ggptgg

246 posts

ggptgg

ggptgg

@ggptgg

Katılım Mayıs 2025
516 Takip Edilen26 Takipçiler
sawaiz
sawaiz@SawaizSyed·
@MSchwaibold Taking it a little further, radiology doesn’t really know what’s coming.
English
4
0
95
9.8K
Marvin Schwaibold
Marvin Schwaibold@MSchwaibold·
I just got my MRI scan and did the same thing ... and the (german) clinic was blown away by my viewer. I can browse every scan, hover to autoplay slices, search anything, scribble notes, stamp findings, and screenshot moments instantly.
tobi lutke@tobi

My annual MRI scan gives me a USB stick with the data, but you need this commercial windows software to open it. Ran Claude on the stick and asked it to make me a html based viewer tool. This looks... way better.

English
148
188
5.8K
879.9K
ggptgg retweetledi
Naomi Seibt
Naomi Seibt@NaomiSeibt·
ALICE WEIDEL NUKES URSULA VON DER LEYEN🔥 Hey, @vonderleyen, show us your texts once you enforce Chat Control! 👋 “Total control in your chats – that's how they want to keep citizens in check, while Ursula von der Leyen DELETED her PFIZER DEALS via text messages.” - @Alice_Weidel We must leave the EU. 🇪🇺
English
272
6K
22.8K
230.9K
Nick Norwitz MD PhD
Nick Norwitz MD PhD@nicknorwitz·
4/4) It’s a fascinating molecule: strange biology, compelling mechanistic data, and potentially enormous promise. If you want the full deep dive: Mechanisms Human trials + Dosing protocols + What people are actually experiencing with GHK-Cu, check out the deep dive: staycuriousmetabolism.substack.com/p/ghk-cu-the-s…
Nick Norwitz MD PhD tweet media
English
1
2
42
4.4K
Nick Norwitz MD PhD
Nick Norwitz MD PhD@nicknorwitz·
The Strange Science of the Copper Peptide 1/4) GHK-Cu is among the weirdest peptides... once you understand how it works. First, consider this: Copper is an element that’s essential for human biology. It sits at the core of enzymes involved in collagen production + antioxidant defenses+ mitochondrial metabolism. And naturally, GHK-Cu levels decline with age, falling by over 50% between ages 20 and 60. But here’s the catch: You can’t just give the body free copper. Free copper ions can accelerate oxidative stress and cellular aging. So, on one hand, you need copper for proper metabolic health and longevity… but on the other hand, excess free copper can actually promote aging. GHK-Cu appears to solve this problem.
Nick Norwitz MD PhD tweet media
English
17
31
282
133.7K
Harry Fisher
Harry Fisher@harryfisherEMTP·
My friend is dying in the hospital right now. Went from working as a paramedic to laying in a bed a fraction of his normal weight. All within months. He knows 100% the covid shots caused his rapid cancer. He knows 100% what is destroying him. And that’s how he’s spending his Father’s Day. While Fauci is pardoned. While mainstream news refuses to air truth. Our people are being destroyed in the most horrific ways imaginable. And our leadership is doing NOTHING! It’s hard to not give up on humanity. I pray I never do. God bless
English
1.3K
2.8K
11.5K
193.3K
ggptgg retweetledi
@levelsio
@levelsio@levelsio·
🇪🇺 Chat Control has passed 😔 They can and will now legally scan any person's messages, emails and photos you send without a warrant The way they passed this law when the majority of the European Parliament was against it will shock you: They waited until most EP members were on holiday so only a few were present and then created an "urgent" vote for it to pass it through There's nothing democratic about any of it and big powerful forces are behind this that can manipulate the EU for whatever they want Democracy in Europe died a bit today 😔
English
252
4.1K
22.8K
3.2M
ggptgg retweetledi
Aurea
Aurea@AureaLibe·
Je lance l’initiative Exit Chat Control. exitchatcontrol.org Ce site est un guide complet qui vise à répertorier tous les outils nécessaires pour contourner tout système de surveillance de vos messageries privées. Le site est open source et sera amélioré en continu.
Aurea@AureaLibe

