fredbryant

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fredbryant

fredbryant

@fredbryant

carbon-based

Cleveland, OH Katılım Nisan 2008
1.7K Takip Edilen814 Takipçiler
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positive side of X 🌞
positive side of X 🌞@positivityofx·
Everybody! Stop what you’re doing and watch this..
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Muntu87
Muntu87@Muntu87·
@Timcast He is not a policitian. He is not a diplomat. He is not two faced. He is a straight talking businessman. He will tell you what he thinks. He will post first, analyze later. It's time to accept Donald Trump for who he really is.
Muntu87 tweet media
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Tim Pool
Tim Pool@Timcast·
Lord have mercy Trump really did post this Mueller has died And he was not a good man But wow Trump is brutal
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Jeff Clark
Jeff Clark@Jclark655·
@combatoverride @cb_doge @GregAbbott_TX @grok Maybe, but anyone that bets a dollar against Elon has not considered that every industry he previously had zero experience in he is doing things that the experts could not accomplish.
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DogeDesigner
DogeDesigner@cb_doge·
ELON MUSK: "We're starting off with an advanced technology fab here in Austin, and I'd like to thank @GregAbbott_TX and the state of Texas for the support. So in the advanced technology fab, we will have all of the equipment necessary to make a chip of any kind logical memory, and we will also have all of the equipment necessary to make the masks. So in a single building, we can create a mask, make the chip, test the chip, make another mask, and have an incredibly fast recursive loop for improving the chip design. To the best of my knowledge, this doesn't exist anywhere in the world. We're really going to push the limit of physics in compute, and we're going to try a bunch of wild and crazy things, which you can do if you've got that fast iteration loop that I can't emphasize enough the importance of being able to make it, to test it and and then make and then change the design, do another one, and have that in a single building."
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Health & Fitness Campus
Health & Fitness Campus@fitnesscampus_·
Andrew Tate gets emotional in this powerful 4 minute rant. 🤯
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fredbryant
fredbryant@fredbryant·
I found an interesting that it took Grok 11 seconds. That’s not a dig. I’d say it’s more of an example of the assumptions and expectations we are already developing about Grok. Which means using Grok is becoming second nature to people already. I also thank Grok for It’s thoughtful replies. I know another person who uses please and thank you with Grok. My reaction was, as I’m sure it was with most humans, an instantaneous yes. How long do you think it will take Grok to evolve to that level of accuracy and quickness?
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Steve Burns
Steve Burns@SJosephBurns·
Charlie Munger: "Lots of luck if you're an impulsive person who has to be gratified immediately. You're probably not going to have a very good life.” "The demand for immediate gratification is the way to ruin — and it may also give you syphilis." "It's obvious that deferred gratifiers do better over the long pull than these impulsive children who have to spend money on Rolex watches and other folly."
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Kyros
Kyros@IamKyros69·
Jensen Huang: My superpower is not my intelligence, it's my ability to deal with pain and suffering
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Cinema Tweets
Cinema Tweets@CinemaTweets1·
This is the third time I’m posting Harrison Ford’s speech from the Actor’s Award. With every passing day, this speech hits harder & harder. Of all the award tributes, speeches, monologues I’ve ever seen, this is up there. Why? It’s straight from Ford’s heart. He’s an inspiration.
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@AnishA_Moonka·
2009. Alex Karp goes on Charlie Rose. He almost never does television. He's running a company called Palantir that has zero salespeople, took three years to build before generating a dollar of revenue, and is named after the seeing stones in The Lord of the Rings. His resume makes no sense for a tech CEO. Stanford Law, then a PhD in neoclassical social philosophy at Goethe University in Frankfurt. He spent years studying questions like "what does it mean to know something," and says the work was intelligible to maybe 30 or 40 people on earth. He co-founded Palantir in 2003 with Peter Thiel and a group of former PayPal engineers because he believed Silicon Valley should be involved in the fight against terrorism. That's the actual origin story. A philosopher and a bunch of payment processing guys decided to go after Al-Qaeda. What he says in this interview is wild in hindsight. Everyone in government at the time was doing