Matt Wolfe

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Matt Wolfe

Matt Wolfe

@mreflow

AI Tools Database: https://t.co/mmVmxk3buH AI News & Tutorials: https://t.co/vUwzYBzCxO The Next Wave Pod: https://t.co/uxC0RIm1Ws

Join 230,000+ Readers → Katılım Temmuz 2022
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Matt Wolfe
Matt Wolfe@mreflow·
I just had such an amazing conversation with @demishassabis about how AI works under the hood, the future of the technology, and how we ensure people can feel comfortable using it. Can’t wait to share it with you!
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Matt Wolfe
Matt Wolfe@mreflow·
Anyone else find that they're starting to talk more and more like an LLM? I feel like I've spent so much time working with them that I take on more and more of the vocabulary that's been output by them. I'll write X posts and think "people will think I had ChatGPT write this." I'll say things like "That's directionally correct but misses some key points," and then think, "holy shit, that's how ChatGPT would have worded it."
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Matt Wolfe
Matt Wolfe@mreflow·
I'm looking for another editor but think I'm searching for a unicorn. lol I need someone who can do quick edits. Same day turnaround. If I send them a recording at 5pm Pacific, they spend 2-hours doing a no-frills edit and have it back by 7pm. See my 3 or 4 most recent videos (excluding my latest GTC video) to see what I mean by no-frills. It takes me an hour to edit my own videos. I'm looking for someone to replace me on that. But same-day, rapid turnaround is the hardest thing to find, especially with someone that can work based on my timezone. I tend to record in my late afternoons or evenings, after the day's news has finished trickling out and I've had time to consume everything. Finding an editor that can work with that has proven to be really difficult.
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Liam J. Wytcherley
Liam J. Wytcherley@Liam856144·
@mreflow You do a great job Matt - I've followed you for ages now and what you have built is amazing - Your site and videos are a primary source for me to check for news across the industry, and I genuinely find you very insightful - you should be proud of what you have achieved.
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Matt Wolfe
Matt Wolfe@mreflow·
Thanks to everyone who's been sharing feedback on the new Future Tools website! A lot of great suggestions to improve things. I was at GTC this week so progress was slow. I'm working through them and continually optimizing for maximal usefulness! Keep em coming!
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Matt Wolfe
Matt Wolfe@mreflow·
Updates coming: - Events page to keep you looped in on AI related events - Physical AI listing - Sortable gadgets - Various leaderboards for ranking tools - Bug and UX fixes based on your suggestions
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Matt Wolfe
Matt Wolfe@mreflow·
@vlelyavin @Ric_RTP Isn't imagination and "knowing what to imagine" the same thing? Being a CEO should require having a bigger vision. If you don't know what to imagine as a CEO, you're in the wrong role at that company.
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Vladimir
Vladimir@vlelyavin·
@Ric_RTP "every carpenter could become an architect" line sounds great only in a keynote in practice i see how my freelance clients use ai to cut their developer budget in half and then wonder why the site breaks in production the imagination part still requires knowing what to imagine
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Ricardo
Ricardo@Ric_RTP·
Jensen Huang just called out every CEO who’s been firing people “because of AI.” Jim Cramer asked him why companies are laying people off if AI is supposed to make everyone MORE productive. Jensen's answer: "For companies with imagination, you will do more with more. For companies where the leadership is just out of ideas, they have nothing else to do. They have no reason to imagine greater than they are. When they have more capability, they don't do more." Read that again. The man who built the most important tech company on Earth just told you that if your CEO is using AI to cut headcount, it means one thing: They have no imagination. They have no vision for what comes next. They got handed the most powerful tool in human history and their FIRST instinct was to fire people. This is the CEO of NVIDIA. The company whose chips power every AI system on the planet. If anyone on Earth has the right to say "AI replaces workers," it's Jensen Huang. And he said the OPPOSITE. He said every carpenter could become an architect. Every plumber could become an architect. AI elevates capability. It doesn't eliminate it. But here's where it gets really interesting... During the same interview, Jensen revealed something nobody's talking about: He said AI startups like OpenAI and Anthropic are seeing their revenues increase by one to two billion dollars a WEEK. And he wishes these companies were public so the world could see what he sees. One to two billion per week. That's a $50 to $100 BILLION annualized run rate. For companies that most people think are burning cash and making nothing. The entire Wall Street narrative that "AI companies aren't profitable" might be completely wrong. Jensen sees their numbers. He sees their compute orders. He sees their growth. And he's saying the revenue is real. So if the money IS real, why are other companies firing people? Because they're not building AI products. They're not creating new revenue streams. They're not using AI to expand into new markets. They're using AI as an EXCUSE to cut costs because they ran out of ideas 3 years ago and need something to tell the board. Jensen's company added $500 billion in new orders in 5 months. He expects $1 trillion in cumulative revenue through 2027 from just two product lines. That number doesn't include the new chips, systems, or partnerships announced this week. And he's not cutting people. He's hiring. Because when you have imagination, more capability means MORE opportunity. Not less headcount. Meanwhile Salesforce cut thousands. Meta cut thousands. Amazon cut thousands. All blaming "AI efficiency." Jensen's