⚡️ Noel Hatem

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⚡️ Noel Hatem

⚡️ Noel Hatem

@noelhatem

Built crypto exchanges from Brazil to Dubai. Now building @mintply: a prop trading firm. 10 years in digital assets. COO at Mintiply Capital. UAE 🇦🇪

UAE Katılım Temmuz 2009
564 Takip Edilen572 Takipçiler
Aryan
Aryan@justbyte_·
Honestly, how can I prevent MacBook keyboard from becoming like this?
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Google
Google@Google·
We just released Gemma 4 — our most intelligent open models to date. Built from the same world-class research as Gemini 3, Gemma 4 brings breakthrough intelligence directly to your own hardware for advanced reasoning and agentic workflows. Released under a commercially permissive Apache 2.0 license so anyone can build powerful AI tools. 🧵↓
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⚡️ Noel Hatem
⚡️ Noel Hatem@noelhatem·
@Zai_org Well done ! This is what the world needed. Thank you for your efforts and research
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Z.ai
Z.ai@Zai_org·
Introducing GLM-5V-Turbo: Vision Coding Model - Native Multimodal Coding: Natively understands multimodal inputs including images, videos, design drafts, and document layouts. - Balanced Visual and Programming Capabilities: Achieves leading performance across core benchmarks for multimodal coding, tool use, and GUI Agents. - Deep Adaptation for Claude Code and Claw Scenarios: Works in deep synergy with Agents like Claude Code and OpenClaw. Try it now: chat.z.ai API: docs.z.ai/guides/vlm/glm… Coding Plan trial applications: docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAI…
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Naval
Naval@naval·
Vibe coding is more addictive than any video game ever made (if you know what you want to build).
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kirbycrypto
kirbycrypto@kirbyongeo·
Someone built an agent that: - Tracks live pizza delivery surges near the Pentagon - Auto-longs oil on Hyperliquid when activity surges This is the kind of unhinged builds crypto natives think of. TradFi Meme signals meets DeFi execution, automated by agents. Powered by Hyperliquid. P.S. Join the community on reddit.com/r/hyperliquid1/
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Makoto | .....
Makoto | .....@mareni_musashi·
@atermisgreek @archiexzzz Now what would be truly interesting is an analysis on this training data to identify which labs are violating their own ToS by training on customer data!
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⚡️ Noel Hatem
⚡️ Noel Hatem@noelhatem·
Makes sense
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka

The research behind this is wild. If you played Pokémon as a kid, you have a tiny region in your brain that exists only because of Pokémon. Not a metaphor. Stanford put people in brain scanners and found it. The study was published in Nature Human Behavior in 2019. They scanned 11 adults who grew up glued to their Game Boys and 11 who never played. When they showed both groups images of the original 151, the players' brains lit up in one specific spot every time. Same spot across all 11 people. The non-players showed zero response. That spot is a little fold in the back of your brain that normally processes things like animal shapes and cartoon faces. In the Pokémon players, a chunk of it had been permanently reassigned. Their brains carved out a Pokémon department sometime around age 6 or 7 and just never took it down. And the reason it ended up in the same place in everyone's brain comes down to the Game Boy itself. The screen was 2.6 inches. Every kid held it at roughly the same distance. So those 151 characters hit the exact same patch of each kid's retina, thousands of times, during the years when the brain is still soft enough to reorganize itself. Where an image hits your retina in childhood is what tells your brain where to build the wiring. Reading works the same way. Humans invented writing about 5,000 years ago. There's zero evolutionary reason for a brain region dedicated to recognizing words. But every person who learns to read grows one, roughly the size of a dime, in the same part of the brain. Brain-imaging research from 2018 actually watched it appear in children's heads as they learned their letters. It grew by quietly taking over nearby tissue that wasn't doing much yet. Stanford published a follow-up this year showing this region is way smaller or missing entirely in kids with dyslexia, and that 8 weeks of intense reading practice physically grew it back. London taxi drivers show the same thing in a completely different part of the brain. Brain scans from a 2000 study found the region that stores mental maps had physically expanded, and the longer they'd been driving, the bigger it got. These drivers spend 3 to 4 years memorizing 25,000 streets before they get licensed. About half wash out. The common thread is childhood. Harvard researchers trained young monkeys to recognize new shapes and they developed brand-new brain regions in predictable locations. Adult monkeys trained on the same shapes never got those structural changes. The young brain wires itself in a way the adult brain cannot replicate. If you're wondering whether a Pokémon patch in your brain means you lost something else, no. The region sits alongside your normal visual processing areas, not on top of them. Your brain has hundreds of millions of neurons in that zone alone. The lead author noted that every participant in the study had gone on to earn a PhD.

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⚡️ Noel Hatem
⚡️ Noel Hatem@noelhatem·
@adonis_singh Well if I he means that Claude runs his account it actually makes sense. He has embodied the model.
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Arun
Arun@hiarun02·
Every Windows user believes refresh has hidden powers.
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⚡️ Noel Hatem
⚡️ Noel Hatem@noelhatem·
@levelsio Any system that puts critical decisions in the hands of non-experts is destined to fail.
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@levelsio
@levelsio@levelsio·
Ironically I'm convinced democracy might kinda work It just takes 3-5 years of shouting on X about an issue, getting told off for it and then suddenly the governments actually do what people said they should do on here I wonder if you can fasten that feedback loop from 5 years to 5 months or 5 weeks
Home Office@ukhomeoffice

Police time will no longer be wasted investigating legal social media posts, freeing up officers to patrol the streets and tackle real crime. By scrapping Non‑Crime Hate Incidents, we are balancing the protection of vulnerable communities while respecting free speech.

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⚡️ Noel Hatem
⚡️ Noel Hatem@noelhatem·
@paulg Yeah, it's always this and that. And a punchy finishing for maxx bot engagement.
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Paul Graham
Paul Graham@paulg·
Sadly, one way I now recognize fake AI-generated replies is that AIs write punchier sentences than most ordinary humans.
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⚡️ Noel Hatem retweetledi
Camski
Camski@camski·
The Emirati Cabinet meeting looks like it’s coming straight out of a sci-fi movie
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Boxmining
Boxmining@boxmining·
Pitch me your AI/Crypto project in 1 sentence. 🤞🏼
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Jean P.D. Meijer ― 🇪🇺 eu/acc
unless you can afford API prices you should probably learn to code current levels of AI subsidies are unsustainable, why would anthropic keep giving you $5000 worth of inference on the long term for only $200/mo?
Gergely Orosz@GergelyOrosz

Devs who can code also WITHOUT AI as well looking to became 10x more valuable They are the ones who won’t panic or be idle when their Claude quota runs out… So much for all the advice on how learning to code is not worth it any more…

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