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Ev

@hevanill

Katılım Ekim 2010
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Ole Lehmann
Ole Lehmann@itsolelehmann·
the pope and anthropic's co-founder just stood together at the vatican to release "magnifica humanitas," the first ever catholic teaching on AI yes, you read that right. the full ceremony was 2 hours. here's the most interesting things for you to know: 1. this is the biggest religious response to AI in history. popes only put out a handful of these huge official letters in their entire time as pope. the fact that one of them is about AI tells you how seriously the church is taking what's coming. 2. small detail with massive meaning: this pope picked the name "leo XIV" on purpose. the last pope named leo was leo XIII back in 1891, and his most famous act was writing the church's response to the industrial revolution. picking the same name is a deliberate signal. this pope sees AI as the new industrial revolution. 3. the catholic church does this every time a major technology reshapes humanity. they wrote "rerum novarum" in 1891 to respond to the industrial revolution. when nuclear weapons threatened the world in the 1960s, they wrote "pacem in terris." climate change and runaway tech got "laudato si" in 2015. now AI gets "magnifica humanitas." they don't issue these often. 4. the pope's main line: "AI needs to be disarmed." he literally compared AI to nuclear weapons. he said the church spent decades pushing for nuclear disarmament because the technology was too dangerous to leave in the hands of a few. he says AI is now in that same category. 5. anthropic co-founder christopher olah told the pope, on stage at the vatican, that anthropic's own research team keeps finding things inside their AI models that "mirror joy, satisfaction, fear, grief, and unease." 6. olah's reframe of what AI actually is: these things are grown. they're trained on a structure roughly modeled after the human brain and fed everything humans have ever written. in his own words: "they are made from us, from our words." he said even the people building them don't fully understand what's happening inside. 7. olah publicly admitted that every AI lab, including his own, faces pressure that can conflict with doing the right thing. commercial pressure to keep shipping, competitive pressure from other labs, plus the older pressures of pride and ambition. his solution: we desperately need outside critics with no skin in the game who will tell the labs when they're failing. 8. olah says there are 3 giant questions the AI labs cannot answer alone and the world needs religion and philosophy to step in on: > how do we make sure poor countries actually benefit from AI? > what does human flourishing even look like in this new world? > and what are these things we're actually building? 9. one of the sharpest lines in the whole encyclical: "the promise of automatic general prosperity often proves illusory." translation: the idea that AI will just make everyone rich on its own is a fantasy. someone has to actually design the system so the benefits get shared. 10. the pope also pulled out a 100-year-old quote: "contemporary man has not been trained to use power well." said by a theologian back in the 1920s. the whole encyclical is basically a long argument that we need to learn how to use this kind of power before it uses us. 11. the pope kept stressing that he doesn't have the technical answers. but he says the church has thousands of years of wisdom on what it means to be human, and that wisdom is exactly what's missing from how we're building AI right now. his closing line: this technology should serve "human flourishing and human dignity, not control consciences."
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Space and Technology
Space and Technology@spaceandtech_·
This is evoBOT, a robot helper developed by Germany’s Fraunhofer Institute for Material Flow and Logistics. It can grasp and carry goods to support cargo workers in transporting packages. evoBOT can also move smoothly across uneven terrain, including bumpy surfaces and sloping ground.
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F.O.L.A
F.O.L.A@folaoftech·
Google Omni might be too powerful 🫥
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Ev@hevanill·
@SahilBloom What they did teach you in school: Work with A players. Eliminate the B players. The C players never play the game.
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Sahil Bloom
Sahil Bloom@SahilBloom·
Life advice nobody taught you in school:
Sahil Bloom tweet media
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Amir D
Amir D@starks_arq·
We sat down with a Hollywood executive producer and made an AI short film in under 8 minutes, he was speechless... Here's how we used our speech to film system to make it from a hotel room: 🧵
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Ev
Ev@hevanill·
@JeffBezos There are many, many Amazon employees who make what the nurse makes. No pension, no advanced healthcare, and as you’ve pointed out, no job security
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Jeff Bezos
Jeff Bezos@JeffBezos·
Thank you. The important part is zeroing out taxes on the bottom half. Best way to put money in someone’s pocket is to not take it out in the first place. Bottom half is only 3% of total tax revenue. But it’s very meaningful to that person. Zero it out.
Chris | Venture X Media@thecoachchris_

Facts It's great that Jeff Bezos thinks this way, because too many people who don't make money think that giving money to the government will solve a lot of their problems. They think these government programs are the answer, and it's clearly not. You can look at the federal level or at the state level, and you will see that a lot of government programs are simply waste.