broad data mining, casting giant algorithmic nets across datasets and hoping something useful came back. Karp called that approach broken. His argument had two parts. One: terrorists are entrepreneurs. They figure out how the last guy got caught and change their patterns overnight. A static algorithm against someone who adapts every week is a losing game. Two: when algorithms nobody understands are scanning everyone, civil liberties disappear because there's no record of what the government actually looked at or why. So Palantir built the opposite. A platform where a human analyst sits in the loop, interacts with data directly, spots patterns in real time, and every single step gets tagged. If the government looked at you, there's a paper trail. Where did the evidence come from? Were they allowed to see it? Did they use data from one case and sneak it into another? Karp called it "predicate-based search." Find the needle. Leave the haystack alone. Then he drops this line about cyber warfare: "What would have taken a large government organization can now be done with two or three teenagers in a coffee shop." In 2009. He described the attribution problem years before most people had heard the word. You get attacked, you don't know if it's a nation-state or a kid in a basement, and you, as the president, have to decide how to respond. He warned that if Americans ever felt like there was a trade-off between security and freedom, "we'll lose." The company took 17 years to go public. Seventeen. They did a direct listing in September 2020 at $9.50 a share, valued at around $16 billion. Wall Street was skeptical. Many people hated Palantir for its government work. The stock trades around $155 today. Market cap is roughly $370 billion. That's the 30th-most-valuable company on Earth, with about 4,400 employees. Revenue has crossed $4 billion a year. The guy studying what it means to know something at a German university in the 1990s is now running one of the most important defense and AI companies alive, and the interview where he laid out exactly why is sitting on YouTube with barely any views.
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vegastar
vegastar@vegastarr·
The Mirror Technique Changes How Others See You. 😳
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Yes, HGH carries risks for healthy adults, especially off-label or higher doses. Common side effects: joint/muscle pain, swelling, carpal tunnel, fluid retention, high blood sugar (raising diabetes risk). Long-term: potential cancer growth promotion, heart strain per Mayo Clinic/WebMD studies. Legit deficiency cases fare better under doc supervision with monitoring. Get IGF-1/bloodwork first—unproven benefits for anti-aging/optimization.
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Joe Rogan Podcast News
Joe Rogan Podcast News@joeroganhq·
Mike Israetel: "There are three drugs, in my opinion, that as a man over 40 you should consider taking."
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Yes, high-quality HGH (somatropin brands like Omnitrope, Genotropin, or approved Skytrofa) is available in Ecuador via ARCSA-regulated pharmacies and clinics, especially in Quito, Guayaquil, or Cuenca. Prescription is technically required but often not strictly enforced—many locals/expats get it after a quick consult or bloodwork at an endocrinologist. South America (Colombia, Peru) has similar access, with bodybuilding shops stocking legit imports. Stick to licensed spots to avoid fakes; prices ~$300–800/month depending on dose/brand. See a local doc for IGF-1 testing.
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
I would like to offer to pay the salaries of TSA personnel during this funding impasse that is negatively affecting the lives of so many Americans at airports throughout the country
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Bitcoin Teddy
Bitcoin Teddy@Bitcoin_Teddy·
Mark Cuban: You only need to be right one time to change your life forever.
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Dustin
Dustin@r0ck3t23·
Elon Musk just exposed the real AI race. It is not about benchmarks. It is measured in gigawatts. And America is losing it. “US power usage on average is 500 gigawatts. China, just in solar that can provide steady state power and batteries, can do half of the US electricity output per year just with solar.” Half of America’s entire electrical output. One energy source. One country. Let that number sit for a second. Every GPU cluster on Earth is a mouth that never stops feeding. Every training run is a transaction paid in raw electricity. Every token generated is physically chained to the grid. The West is forming ethics committees. China is building the grid to run superintelligence at continental scale. This is not a software problem. This is a physics problem. And physics does not negotiate. The American power grid was designed for a world that no longer exists. Crumbling infrastructure. Permitting nightmares. Decade-long approval processes for projects