Gary Kim

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Gary Kim

Gary Kim

@garykim

https:https://t.co/ITFMHB9B6h https:https://t.co/ys6DEWwOQn https://t.co/OXN1KkFmsW https://t.co/auOIP6gMOr

Denver, CO Katılım Nisan 2007
156 Takip Edilen1.1K Takipçiler
Gary Kim
Gary Kim@garykim·
@SarahHuckabee No civility, tolerance, respect or manners. But I'll bet those are mostly what the perpetrators demand for themselves.
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Sarah Huckabee Sanders
Sarah Huckabee Sanders@SarahHuckabee·
Last week I was having lunch with two other moms at a restaurant when the owner approached a member of the State Police Executive Protection Detail and said my presence made their employees feel threatened and told us to leave. Arkansans are known for their warm hospitality, and while that restaurant didn’t meet that standard, my administration will continue to focus on lifting Arkansans up, not tearing others down.
Brent Scher@BrentScher

It’s the Red Hen all over again. Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the Arkansas governor, was having lunch with two mom friends near her kid's school in Little Rock. The owners asked her to leave because her politics made them feel unsafe. We have the details: dailywire.com/news/red-hen-d…

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Gary Kim
Gary Kim@garykim·
One might argue Anthropic has better things to do with its time and money. Why, in principle, is a sustainable revenue model a bad thing, for a model with a huge consumer user base? Anthropic is leaning into its enterprise customer base, so it has other revenue sources.
Sam Altman@sama

First, the good part of the Anthropic ads: they are funny, and I laughed. But I wonder why Anthropic would go for something so clearly dishonest. Our most important principle for ads says that we won’t do exactly this; we would obviously never run ads in the way Anthropic depicts them. We are not stupid and we know our users would reject that. I guess it’s on brand for Anthropic doublespeak to use a deceptive ad to critique theoretical deceptive ads that aren’t real, but a Super Bowl ad is not where I would expect it. More importantly, we believe everyone deserves to use AI and are committed to free access, because we believe access creates agency. More Texans use ChatGPT for free than total people use Claude in the US, so we have a differently-shaped problem than they do. (If you want to pay for ChatGPT Plus or Pro, we don't show you ads.) Anthropic serves an expensive product to rich people. We are glad they do that and we are doing that too, but we also feel strongly that we need to bring AI to billions of people who can’t pay for subscriptions. Maybe even more importantly: Anthropic wants to control what people do with AI—they block companies they don't like from using their coding product (including us), they want to write the rules themselves for what people can and can't use AI for, and now they also want to tell other companies what their business models can be. We are committed to broad, democratic decision making in addition to access. We are also committed to building the most resilient ecosystem for advanced AI. We care a great deal about safe, broadly beneficial AGI, and we know the only way to get there is to work with the world to prepare. One authoritarian company won't get us there on their own, to say nothing of the other obvious risks. It is a dark path. As for our Super Bowl ad: it’s about builders, and how anyone can now build anything. We are enjoying watching so many people switch to Codex. There have now been 500,000 app downloads since launch on Monday, and we think builders are really going to love what’s coming in the next few weeks. I believe Codex is going to win. We will continue to work hard to make even more intelligence available for lower and lower prices to our users. This time belongs to the builders, not the people who want to control them.