x.com/i/article/2075…

Français
451
7.5K
20.5K
718.9K
ggptgg retweetledi
Sven Clement
Sven Clement@svnee·
The European Parliament voted AGAINST Chat Control. 314 to 276. And it passed anyway. Let me tell you how: they needed 361 votes to say no. On the last day before vacation. Every empty seat counted as a yes. They lost the vote. They won the law. That’s not democracy. That’s a trick. #ChatControl
English
743
10.8K
48K
985.7K
Nick Norwitz MD PhD
Nick Norwitz MD PhD@nicknorwitz·
1/6) There’s a common medication now attracting attention for its potential effects on cardiovascular disease, dementia risk, and even longevity. It’s called Tadalafil. Most people know it as an erectile dysfunction drug. But the biology suggests it may have far broader implications. First, you need to understand how Tadalafil works. It inhibits an enzyme called PDE5, which normally breaks down a signaling molecule called cGMP. More cGMP → more smooth muscle relaxation → wider blood vessels → better blood flow. Importantly, PDE5 is expressed throughout the body, including the blood vessels of the heart, muscles, and brain. But what about human data?
Nick Norwitz MD PhD tweet media
English
6
21
224
23.7K
Abud Bakri MD
Abud Bakri MD@AbudBakri·
Once we solve premature thymic aging the next project is to obtain the bromantane IP and get it approved
English
9
6
196
21.2K
ggptgg retweetledi
david andina
david andina@daandina·
📍El Gobierno homologó 532 títulos de Arquitectura en 2025 (62% resoluciones favorables): el Consejo de Arquitectura ha bloqueado 121 homologaciones. 📍El mismo Gobierno homologó 30.303 títulos de Medicina en 2025 (89% resoluciones favorables): pueden ejercer en la sanidad pública (urgencias y atención primaria) y en la privada SIN especialidad y SIN ningún tipo de prueba práctica ni teórica previa a diferencia de cualquier otro país europeo.
david andina tweet mediadavid andina tweet mediadavid andina tweet mediadavid andina tweet media
Español
31
541
812
64.9K
ggptgg retweetledi
Iñigo San Millán
Iñigo San Millán@doctorinigo·
1994…. This photo was taken during a VO₂max test when I was a young competitive cyclist and a physiology student at Colorado State University. My VO₂max was 76.7 mL·kg⁻¹·min⁻¹ 🤘😊 Back then, VO₂max was the number. The holy grail of endurance performance. But something didn’t add up. With such a high a VO₂max, I should have made it to the Tour de France... Clearly, there was another layer that VO₂max and physiology back then couldn’t explain. That question changed my life. It led me to follow the work of Dr. George Brooks and into the fascinating world of lactate metabolism, muscle bioenergetics, mitochondrial function, pyruvate oxidation and metabolic flexibility… 32 years later, my questions are no longer about how much oxygen the body can consume, but about muscle bioenergetics and metabolic equilibrium. I’ve been incredibly fortunate to contribute to this field and to have worked alongside my longtime scientific idol, Dr. Brooks. Ironically, VO₂max has recently re-emerged as one of the hottest topics in health and longevity. But after spending 3 decades studying metabolism in sports performance and disease, I’ve come to see VO₂max not as the destination, but as the beginning of the story. The real story starts inside the cell, inside mitochondria…
Iñigo San Millán tweet media
English
25
78
1.1K
121K
ggptgg retweetledi
Z.ai
Z.ai@Zai_org·
Introducing ZCode, the official development environment for GLM-5.2 - GLM Coding Plan subscribers: now 1.5x usage quota in ZCode - BYOK supported: works with your existing subscriptions and APIs - Available on macOS, Windows, and Linux Download now: zcode.z.ai/en
English
385
613
5.8K
1.4M
ggptgg
ggptgg@ggptgg·
@trq212 Why did you increase the price.
English
0
0
0
4
ggptgg
ggptgg@ggptgg·
@AnthropicAI Why did you increase the price of the subscription
English
0
0
0
23
Anthropic
Anthropic@AnthropicAI·
Claude Fable 5 will be available again globally tomorrow. After a series of productive conversations with the US government, we're redeploying the model with a new set of classifiers to target and block more cybersecurity tasks. In the near term, some routine tasks like coding and debugging will fall back to Opus 4.8. We’ll continue to refine these classifiers over the coming weeks to reduce false positives and better distinguish genuine misuse from legitimate requests. We’ve also begun drafting a consensus framework—with Amazon, Microsoft, Google, and other Glasswing partners—for assessing the severity of AI jailbreaks and how AI developers should respond to them. We invite other industry partners and model providers to join us in this effort. Finally, we’re scaling up our collaboration with the US government on model testing and safeguards. This will include pre-release access to models and safeguards for evaluation, information sharing on jailbreaks and misuse, and dedicated resources for joint research. Thank you to our users for your patience, and to our partners across the government, industry, and the research community who worked alongside us to make Fable 5 available again. Read our full blog: anthropic.com/news/redeployi…
English
3.6K
6.5K
43.4K
15.5M
ggptgg
ggptgg@ggptgg·
@DeryaTR_ They increased the subscription with 17 euros for MAX.
English
0
0
0
21
Derya Unutmaz, MD
Derya Unutmaz, MD@DeryaTR_·
Looking forward to trying this prompt with the re-release of Fable 5, since initially they blocked all of biomedicine so they could make it available safely for other reasons like coding to the public. Oh but wait, why did the US gov block them again?: “In the near term, some routine tasks like coding and debugging will fall back to Opus 4.8.”
Derya Unutmaz, MD tweet media
Anthropic@AnthropicAI

