ian Wright was in the middle of an interview when the teacher who once believed in him unexpectedly walked in.
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chaotic memes
chaotic memes@memechaotic·
Facts.
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chl$
chl$@chelsssseeeea·
I fully believe the singularity already happened. Not in a dramatic way. Not with sentient robots, it happened quietly. It happened when we stopped thinking by ourselves. It happened when we started asking ChatGPT to draft emails. When engineers started using Claude to write production code. When lawyers began summarizing contracts with AI before reading them. When students started checking their reasoning against a model before checking it against themselves. It happened when “Google it” became “ask chat.” We still talk about the singularity like it’s some future event. We don’t memorize directions anymore. We don’t remember phone numbers. We don’t debate from memory. We don’t draft from scratch. We prompt. And I don’t think that’s trivial. It’s like Interstellar, that moment when they cross the event horizon and nothing dramatic happens. No alarms. No screaming. Just a subtle shift. But once you cross, the physics are different whether you feel it or not. That’s what this feels like. The shift wasn’t machine consciousness. It was cognitive dependence. Try turning it all off … cloud systems, AI copilots, algorithmic logistics, predictive modeling, automated finance. It’s not “less efficient.” It would all totally collapse. And the weirdest part is that most of us still talk like we are the ones steering the ship. But so much of what we see, buy, believe, and even consider important is filtered through systems the majority doesnt understand. Feeds decide what’s visible. AI models suggest what’s optimal. Algorithms decide what’s relevant. LLMs draft before we do. Humans are still in the loop. But really only as editors. That’s the part that feels irreversible. And I feel it most clearly as a new parent. My daughter is going to grow up in a world where talking to AI feels normal. Where asking a model to explain something isn’t impressive it’s expected. Where drafting without assistance might feel inefficient. She will never know “before.” She won’t remember a time when thinking was mostly internal. That doesn’t scare me. But it changes the job of parents. Because now raising a child isn’t just about teaching math and reading. It’s about teaching attention. Teaching discernment. Teaching when to think alone before asking for help. I catch myself reaching for my phone to answer something instead of sitting with it. I see how easy it is to let a feed dictate what feels urgent. I notice how fast my own brain adapts to having a copilot. That’s the real singularity. Not machines getting smarter. But humans getting comfortable outsourcing parts of themselves. And the question isn’t “Is this bad?” It’s “Who will my daughter be inside this?” Will she know how to focus without stimulation? Will she know how to build an argument before asking for one? Will she use AI to multiply her thinking or to replace it? Because this isn’t dystopian It’s just different physics. And like Interstellar, once you’re past the boundary, you don’t go back to the old rules. You learn how to operate in the new ones.
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Patrick OShaughnessy
Patrick OShaughnessy@patrick_oshag·
"The most important thing in the next 3-4 years is data centers in space. In every way, data centers in space, from a first principles perspective, are superior to data centers on earth. In space, you can keep a satellite in the sun 24 hours a day. The sun is 30% more intense, which results in six times more irradiance than on Earth. So you don't need a battery. The cooling in these data centers is incredibly complicated. Space cooling is free. You just put a radiator on the dark side of the satellite. The only thing faster than a laser going through a fiber optic cable is a laser going through absolute vacuum. Link satellites with lasers, and you have a faster and more coherent network than any data center on Earth."
Patrick OShaughnessy@patrick_oshag

This is my fifth conversation with @GavinSBaker. Gavin understands semiconductors and AI as well as anyone I know and has a gift for making sense of the industry's complexity and nuance. We discuss: - Nvidia vs Google (GPUs + TPUs) - Scaling laws and reasoning models - The economics of AI compute - Why Blackwell's delay mattered - The bear case on the AI capex buildout - Data centers in space - The mistake SaaS companies are making Few people love investing more than Gavin. His closing answer about why he loves it turned into a full reflection on his investing origin story, which I had never heard before. Enjoy! Timestamps: 0:00 Intro 5:03 The Blackwell Transition 23:15 The Prisoner's Dilemma 27:12 The Bear Case: Edge AI 37:19 Meta, Open Source, and Model Depreciation 43:08 Geopolitics and Rare Earths 50:42 Data Centers in Space 56:06 Power Constraints as a Governor 1:11:31 The SaaS Mistake 1:16:17 Nuclear and Quantum 1:22:25 Gavin’s Investing Origins

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