JimmyC.

4.1K posts

JimmyC.

JimmyC.

@jimbo055

Not a billionaire… (in fb I put joke alerts on my posts but I would like to get you to think)

Katılım Ekim 2009
427 Takip Edilen69 Takipçiler
JimmyC.
JimmyC.@jimbo055·
@JeffBezos @stevesi How badly do the democrates want to defeat Trump? Hating big oil, big pharma, big tech, e-commerce isn’t going to do it. No one cares about your moral superiority. Your righteousness doesn’t win votes.
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JimmyC.
JimmyC.@jimbo055·
@TheLaurenChen Yes - food should be getting cheaper. Depends where you live. There are rural dinners that only service breakfast and lunch. That’s what you’re looking for. I suspect you are a coastal elite. All your food comes from 2-3 global food services.
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JimmyC.
JimmyC.@jimbo055·
@pmddomingos @GitaGopinath Trump is so sc**ewed. If they all brought gifts, the deals sealed. West kneels to the east. This is history.
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Gita Gopinath
Gita Gopinath@GitaGopinath·
A painting of the end of meritocracy: A meeting of the two largest economies and not one woman at the table.
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JimmyC.
JimmyC.@jimbo055·
@typesfast Maybe platonic means something else in French?
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Touchstone Truth
Touchstone Truth@uncleboss143581·
🩸ATHEISM's DILEMMA 💫So, can you explain what the Universe is actually EXPANDING INTO⁉️ 💥A balloon expands in our hands, but what does the expanding universe expand into ?
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Kekius Maximus
Kekius Maximus@Kekius_Sage·
Physicist Michio Kaku suggests dark matter isn’t matter at all. It is gravity leaking from a parallel dimension.
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JimmyC.
JimmyC.@jimbo055·
@Kekius_Sage Has to do with our senses… not its existence
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Kekius Maximus
Kekius Maximus@Kekius_Sage·
The next revolution in cosmology won't be finding a new particle in a collider. It will be the realization that we are living in a high dimensional stack. We are just deaf to the layers sitting right on top of us.
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JimmyC.
JimmyC.@jimbo055·
@skdh This was used to explain gravity. That gravity decreases in strength at an order of magnitude less than electromagnetic suggests that it is connected to a higher dimensional space. But it has to have a functional activity to be experimentally interesting.
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JimmyC.
JimmyC.@jimbo055·
@EricLDaugh No… it’s not cameras, it’s AI watching and making judgement through a camera system.
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Eric Daugherty
Eric Daugherty@EricLDaugh·
🚨 The Chinese Communists have just TICKETED the Fox News crew, using their abundance of surveillance cameras placed around Beijing! BRET BAIER: "There are literally cameras everywhere...they see everything...our driver parked illegally for 2 MINUTES and got a ticket for $40!" "Because they saw it, on the camera." This is Communism! It's what the Democrats want.
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JimmyC.
JimmyC.@jimbo055·
@GBNEWS @StevenEdginton What you fail to identify is that India is more authoritarian and has a more top down, aggressive mgmt style. This has shaped American IT and also the public’s perception of IT. Customer service - Unless you have spent time in India, I’m not sure you see the cultural disconnect.
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GB News
GB News@GBNEWS·
‘Indians shared confidential interview questions with Indian applicants’ Ex-Google contractor exposes how Indian “networks” hire other Indians to @StevenEdginton. Indians have become CEOs at major American companies, including FedEx, Google, Microsoft, T-Mobile and IBM.
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Dustin
Dustin@r0ck3t23·
Elon Musk just told a story that should terrify every AI company on Earth. His son Saxon is autistic. Saxon couldn’t understand why the family went to restaurants. You can get the same food delivered. You can call your friends over. You can eat better at home for half the price. So why go? Musk: “He had an epiphany and said, ‘Oh, the reason people go to restaurants is to hang out with strangers.’” A kid who takes the world literally just decoded something the rest of us never thought to question. We like being around people we’ll never know. Look at what we already built. Delivery apps so you never wait in line. Remote work so you never share an office. Self-checkout so you never talk to a cashier. Every innovation of the last 20 years was a bet against