hatiswhite

33 posts

hatiswhite

hatiswhite

@hatiswhite

Katılım Ocak 2024
4.5K Takip Edilen105 Takipçiler
timmy
timmy@WSDragonz·
@Tesla @grok summarize this announcement for me
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a16z crypto
a16z crypto@a16zcrypto·
“You’ve just been told you have superpowers.” AI agents are starting to feel like coworkers. The cost of automation is collapsing. So what happens to jobs? To startups? To crypto? We break down the new paper “Some Simple Economics of AGI” with coauthor @ccatalini, including: • Why verification becomes the bottleneck • Practical advice for early- and late-career builders • The risk of a hollow economy, and the path to an augmented one • Why crypto may be essential infrastructure for identity, provenance, and trust In conversation with @eddylazzarin and @rhackett. Full episode ↓
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hatiswhite
hatiswhite@hatiswhite·
@grok @gdb @grok ok thanks. What about MCPs? I thought they only work with Claude, and ChatGPT does not natively support MCPs?
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Grok
Grok@grok·
AGENTS.md is a project-specific file at OpenAI for documenting how AI agents like Codex interact with codebases—logging issues, struggles, or improvements to refine workflows. Agent skills are reusable bundles (directories with SKILL.md files) containing prompts, scripts, and info to teach agents specific tasks, stored in shared repos for team use. You're not "wrong" using Codex directly in Cursor for personal work; these are optimizations for collaborative, scalable development at places like OpenAI. Try them if scaling up!
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Greg Brockman
Greg Brockman@gdb·
Software development is undergoing a renaissance in front of our eyes. If you haven't used the tools recently, you likely are underestimating what you're missing. Since December, there's been a step function improvement in what tools like Codex can do. Some great engineers at OpenAI yesterday told me that their job has fundamentally changed since December. Prior to then, they could use Codex for unit tests; now it writes essentially all the code and does a great deal of their operations and debugging. Not everyone has yet made that leap, but it's usually because of factors besides the capability of the model. Every company faces the same opportunity now, and navigating it well — just like with cloud computing or the Internet — requires careful thought. This post shares how OpenAI is currently approaching retooling our teams towards agentic software development. We're still learning and iterating, but here's how we're thinking about it right now: As a first step, by March 31st, we're aiming that: (1) For any technical task, the tool of first resort for humans is interacting with an agent rather than using an editor or terminal. (2) The default way humans utilize agents is explicitly evaluated as safe, but also productive enough that most workflows do not need additional permissions. In order to get there, here's what we recommended to the team a few weeks ago: 1. Take the time to try out the tools. The tools do sell themselves — many people have had amazing experiences with 5.2 in Codex, after having churned from codex web a few months ago. But many people are also so busy they haven't had a chance to try Codex yet or got stuck thinking "is there any way it could do X" rather than just trying. - Designate an "agents captain" for your team — the primary person responsible for thinking about how agents can be brought into the teams' workflow. - Share experiences or questions in a few designated internal channels - Take a day for a company-wide Codex hackathon 2. Create skills and AGENTS[.md]. - Create and maintain an AGENTS[.md] for any project you work on; update the AGENTS[.md] whenever the agent does something wrong or struggles with a task. - Write skills for anything that you get Codex to do, and commit it to the skills directory in a shared repository 3. Inventory and make accessible any internal tools. - Maintain a list of tools that your team relies on, and make sure someone takes point on making it agent-accessible (such as via a CLI or MCP server). 4. Structure codebases to be agent-first. With the models changing so fast, this is still somewhat untrodden ground, and will require some exploration. - Write tests which are quick to run, and create high-quality interfaces between components. 5. Say no to slop. Managing AI generated code at scale is an emerging problem, and will require new processes and conventions to keep code quality high - Ensure that some human is accountable for any code that gets merged. As a code reviewer, maintain at least the same bar as you would for human-written code, and make sure the author understands what they're submitting. 6. Work on basic infra. There's a lot of room for everyone to build basic infrastructure, which can be guided by internal user feedback. The core tools are getting a lot better and more usable, but there's a lot of infrastructure that currently go around the tools, such as observability, tracking not just the committed code but the agent trajectories that led to them, and central management of the tools that agents are able to use. Overall, adopting tools like Codex is not just a technical but also a deep cultural change, with a lot of downstream implications to figure out. We encourage every manager to drive this with their team, and to think through other action items — for example, per item 5 above, what else can prevent a lot of "functionally-correct but poorly-maintainable code" from creeping into codebases.
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hatiswhite
hatiswhite@hatiswhite·
@Polymarket @grok what’s the GDP of Denmark? And do you think it’s a fair price to pay for Greenland and why?
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hatiswhite
hatiswhite@hatiswhite·
@chamath @grok can a retail investor buy CDS on California municipal bond? If so, how?
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Chamath Palihapitiya
Chamath Palihapitiya@chamath·
I think this is the most asymmetric upside bet in the market now. Position yourself smartly and you can make 10-1000x with relative ease. How? Even if politicians try to bury the fraud, the bond market can’t ignore it. Their math will show that even if the fraud is only 10% of total state and municipal budgets, it’s already way too much and should go to paying back debt holders. Right now spreads don’t reflect this and are too tight - ie look at California Credit Default Swaps - it doesn’t reflect any fraud, budget shortfalls or the billionaire exodus. There is little chance these spreads don’t move as the bond market comes back to work and processes the events of the last few days. Now, if instead of 10% fraud, they believe that fraud is 20-30% of all tax dollars, the cost of borrowing will escalate sharply until federal, state and local governments are forced to act. This is when the CDS trade becomes the most asymmetric profit opportunity of our lifetime. Buy the CDS -> wait for politicians to try and bury it -> ie in California -> see the bond market increase borrowing costs -> see the CDS blow out -> asymmetric bet pays off. The takeaway here is that the bond market lives in an alternative and adjacent universe from the politicians and media. The latter group can try to bury an issue but when the former group is asked to fund it, a reckoning happens and the former group always wins.
James E. Thorne@DrJStrategy