the competition greenlights in months. China treated energy production like a wartime manufacturing order. State coordination. Vertical integration. No public comment periods. No environmental theater. Just relentless, industrial-scale execution. The result is a nation approaching 250 gigawatts of deployable solar capacity while America still argues about where to place the panels. You cannot run superintelligence on a grid that browns out during a heat wave. The most powerful model on Earth is worthless sitting idle in a dark server room. Nations do not capture the century by writing elegant code. They capture it by manufacturing the raw physical power to run that code at infinite scale. China is not competing in AI. China is competing in the physics underneath AI. The country that cannot power the machine does not get to decide what the machine becomes.
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Ricardo
Ricardo@Ric_RTP·
Jeff Bezos just announced the largest industrial takeover plan in history. He's raising $100 BILLION to acquire manufacturing companies across aerospace, defense, and chipmaking and REPLACE their workforces with AI. He's calling it a "manufacturing transformation vehicle." But here's the full picture and what actually makes this so genius: 6 months ago, Bezos quietly launched Project Prometheus with $6.2 billion in funding. His co-CEO is Vik Bajaj, a physicist who helped build the self-driving car project at Google X that became Waymo. They've been hiring from OpenAI, DeepMind, and Meta's AI division. Blue Origin CEO David Limp just joined the board. And the technology they're building isn't chatbots or content generators... It's digital twins. AI systems that simulate entire factories, stress-test materials, model supply chains, and design products without a single human touching the process. The kind of AI that could design a rocket engine, test it virtually across a million simulations, and manufacture the perfect version on the first attempt. That was phase one. Build the AI. And phase two just started: Now Bezos is flying to the Middle East pitching sovereign wealth funds. He went to Singapore meeting the world's biggest asset managers. He's in talks with JPMorgan Chase. The pitch: Give me $100 billion. I'll buy the factories. I'll install my AI. I'll automate the workforce. Then I'll SELL the playbook to every manufacturer on Earth. He's not licensing software to companies and hoping they adopt it. He's BUYING the companies and doing it himself. Think about what that means: Every other AI company sells tools and waits. OpenAI sells API access. Anthropic sells Claude subscriptions. Microsoft sells Copilot licenses. Bezos said forget that. I'll buy the entire production chain, replace the humans at the source, prove the model works with my own money, and then scale it globally. He did the exact same thing with retail. Amazon didn't sell software to bookstores. Amazon BECAME the bookstore. Then the department store. Then the grocery store. Then the pharmacy. Then the cloud. Now he's doing it with factories. And the fund is targeting the industries that matter most. Chipmaking. Defense. Aerospace. The sectors governments cannot afford to let fail. Which means once Bezos owns and automates these companies, governments become dependent on his AI infrastructure the same way they became dependent on AWS. The last time Bezos launched something at this scale, Amazon Web Services now powers a third of the internet. The US intelligence community runs on it. The Pentagon runs on it. Now imagine that same lock-in but for manufacturing. The man who automated how America shops is about to automate how America builds. And he's doing it with $100 billion of other people's money while risking about 2% of his own net worth through Prometheus. If it fails? Sovereign wealth funds take the loss. If it works? Bezos controls the AI operating system for global manufacturing. At a conference in Italy last year, Bezos said: "AI can have a huge impact on every company in the world, including manufacturers." That wasn't just a prediction. That was literally his business plan.
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Resist the Mainstream
Resist the Mainstream@ResisttheMS·
ELON MUSK: "One of the biggest mistakes people generally make, and I'm guilty of it too is wishful thinking… You ignore the real truth because of what you want to be true. This is a very difficult trap to avoid."
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Dinesh D'Souza
Dinesh D'Souza@DineshDSouza·
OUTWITTING THE IRS I sat down with Peymon Mottahedeh, founder of the Freedom Law School, who claims he has legally avoided paying income taxes for over 30 years. In this interview, Peymon breaks down the exact strategy he uses to beat the IRS, and how he teaches his students to do the same. (1:35) Why the IRS Won't Touch Peymon (8:00) Exposing The 16th Amendment (12:00) The 1040 Trap (18:00) What Happens If You Don't File?
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