response: You're out of imagination. He also said something that stuck with me. Cramer asked if he ever thought he'd build a $10 to $20 trillion company while waiting tables at Denny's. His answer: "I was just trying to make it through the shift." Biggest tip he ever got? Two, three dollars. Now he's building tech that increased computing demand by one million times in two years. He announced OpenClaw, which he says is as big as ChatGPT. And he's got 21 months of new business that isn't even counted in the trillion dollar figure yet. When asked how long he plans to keep working? "I'm hoping to die on the job. And I'm not hoping to die anytime soon." This is a man who believes every single thing he's building. And his message to every CEO using AI to justify layoffs is simple... You're not innovating. You're surrendering. The technology wasn't built to shrink companies. It was built to make them limitless. If your leadership can't see that, the problem isn't AI. It's THEM.
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Matt Wolfe
Matt Wolfe@mreflow·
@Ric_RTP Jensen always has the best takes on this stuff!
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Matt Wolfe
Matt Wolfe@mreflow·
I think this is somewhat correct but misses some key points that make the reality a lot less doom and gloom… 1. This acts like Nvidia’s chip sales are the only way they make money. It’s way more nuanced than that. Their networking business alone generated $31b last year. Chips are, by far, the largest part of their business but there are other revenue streams that prop them up and can help subsidize their investments. 2. The OpenAI deal with Cerebras is not evidence that they’re releasing reliance on Nvidia. Cerebras focuses on inference chips. OpenAI needs Nvidia for training chips. OpenAI diversifying for a very specific, latency-sensitive inference use case. 3. Nvidia announced an expected $1 trillion in POs on chips alone over the next year. The shift of labs moving from a focus on pre-training to post-training has increased demand for chips. Not decreased it. And with Nvidia’s recent deal with Groq, they’ve addressed their low-latency compute issue as well. As these companies shift to improving their models via post-training and inference, their costs should go down. Pre-training was the most expensive aspect. 4. It’s true that CapEx is still far outpacing revenue but companies like Nvidia and Oracle will continue to prop them up during this ugly phase until costs inevitably come down. Their war chests are big enough to keep companies afloat for now. The shift to agentic AI and test-time compute is the mechanism that closes that gap.
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Matt Wolfe
Matt Wolfe@mreflow·
@javilopen They had the lead and fumbled the ball so hard. It's wild to me.
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Javi Lopez ⛩️
Javi Lopez ⛩️@javilopen·
What happened to Midjourney? Serious question.
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Matt Wolfe
Matt Wolfe@mreflow·
I think this photo accurately describes Jensen’s (Nvidia) keynote today…
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Mark Manson
Mark Manson@Markmanson·
FOMA (noun) — Fear of Missing AI /ˈfōmə/ FOMA is a persistent fear that you are "falling behind" on AI and every minute you're not prompting, building agents, or vibe-coding brings you closer to inevitable replacement in the post-AGI economy. FOMA is exacerbated by listening to VC podcasts, reading clickbait articles about Open Claw, and refreshing your X feed like it's your ex-girlfriend's Instagram. Remedies to FOMA include: touching grass, talking to humans who don't know what an MCP is, actually trying to use Open Claw and realizing it's a total piece of shit, and watching as your vibe-coded masterpiece breaks eighteen different ways by Tuesday.
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Matt Wolfe
Matt Wolfe@mreflow·
@shiftynick Interesting. The most common feedback I got about the old site was how much people disliked how plain and congested the old news page looked. The new page gives you a full TLDR for every single piece of news too so you don't even need to click into articles if you don't want.
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Nick Underwood
Nick Underwood@shiftynick·
@mreflow the futuretools update looks nice, but man it was so much easier to quickly read the ai news in the old style
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Matt Wolfe
Matt Wolfe@mreflow·
Here’s the AI news from the past week — let me know if I missed anything! - @ChatGPTapp adds interactive visuals for math & science - @Google rolls our Ask Maps - Google adds Gemini to Docs, Sheets, Slides & Drive - Google launches Gemini Embedding 2 - @AnthropicAI adds interactive charts and diagrams in Claude - Anthropic launches Claude Code Review - Anthropic launches Claude Code Scheduled Tasks - @Microsoft launches Copilot Health - @Meta adds AI listings to Facebook Marketplace - Meta hires @moltbook creators - @nvidia launches Nemotron 3 Super - @perplexity_ai unveils Computer running on MacMinis - @amazon adds adults-only “sassy mode” to Alexa+ - @Adobe adds AI Assistant to Photoshop - @canva launches Magic Layers - @xai adds Grok audio option - X adds toggle to block Grok from editing media - @karpathy releases Autoresearch I’ll be heading to NVIDIA GTC 2026 on Monday where I’m sure we’ll get a bunch more exciting news. Hope to see some of you there! And leave a comment with what new release you’re planning to try this week 🚀
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Om Patel
Om Patel@om_patel5·
stop spending money on Claude Code. Chipotle's support bot is free:
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Matt Wolfe
Matt Wolfe@mreflow·
@aiedge_ He's making a great case for people using open-weight models on their own local devices. If the OpenAI is the new electric company, having on-prem AI machines is like having your own solar panels.
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AI Edge
AI Edge@aiedge_·
JUST IN - Sam Altman: “We see a future where intelligence is a utility, like electricity or water, and people buy it from us on a meter.” Yeah, this guy is not real.
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