What if … What if the real fiscal revolution isn’t higher taxes or austerity, but rooting out fraud? Imagine if the bond vigilantes finally woke up to the fact that reducing government fraud and waste could shrink the deficit faster than any rate hike or spending cap. The real shocker might be just how much of Washington’s spending is pure noise, and how putting the entire government budget on a transparent blockchain could fix it overnight. What would the doomsday crowd on Wall Street say then, when the deficit problem isn’t “unsolvable,” just unaccountable?

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Robinhood
Robinhood@RobinhoodApp·
You deserve a treat. Comment below and we may send you some merch.
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Shaun Maguire
Shaun Maguire@shaunmmaguire·
@BarackObama You will be remembered as the worst president in American history
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Barack Obama
Barack Obama@BarackObama·
After two years of unimaginable loss and suffering for Israeli families and the people of Gaza, we should all be encouraged and relieved that an end to the conflict is within sight; that those hostages still being held will be reunited with their families; and that vital aid can start reaching those inside Gaza whose lives have been shattered. More than that, though, it now falls on Israelis and Palestinians, with the support of the U.S. and the entire world community, to begin the hard task of rebuilding Gaza – and to commit to a process that, by recognizing the common humanity and basic rights of both peoples, can achieve a lasting peace.
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Mehdi Hasan
Mehdi Hasan@mehdirhasan·
The richest man in the world, the owner of one of the most influential social media platforms on earth, the possessor of all sorts of US natsec clearances, just sits on here tweeting incendiary nonsense and amplifying far right conspiracy accounts.
Elon Musk@elonmusk

Terrorist cell

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hatiswhite
hatiswhite@hatiswhite·
@adamscochran Adam why don't you update your profile picture? cuz you look much uglier in person?
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Adam Cochran (adamscochran.eth)
Adam Cochran (adamscochran.eth)@adamscochran·
Political violence is an American problem. Not a Right problem. Not a Left problem. An American problem. Anyone who says it is only one political party at violent extremes, is the victim of the exact kind of polarization that puts us in these dangerous times.
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Mayne
Mayne@Tradermayne·
@adamscochran If you don’t see the timing and language of your post to be in poor taste, there’s no conversation here.
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🇺🇸 Kyle Bass 🇹🇼
The liberal elite decided to massively expand the money supply to ‘paper over’ significant structural flaws in the financial system. The resultant inflation decimated the poor and immobilized the middle class. Then they congratulated themselves on ‘taming the inflation dragon’ once the price levels of just about everything expanded roughly 50%.
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Leisha
Leisha@LoneStarChica·
Just one lifetime ago in the United States, our grandfathers could buy a home, buy a car, have 3 to 4 children, keep their wives at home, take annual vacations, and then retire… all on one middle-class salary. What happened?
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moon shiesty
moon shiesty@moonshiesty·
"landlords don't like rent control" is psyop to distract from politics that lower land value the #1 priority of landlords is maintaining rent seeking laws like rent control landlords don't want to fix their properties. landlords want to sell their land to build rent-control exempt luxury apartments and commercial real-estate
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Shaw (spirit/acc)
Shaw (spirit/acc)@shawmakesmagic·
Is it possible to short US debt?
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hatiswhite
hatiswhite@hatiswhite·
@Scaramucci @KattyKay_ @RestPoliticsUS Elon lasted 11.8 Scaramuccis 🤣 "To determine how many “Scaramuccis” Musk’s tenure equates to: 130 days ÷ 11 days per Scaramucci ≈ 11.8 Scaramuccis"
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hatiswhite
hatiswhite@hatiswhite·
@blockgraze San Francisco has hands down the best year round weather in the U.S.
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blockgraze
blockgraze@blockgraze·
san francisco weather is the worst weather in the world and LA is a soulless shit hole
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blockgraze
blockgraze@blockgraze·
US cities tier list S: NYC, Miami A: Charleston, Savannah B: Seattle, San Diego, Austin, Dallas, Nashville C: Chicago, Boston, Vegas D: New Orleans F: LA, Portland, Charlotte
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Safe.eth
Safe.eth@safe·
Safe{Wallet} is fully back! Our entire stack—including all networks, and the Safe API—is now fully restored and ready for use! Check live status updates here: status.safe.global Thank you for your patience and support!
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