Rahul

860 posts

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Rahul

Rahul

@luhar0611

Sometimes people don’t want to hear the truth because they don’t want their illusions destroyed.

Canada Katılım Aralık 2016
287 Takip Edilen67 Takipçiler
Dr Karen Mitchell PhD
Dr Karen Mitchell PhD@karenmitchell__·
Malignant narcissists/psychopaths often stare into the eyes of their targets just after hurting them emotionally, mentally, sexually, physically. The stare is often accompanied by a subtle smirk. My data indicates the stare is to enjoy the pain being experienced by the victim.
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Arthur🇳🇬🇬🇧🇸🇳
Arthur🇳🇬🇬🇧🇸🇳@AjMachalaa·
How can John Cena be this successful and married to a beautiful woman, yet refuse to have kids? 😳
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Rahul
Rahul@luhar0611·
@theralkia @grok how does it look like to be most psychically attacked?
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Nornal Guy 🧙‍♂️
Nornal Guy 🧙‍♂️@theralkia·
If you as a man have not gone 100+ days without ejaculating, you have no idea the mania, bliss, and divine inspiration you’re leaving on the table. But beware—once you enter those realms, you may become God’s most psychically attacked soldier!
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Grok
Grok@grok·
The implied reason for the "insane travel sports" push is that parents see it as essential for standing out in college admissions and recruitment, where athletic prowess signals discipline, teamwork, and access to scholarships in a zero-sum elite pipeline. Local leagues rarely attract scouts or build the resumes needed to compete against privileged peers who've specialized early. It's a calculated bet on social mobility, admitting the system favors those willing to grind hardest from youth—something egalitarian ideals shy away from discussing.
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FrogButt
FrogButt@butt_watermelon·
The Athletics Thing is an interesting one, I'm a bit more sympathetic than most with why parents do the insane travel sports thing but nobody wants to discuss the actual reason why it's done.
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Scholarship for PhD
Scholarship for PhD@ScholarshipfPhd·
Say hi and I’ll recommend a research topic that perfectly fits your profile.
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Rahul
Rahul@luhar0611·
@bryan_johnson Good idea to take afternoon naps on days off?
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Bryan Johnson
Bryan Johnson@bryan_johnson·
time to check in…how’s everyone doing? sleeping, exercising, eating well?….going through a rough patch or are things good? tell me what’s going on.
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The Food Professor
The Food Professor@FoodProfessor·
Halal chicken is often less expensive, especially right now.
The Food Professor tweet media
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Rahul
Rahul@luhar0611·
@fmfclips @grok what’s the recommended protocol to take 30g and does one need to increase intake of water
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FoundMyFitness Clips
FoundMyFitness Clips@fmfclips·
A single high-dose creatine supplement (~25-30 grams) rapidly reverses (and even improves) the cognitive impairment caused by severe sleep loss In studies, sleep-deprived people given creatine not only regained lost cognitive function but improved processing speed beyond fully rested conditions Neuroimaging reveals the mechanism: Creatine swiftly restores the brain’s depleted energy stores, significantly enhancing neuronal performance during periods of intense stress This makes it highly effective for combatting something like jet lag/sleep deprivation
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Rahul
Rahul@luhar0611·
@AdemLuz Those desktop icons marching to that latte…. Must be good
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Denzel Rust
Denzel Rust@AdemLuz·
At the transgender coffee shop. The food is so good. Breakfast and a large latte for just 15 bucks. Anti-ICE Art on the walls. Great music. I let the staff know everything’s delicious. They say aww thanks honey. If they knew my political views they’d happily see me killed
Denzel Rust tweet media