human proximity. Every one paid off. Until it didn’t. Loneliness is now a public health emergency. Depression has doubled since the smartphone. The average American has fewer close friends than any generation in history. We didn’t remove friction. We removed the thing friction was hiding. Now look at what’s coming. AI agents that handle your emails. AI companions that replace your conversations. AI assistants that make every human interaction optional. Same playbook. Same bet. Except this time we’re not engineering out strangers. We’re engineering out humans entirely. The coffee shop where nobody knows your name. The subway where no one speaks. The restaurant where you’ll never see that couple again. Those aren’t failed connections. They’re the background radiation of belonging. We don’t just need people who know us. We need to exist in rooms full of people who don’t. That’s what a kid understood at a dinner table that billion-dollar companies still can’t grasp in a boardroom. We spent 20 years building a world you never have to show up to. AI is about to finish the job. And nothing it builds will ever replicate sitting in a room full of strangers and not feeling alone.
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JimmyC.
JimmyC.@jimbo055·
@johnhboyer No one teaches them how to use Microsoft product. You have to figure it out on your own. And and and… the way it worked in 1995 is different than today. But seriously, weird thing to comment on. Maybe get more friends?
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John H. Boyer
John H. Boyer@johnhboyer·
The number of college students I have taught who don't know how to insert a footnote in Word and Google Docs is astounding. It's gotta be between 50% to 75% of them.
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JimmyC.
JimmyC.@jimbo055·
@skdh How do we know it’s water? Did you have it analyzed?
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JimmyC.
JimmyC.@jimbo055·
@curiouswavefn @paulg This is her opinion. It’s wrongs. It’s also why Dem will continue to lose elections. Not a hill to die on.
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Ash Jogalekar
Ash Jogalekar@curiouswavefn·
@paulg She won’t agree with you because for her the fact of abusing workers or manipulating the market is a necessary condition for making a billion dollars.
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Paul Graham
Paul Graham@paulg·
Sure you can earn a billion dollars. I've been teaching people how to do it for 20 years. The way you do it is to start a company that grows fast. You don't have to do anything bad to make a company grow fast. You just have to make something people want. paulgraham.com/ace.html
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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JimmyC.
JimmyC.@jimbo055·
@typesfast Weird - commentators keep telling us Europe, Germany, UK did this or that. We live in the age of mega corporations. Just tell us the name of the corporation responsible. If you don’t know, you’re watching the wrong thing. In this case? Automotive?
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Ryan Petersen
Ryan Petersen@typesfast·
Germany has been Europe's largest ocean (containerized) exporter to the US for a long time. In 2016, the gap was 250,000 TEUs. In 2025, it's down to 39,000. Italy is about to take #1. Turkey 2.5x'd. Denmark doubled. Poland grew 50%. Germany? Flat for a decade.
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JimmyC.
JimmyC.@jimbo055·
@skdh I have 5 electrons and you have 4 electrons. Together, how many electrons do we have?
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Ash Jogalekar
Ash Jogalekar@curiouswavefn·
A close family member was having alarming symptoms (extreme headache, vomiting etc.) I plugged in all his symptoms into Claude and GPT, and both suggested taking him to the hospital right away and treating it as a medical emergency. Turns out it was a brain hemorrhage. Thankfully he is ok now, but it was an interesting example of how AI could guide people to the right decisions.
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JimmyC.
JimmyC.@jimbo055·
@MarioNawfal You start by getting rid of the cows? Then the deer? Elk? And the wild ungulates in Africa. Buffalo? The goats and sheep? All the other wild animal? How about cats and dogs. They all fart. The world doesn’t exist for human’s benefit.
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Mario Nawfal
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal·
Bill Gates: "6% of global emissions are cows who burp and fart methane to an extreme degree. You can either fix the cows, or make beef without the cow." Can we just fix Bill instead?
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JimmyC.