Claude Fable 5 will be available again globally tomorrow. After a series of productive conversations with the US government, we're redeploying the model with a new set of classifiers to target and block more cybersecurity tasks. In the near term, some routine tasks like coding and debugging will fall back to Opus 4.8. We’ll continue to refine these classifiers over the coming weeks to reduce false positives and better distinguish genuine misuse from legitimate requests. We’ve also begun drafting a consensus framework—with Amazon, Microsoft, Google, and other Glasswing partners—for assessing the severity of AI jailbreaks and how AI developers should respond to them. We invite other industry partners and model providers to join us in this effort. Finally, we’re scaling up our collaboration with the US government on model testing and safeguards. This will include pre-release access to models and safeguards for evaluation, information sharing on jailbreaks and misuse, and dedicated resources for joint research. Thank you to our users for your patience, and to our partners across the government, industry, and the research community who worked alongside us to make Fable 5 available again. Read our full blog: anthropic.com/news/redeployi…

English
41
15
259
33.5K
ggptgg
ggptgg@ggptgg·
@patrick_oshag @Etched Computers look again like in the 40s.. Make Computers Great Again. Everything is a cycle.
GIF
English
0
0
1
535
Patrick OShaughnessy
Patrick OShaughnessy@patrick_oshag·
Three years ago, two Harvard dropouts set out to build a better AI chip than the largest companies in the world. Almost everyone I called at the time said it was impossible. Today, Etched (@Etched) comes out of stealth with $800M total raised, $1B in signed customer contracts, and a working next-gen AI chip. This was my excuse to ask the two founders, @UbertiGavin and @robertwachen, every question I have about compute and inference. We discuss: - Why they built an entire rack and not just a chip - The two technical bets behind their architecture no one else has tried - How two founders in their twenties recruited industry legends - The night they nearly ran out of money - Why whoever produces the most tokens wins If you care about the future of compute, Gavin and Rob are two people to know. I think you will find the story of what they have built hard to forget. Enjoy! TIMESTAMPS 0:00 Intro 1:00 Why Nobody Believed Etched Would Work 14:06 Why Inference Is the Bottleneck 22:27 Gavin and Rob’s Origin Stories 33:24 Taking Huge Risks to Move Faster 49:43 Kernels, Compilers, and the AI Stack 1:02:08 Raising $100M to Survive 1:16:00 The Future of Models, Agents, and Intelligence
English
65
215
2.3K
1.3M
ggptgg retweetledi
Etched
Etched@Etched·
We're coming out of stealth. We've built our first racks after a successful A0 tapeout, $1B+ in customer contracts, and $800m raised. Early customer tests show us achieving SOTA throughput, latency, and power efficiency on inference workloads. Our first racks ship this summer.
Etched tweet media
English
638
926
9.5K
6.1M
ggptgg retweetledi
Bryan Johnson
Bryan Johnson@bryan_johnson·
Breaking news for people who want to look hot, be young and not die. 

A few years ago, two college dropouts told me they could accelerate longevity by building a faster AI chip. 

I invested, and they just pulled it off.
 What it means:
 > 10x more throughput (tokens per second) for the same power footprint > Dramatically lower operational costs for executing today’s frontier models > Run far larger, more capable AI models within the same power and thermal budget, because a transformer-specific chip spends a fraction of the energy per token that a general-purpose GPU does Rob and Gavin's approach resonated with me because solving aging is a gigantic combinatorial search problem. The chemical space of small, drug-like molecules has around 10^60 possibilities. These compounds need to be mapped against a human proteome derived from 20,000 genes, including 1,600 transcription factors, and a dense web of interactions among them. 

The size of the combinatorial space is problematic. You need to identify which targets to modulate, within specific cellular lineages, at exact dosages, and in optimal temporal sequences.

Traditional high precision physics simulations are too slow to brute force the problem. You can shortcut it with AI inference, using frontier neural networks as hyper fast surrogate models to predict biological interactions instantly. By hardwiring transformer logic into silicon, Etched offers the infrastructure needed to run these massive biological foundation models at scale.

I'm surprised and impressed they were able to pull this off, and so quickly.  They already have $1B in orders
Etched@Etched

We're coming out of stealth. We've built our first racks after a successful A0 tapeout, $1B+ in customer contracts, and $800m raised. Early customer tests show us achieving SOTA throughput, latency, and power efficiency on inference workloads. Our first racks ship this summer.

English
186
293
7K
1.4M