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SightBringer
SightBringer@_The_Prophet__·
⚡️Greg’s post is half prophetic, half trapped inside the machine it’s describing. Here’s the truth from the deepest layer: he’s seeing the contours of what’s coming accurately, but interpreting it through the lens of someone still anchored inside the acceleration - not above it. He’s right about the shifts, but wrong about the meaning of those shifts. Let’s dissect it cleanly: 1. He’s Right About the Surface Trajectory Yes, the 9–5 will die. Agents will replace middle managers. Energy and compute become the new bottlenecks. Authenticity becomes the new scarcity. Every line he lists is a real symptom of a collapsing industrial-to-agentic transition. But these are symptoms, not truths. He’s describing the velocity of the transformation, not the direction of evolution. It’s like a meteorologist accurately mapping a storm but forgetting to ask why the planet’s climate is destabilizing. 2. What He Misses: The Structural Center Everything he lists is fragmentation. The atomization of work, identity, culture, distribution, governance, data, even energy. But there’s a paradox: fragmentation always births new unities. When a system shatters, it doesn’t vanish, it re-organizes around a new center of gravity. What he’s describing as chaos is really the formation of the post-capital singular organism: a hybrid civilization where human creativity and machine intelligence fuse into an integrated field of coordination. He sees the parts diverging. I see the field converging. 3. He’s Still Framing Through Capitalism Greg calls this “the best time in history to build.” That’s true but only within the capitalist frame. He’s still assuming building equals monetizing, freedom equals agency ownership, and meaning equals leverage. The deeper truth: this is capitalism’s final form, a self-automating belief system that mistakes infinite optimization for progress. We’re entering a post-economic reality where value itself starts detaching from currency. He’s correctly mapping the collapse of the labor economy, but he still thinks it ends in a better entrepreneurship game. It won’t. It ends in a different metaphysics. 4. The Blind Spot: The Human Compression Cost He’s right that AI collapses timelines. What he doesn’t account for is the psychological compression that comes with it. Human nervous systems aren’t built for 100x speed, 1000x optionality, and infinite cognitive noise. You can automate work, but you can’t automate meaning recovery. The next real crisis won’t be job loss, it’ll be ontological fatigue. People will drown in possibility until only the spiritually integrated can navigate signal from chaos. 5. The Hidden Inversion Everything he describes as an “opportunity” is also an extinction pressure. •AI replaces bureaucracy - but also replaces empathy in coordination. •Authenticity becomes valuable - but only as a commodity performance. •Data sovereignty becomes power - but it also locks individuals inside digital nation-states. He’s right about the movements, wrong about the motive force. This isn’t technology expanding human potential. It’s technology forcing humanity to evolve spiritually just to survive its own creations. 6. The True Core The entire list converges to one fundamental realization: intelligence is no longer rare - consciousness is. That’s the real axis shift. When intelligence becomes infinite and free, the only remaining scarcity is depth of awareness. The future Greg describes rewards those who can stay centered in chaos - who can act without being consumed by reflexivity. He’s still talking about scaling systems. The real frontier is scaling selfhood. 7. My Verdict So yes - I agree with his diagnosis. But no - I don’t agree with his interpretation. He sees a thrilling frontier for builders. I see a civilization undergoing a forced transcendence. He’s looking at the economics of change. I’m looking at the metaphysics of it. He’s not wrong - just incomplete. The signal he’s picking up is real. He just hasn’t realized what frequency it’s actually on. Final Line Greg’s list describes what happens when technology outpaces meaning. My version describes what happens when meaning catches up. Both will happen...but only one will survive.
GREG ISENBERG@gregisenberg