JimmyC.@jimbo055·
@bryan_johnson “Epigenetic disruption by environmental toxins” has been one of those excuses for everything. Then it turns out to be bacteria like ulcers or a virus like HPV. Yes - it’s real. No it’s not some environmental factor. It’s not vapors or bad air.
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Bryan Johnson
Bryan Johnson@bryan_johnson·
I got put under and had probes inspect my gastrointestinal tract. Down my throat and up the anus. It was my first bidirectional endoscopy. Right before the anesthesiologist injected, I thought "This is the end. This is how I die. What could make the internet happier?" Then it was lights out. This was important to do because colon cancer is now the #1 cancer killer under 50, and rising fast. Early onset colorectal cancer incidence has more than doubled since 1994, climbing roughly by 3% per year in 20 to 49 year olds and 8% in 20 to 29 year olds. Even though I routinely do all sorts of painful things to my body and mind for this project, this procedure had been weighing on me. I didn't want to go under and, you know, didn't love the idea of the probes being snaked through my body. Glad it's over and it honestly was not as bad as I had anticipated. Here are my results: + doctor gave me a 10/10 score + no polyps + no inflammatory bowel disease + no diverticulosis, a common colon-aging marker + we are awaiting biopsy results Colonoscopy screening can save your life. A meta-analysis of over 4.7 million people found colonoscopy was associated with 52% and 62% reduction in colorectal cancer incidence and mortality. A regular full body MRI (I get one every 6 months) can't reliably detect early colon lesions or polyps. A colonoscopy remains the gold standard for both detection and removal. The recommended screening age has been lowered from 50 to 45 in 2021. Half of early colorectal cancer cases now fall in 45 to 49 year olds. Obesity is a genuine colorectal cancer risk factor. A meta-analysis involving over 66,000 participants found obesity raises early colorectal cancer odds by roughly 50%. Yet it is unlikely to fully explain the under 50 surge. A new study surfaced an unexpected culprit. Across 10 cohorts and 29 lifestyle and environmental signatures, comparing tumor DNA methylation in early-onset (<50) vs late-onset (≥70) colorectal cancer, one signal stood out: the herbicide picloram. Early onset tumors showed ~3 fold higher odds of carrying the picloram methylation signature in the discovery cohort, and 1.77-fold across all 10 pooled cohorts (114 early onset vs 372 late onset). Across 94 US counties over 21 years (1992 to 2012), picloram-use intensity correlated with increase in EOCRC incidence, the most robust signal among 62 pesticides tested. Early onset tumors carried a lower obesity methylation signature than late onset, suggesting that environmental toxins, more than metabolic dysfunction, are the dominant epigenetic driver in young patients. Epigenetic drift drives biological aging and most age-related disease: chemicals assumed safe because they aren't directly genotoxic may still predispose us to cancer and chronic disease over decades through methylation and gene-expression disruption It's time to ring the alarm: every additive chemical in our food, water, and environment needs re-evaluation through a long term, population-based epigenetic and gene expression lens, not just acute genotoxicity assays Epigenetic disruption by environmental toxins is likely a key driver.
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JimmyC.
JimmyC.@jimbo055·
@typesfast @Forbes Seems confusing to me. If he would just go to Mars, wouldn’t that be a benefit to humanity? Drop all the bull, about how other people need to do it.
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Ryan Petersen
Ryan Petersen@typesfast·
@Forbes Saving humanity from an asteroid by creating a backup civilization on Mars is pretty philanthropic
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Forbes
Forbes@Forbes·
Elon Musk is the planet’s richest person by far, worth $839 billion as of Forbes’ annual World’s Billionaires list. He also ranks among the least philanthropic billionaires. Sure, Musk has transferred $8.5 billion of Tesla stock to his charitable foundations (1% of his net worth)—but nearly all of it is still sitting there idle. Only an estimated $500 million, or 0.06% of Musk’s vast fortune, has ever been disbursed to those in need. His lack of giving raises a question: What would our billionaires ranking look like if the world’s most generous people had never donated a dollar to charity? forbes.com/sites/mattduro…
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JimmyC.
JimmyC.@jimbo055·
@edels0n 10k are not nearly that long….
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