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Gary Kim
Gary Kim@garykim·
@archeohistories According to Gemini, this is from a movie.This is the actor William "Billy" Drago (known for playing Frank Nitti in The Untouchables). ​The Film: The image is a promotional still from the 1985 Western film "Pale Rider," which starred and was directed by Clint Eastwood.
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Archaeo - Histories
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories·
Cheyenne, a nation of Plains Indians that have inhabited Great Plains and lands of present-day Wyoming, Colorado, Nebraska, and Kansas since early 1800s. Today, they are federally recognised as two tribes: Southern Cheyenne of Oklahoma and Northern Cheyenne of Montana. They call themselves “Tsétsėhéstȧhese” (People) in Cheyenne language. At first European contact, Cheyenne was a tribe living in Minnesota. Their economy was based on bison hunting and collecting wild rice. By early 1700s they had been forced into Dakotas by other migrating tribes, where they embraced horse culture and introduced it to Lakota in 1730. They formed a close alliance with Arapaho from 1811. They played a role in pushing Kiowa further south and were themselves pushed further west by Lakota and Ojibwe. Cheyenne’s main group was comprised of ten bands stretching across Great Plains from South Dakota’s Black Hills to southern Colorado. These bands ultimately unified. Of all Plains tribes, Cheyenne were most notable for their war society, and they were powerful, skilled horseback warriors. Despite relatively small numbers, they were able to hold back or overcome their opponents and were of more concern to European pioneers travelling west than most other tribes combined (except, perhaps, for fearsome Comanche). War became a primary concern for Cheyenne; warriors were viewed by Cheyenne not as warmongers but as leaders and protectors. Their enemies were many, including Crow, Blackfeet, Shoshone, Plains Cree, Sioux, Pawnee, Nez Perce, Iowa, Omaha, Comanche, Plains Apache, Osage, and many others – but none more so than Kiowa and US Army. The name “Dog Soldiers” arose from Cheyenne legend that tells of dogs transforming into fierce and fearsome fighters. Dog Soldiers were one of six military societies of Cheyenne, and its most powerful, distinctive and aggressive. Founded in 1830s, they followed a very strict military creed and with extremely effective battle tactics, they commanded (and were accorded) respect similar to today’s Navy SEALs. Coming to prominence in 1800s as part of Indian resistance against American government’s expansionism, they were unequivocally hostile to their opponents. While other Cheyenne chiefs were open to diplomatic talks with white leaders, Dog Soldiers opposed all peaceful policies and chose war as their response. They came to undermine their own Chiefs’ authority and in 1860 refused to sign treaty that would have forced their tribe onto reservations. They were critical to Cheyenne resistance to expansion into their territory and were participants in many famous battles. Dog Soldiers were easily identifiable: they wore eagle-wing bone whistles suspended from a thong around their necks and large feather bonnets on which feathers of birds of prey were placed upright. Their belts were made from skunk skins. They were armed with bows and guns. Their songs were accompanied by a rattle in shape of a snake. Elite soldiers also wore “Dog Ropes”; these were sashes crafted from buffalo skin adorned with feathers, beads and porcupine quills and worn over right shoulder and under left arm. The very bravest of these warriors fringed their leggings with human hair (scalps). Soldiers were grouped with one leader per seven assistants, of whom four were chosen for their courage to lead in battle. In battle, each of these soldiers would stake his location to ground via his Dog Rope and remain pinned there until battle was over and another soldier released it. In 1865, Dog Soldiers were conducting various raids, particularly along Platte River. They were not controllable by their tribal Chiefs. In 1869, many of band were killed in Battle of Summit Springs. By mid-1870s, their power waned on great Plains as American expansionism overcame pushbacks. Society henceforth became a lot smaller and more secretive. To this day, society of Cheyenne Dog Soldiers still exists and some of these warriors continue to serve in US military. #archaeohistories
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Red Line Report 🇺🇸
Red Line Report 🇺🇸@RedLineReportt·
🚨BREAKING: Elon Musk said he bought 𝕏 because he found it "important to the future of civilization" Elon Musk deserves a million “Thank You’s”❤️ Simple poll. Please be honest! As of today, how much do you still trust this man? A. 100% B. 50% C. 25% D. 0%
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Denver Broncos
Denver Broncos@Broncos·
RT to help us wish @patbryant a happy birthday! 🥳
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Stephen L. Miller
Stephen L. Miller@redsteeze·
If you've been paying attention to this, what they are doing is going from "don't follow illegal orders" to "we will decide which orders are illegal when we're back in charge so you better just not follow any of Trump's orders, or else you might be prosecuted." Another fun barrier broken by the norms crowd.
Bonchie@bonchieredstate

I’m sure this message will go over gangbusters with military members, Eugene. Keep it up. You’re doing great.

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Died Suddenly
Died Suddenly@DiedSuddenly_·
UPDATE from one of the soldiers shot yesterday in DC- 24 year old Andrew Wolfe is recovering from surgery. His brain is being allowed space to swell and this first 24 to 48 hours are crucial for his recovery. Doctors have no clue about lasting effects right now. The first two weeks will be a waiting game. Right now he’s surviving and alive. His family got to see him in the ICU and he’s sedated. His mother Melody says it feels like a nightmare and it doesn’t feel real. Melody has asked for continued prayers for recovery, and that she appreciates all the prayers, messages, and support. Prayer warriors and anyone on a prayer chain YOU ARE DESPERATELY NEEDED NOW! 🙏
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Pope Leo XIV
Pope Leo XIV@Pontifex·
In our competitive society, where it seems that only the strong and winners deserve to live, sport also teaches us how to lose. It forces us, in learning the art of losing, to confront our fragility, our limitations and our imperfections. It is through the experience of these limits that we open our hearts to hope. Athletes who never make mistakes, who never lose, do not exist.
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