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Ev
Ev@hevanill·
@atrupar Definitely a non-serious, laughing matter
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Aaron Rupar
Aaron Rupar@atrupar·
QUINTANILLA: According to the filings, the president has been trading some Intel in the quarter JIM CRAMER: Yeah, uh, yeah, hmm FABER: Got nothing to say? CRAMER: Uh, uh, yeah, whoa, yeah. FABER: Don't worry. We're not having technical difficulties, but we gotta go
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Founders Inc
Founders Inc@fdotinc·
They reinvented the hearing aid by studying the human ear Normal hearing aid: $4700 Theirs: $20
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Ev
Ev@hevanill·
@HumanityChad And many of the main actors were paid 6 figures, not 7
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Restoring Your Faith in Humanity
When filming of The Lord of the Rings wrapped 25 years ago, the horses used for the films were auctioned off. Liv Tyler's stunt double, Jane Abbott couldn't afford to buy the horse she worked with (and fell in love with), so Viggo Mortensen bought it for her. "He just did it because he understood."
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Ev@hevanill·
@elonmusk Again, I think it might be the “replace humans with robots and abandon the planet for mars” thing
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Ev@hevanill·
@elonmusk It might be the “replacing humans with robots and abandoning the planet for mars” thing
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Ev@hevanill·
When Burger King comes along and buys Boomer Burger and drives it into the ground Then you have a guy who’s good at making burgers (because he hired others to run it right?) receive a massive lump sum that’s disproportionate to the time, cost and equity put in. They can borrow to live at 3% while making 10% for the rest of their lives, while Boomer burger has died with the Boomers
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Carl
Carl@HistoryBoomer·
You start a burger joint: Boomer Burgers. You hire 10 people to run it, and it makes money. Ok? You branch out and build 2 more joints. You make more money. You keep building new BBs. Dozens. Hundreds. Thousands. At what point does the money you're making become "unearned"?
Marco Foster@MarcoFoster_

AOC: “There’s a certain level of wealth and accumulation that is unearned. You can’t earn a billion dollars. You just can’t earn that. You can get market power, you can break rules, you can abuse labor laws, you can pay people less than what they’re worth, but you can’t earn that”

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Ev
Ev@hevanill·
@astro_greek Guess what you won’t get on Mars Saxon? Restaurants OR strangers
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Astro Greek
Astro Greek@astro_greek·
Elon Musk once shared this touching story about his son Saxon: "One of my sons, Saxon, who's sort of autistic but he's kind of awesome, he's like an article of wisdom. For a long time, I tried to have a family dinner at a restaurant once a week. Saxon really didn't understand why we were doing this. Then finally, he had an epiphany and said, "Oh… the reason people go to restaurants is to hang out with strangers?" And I'm like, yeah… that's actually true. You can get the same food delivered, you can invite friends over… but what you can't get at home is hanging out with strangers."
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Ev
Ev@hevanill·
I think her point is that the wealth accumulated by a massive tech company sale, a once-a-decade merger, (in your example - art), it's unique and disproportionately tied to the time put in Almost immediately you've unlocked a new set of tools and rules that aren't available to the public. They come with responsibility
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Ev
Ev@hevanill·
@elonmusk Why aren’t all of these electric and Teslas?
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Tom Goodwin
Tom Goodwin@tomfgoodwin·
Every single AI use case video is still utterly painful to watch for anyone not rich, 33, and living in SF. It's still , "help me plan a hiking trip to Yosemite with a cute sushi picnic, maybe with a live band " "schedule 1 on 1's with the GTM team about brand guidelines, upload to notion and update everyone on Slack" " Can you buy a gift for my brother and and an uber to deliver it, he likes organic flour, yoga, helicopters, and lives in Carmel" This isn't how the real world works at all. Every time I do a big keynote to a real company, I can't possibly use any assets made.
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Tandy
Tandy@dantypo·
I’m going to defend the Starbucks CEO who is under fire for saying that their price of $9 is for an exceptional coffee and a premium experience. First, there are cups of coffee so good and experience so premium that $9 is worth that cup. Even $20. That experience comes after a very good and well portioned meal, brought to you by a waiter in a perfectly white and pressed shirt, who brushes the crumbs off your tablecloth into a tray and not onto the floor before placing a leather bound drink menu on your candlelit table. It comes to complement a sinfully, sweet dessert. It comes with the ambience of an intimate experience. Starbucks is not that. At Starbucks, you’re paying nine dollars to rest your ass in a seat made by IKEA in a warehouse I brought to you via a barista who swept the floor sometime last Tuesday.
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Ev
Ev@hevanill·
@FirstDoctor Did you self convert or were you cardioverted? Any previous or subsequent episodes? Were you referred to an EP who said it was only sleep deprivation?
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First Doctor
First Doctor@FirstDoctor·
Years back, my heart went into atrial fibrillation at 3am. I was standing alone in a hospital corridor. I was the doctor on shift. And my own body was shutting down. The cause? Not genetics. Not diet. Not hypertension. Not stress alone. I wasn't sleeping.
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First Doctor
First Doctor@FirstDoctor·
BREAKING: A new study shows that good sleep is more important for longevity than diet, exercise, and social ties.
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Ev
Ev@hevanill·
There is no system. You create the system. Every doctor, specialist, referral, prescription - you need to see through yourself to completion or it isn’t getting done right. Call and call again “because somebody else is, and that’s how you fall through the cracks. Squeeky hinge gets the oil”. This is now they expect patients to navigate the “system”. Doesn’t sound like a system to me.
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mbaril010.eth 🦇🔊
mbaril010.eth 🦇🔊@mbaril010·
587 days. That's how long the Canadian healthcare system took to call me back about the spinal surgery I needed immediately or risk losing the use of my legs. In 2024, I broke my back in Singapore. The neurosurgeon there said surgery was urgent. After 3 weeks fighting my insurance from a hospital bed, I flew home with medical support. The Canadian hospital quoted an 8-month wait. I'm lucky I could afford to go private. The next day, I had the operation. Today, 587 DAYS LATER, the public hospital called to say they're ready for me. People say Canadian healthcare is free and great. It's neither. It's horrible!
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Ev
Ev@hevanill·
@AsakyGRN Pauly Soprano could have at least bought her lunch
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𝐀𝐬𝐚𝐤𝐲𝐆𝐑𝐍
Man appreciates his tenant after she moved out of his house after 10 years, leaving the property intact, clean, and without any damage.
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