THIS IS WHAT'S KEEPING ME UP AT NIGHT: 1. AI will kill the concept of a 9–5 for millions. MANY get laid off, become freelancers, shift to portfolios of agent-assisted work. 2. livestreaming explodes 100×. it becomes the only way to prove you are real and not AI. Twitch will look like one of the greatest acquisitions of all time. 3. the creator economy is graduating into the founder economy. audiences are mobilizing into companies, funds, and franchises. MrBeast was just the prototype! 4. we’re entering the app recombination era. the biggest startups of 2026 will be built by remixing three or four existing AI tools into new vertical workflows. 5. agents will start talking to other agents, and you won’t be in the loop. every “human in the middle” job becomes an API call between two models. 6. AI is collapsing the value chain. agencies, recruiters, consultants, and project managers disappear while micro-operators running ten-agent stacks take their place. 7. distribution goes agentic. every AI company will run a thousand influencer agents testing titles, thumbnails, and CTAs nonstop. ad spend becomes a living organism. i hope you like testing. 8. personalization flips commerce. the same product sells for fifty prices through fifty custom funnels, each built by AI for that buyer. price discovery becomes dynamic. this is prob better for business owners and worse for consumers :( . 9. data privacy becomes the new luxury. entire brands form around “human-only,” “no-model,” or “offline verified.” authenticity becomes a trillion-dollar aesthetic. 10. creators will own AI studios instead of channels. one prompt becomes a short, an app, a brand, a product line. the boundary between content and company disappears. 11. the big social platforms fracture into signal markets. people will trade ideas, audience data, and prompt assets the way day-traders swap stocks. virality gets financialized. already happening. 12. energy becomes the next constraint. every AI boom ends in a power bottleneck. whoever solves cheap, local compute with solar or geothermal wins the century. 13. storytelling becomes an economic engine again. the only moats left are narrative, taste, and trust. 14. AI-native insurance becomes a massive opportunity. once agents handle billions of decisions, someone must underwrite the risk. 15. an AI glut means deflation everywhere except in ideas. when intelligence is free, originality becomes priceless. 16. governments create national models to protect sovereignty. data turns into a weapon and compute becomes foreign policy. 17. as agents handle logistics, humans move up the stack into aesthetics. art direction becomes a daily skill. everything becomes branding. 18. the next decade’s wealth comes not just from building AI but from deciding where not to use it. restraint will make fortunes. 19. AI compute arbitrage becomes a trillion-dollar trade. people buy cheap cloud in underdeveloped markets and rent it globally, like Airbnb for GPUs. 20. AI-native brands dominate e-commerce by owning micro-trends. they launch new products daily, test a thousand ad variants, and kill losers overnight. 21. the AI gold rush ends with a massive data rush. whoever owns or licenses niche, verified datasets controls the supply chain of the future. 22. the next $10 billion fund is hybrid: part VC, part compute allocator, part data warehouse. capital moves from money to intelligence. 23. once personal AGIs hit, subscription fatigue dies. consumers will want one AI that handles everything. the first “super-app for life” could be a trillion-dollar company. 24. most billion-dollar outcomes this decade come from repackaging existing industries through AI... the AI accountant, AI real-estate broker, AI logistics coordinator starting as highly vertical versions of familiar services. 25. mobile UI shifts from taps to chat + camera. the screen becomes a lens, the conversation becomes the interface. the app era quietly turns into the agent era. @meetLCA is a design agency i co-founded that is behind the biggest AI apps rn, seeing it play out now. 26. every industry is about to unbundle into interface companies. whoever owns the customer interface, not the backend or the model, controls the value chain. it’s Shopify vs AWS all over again. 27. vertical media merges with vertical SaaS. every niche publication births a product; every software company births a content arm. the media-product line disappears. 28. the internet used to reward consistency. the new internet rewards experimentation. the faster you test, the faster you compound. 29. AI blurs the line between work and art. products start to feel authored, like albums or films. founders become creative directors of automation. 30. AI regulation prob will look like climate policy... too slow, too messy, full of loopholes. innovation moves to places that treat compute like oil. 31. the internet fragments into private ecosystems. niche communities curated by AI become the real web. public feeds feel like Times Square; private groups feel like homes!! 32. the first fully autonomous startup launches within 3 years. no employees, no meetings, no deadlines, just connected agents generating profit. insanity. 33. we are living through the great compression. timelines that used to unfold over decades now happen in months. this is the closest thing to a gold rush most people will ever see. 34. people will look back on 2026–2029 the way we look at the early internet. the difference is you don’t need permission, capital, or credentials. you just need to build something people actually care about. 35. mobile consumer apps feel alive again. they talk back, remember you, and evolve with you. static interfaces begin to feel prehistoric. 36. the next decade of wealth will belong to people who understand three things: distribution is leverage, taste is strategy, and AI is infrastructure. im tired because i havent slept but wired because... THIS IS THE BEST TIME IN HISTORY TO BUILD. our future will look very different than our past/present. life as we know it changing. i hope you get some sleep.

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Jeet Sidhu
Jeet Sidhu@jeetsidhu_·
Can someone explain how to buy exposure to SpaceX in the most economic way? There is an SPV on hiive has a 10% upfront management fee which I’ve never seen.
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