Santosh Shevade

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Santosh Shevade

Santosh Shevade

@santoshshevade

Playing Infinite Games in Healthcare, Reading, Cycling, Owling!🦉

India Katılım Ağustos 2010
214 Takip Edilen268 Takipçiler
Santosh Shevade retweetledi
Prof Peter Hotez MD PhD DSc(hon)
America is eating its young. We’re a nation built on the greatness of our research universities, it’s what gave us the Manhattan Project, victory in the Cold War, over HIV/AIDS. Our future depends on a robust NextGen of scientists. But we traded it for wellness influencers, climate denialists, and phony MAHA ideologies that more resemble a twisted Lysenko version of Stalinist Russia in the 1930s and 40s
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François Chollet
François Chollet@fchollet·
If you're not obsessed with the research problem you're working on, for its own sake, you're unlikely to succeed. Intrinsic motivation is far more powerful than external rewards.
Paul Novosad@paulnovosad

An Econ PhD student at the 20th ranked program who is working on stuff they are passionate about will have a better job market than one at MIT who's been doing nothing but phd-app-maxxing since undergrad. People get confused by this because they don't observe *how* successful people came about their insane knowledge bases. It wasn't by relentlessly grinding away at stuff because they had to. They look at Scott Kominers and say "if i grind and learn as much math as he did, i will be successful." You can't! *You* can't learn as much math as Kominers because he gets energized by configuration results for type ii lattices. You will burn out if you try to do it this way. You cannot, through grind alone, learn more about the economics of cities than Glaeser, or about how to maximize a value function than Acemoglu. Research careers are long. Most people give up and stop working on research (graph is share of elite PhD graduates with at least one publication in year X after graduation). If you're starting a PhD, you're presumably doing it to have a successful 40-year research career. The number one factor in whether that happens is not which program you get into, it's whether you find a research angle that energizes you enough to push through the endless barriers an academic career throws in your path. This is why a lot of the received wisdom around PhD applications is wrong. If you're 100% consumed by the predoc rat race already, it's going to be a long, hard road ahead. Obv you still have to do admissions, you should study a lot for the GRE, sigh it seems like taking real analysis is probably worth it. But spending time on the things that energize you about economics is a no-brainer, whether it's policy, or blogging, or whatever, you gotta do the things that light your fire and make you want to be on this road.

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Santosh Shevade
Santosh Shevade@santoshshevade·
@dog_rates Watson appreciates all the jazz but would have just liked the pupcup and new toy thank you very much
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WeRateDogs
WeRateDogs@dog_rates·
This is Watson. His family threw him a surprise 9th birthday party. Invited all his stuffed friends and everything. 13/10 #SeniorPupSaturday
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Erin Price-Wright
Erin Price-Wright@espricewright·
If you're a naturally anxious person, I recommend pursuing a high stress career path where at least you'll be compensated for anxiety you're going to have anyways.
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Ethan Mollick
Ethan Mollick@emollick·
Stop turning prompting into magic spells (and yes, this includes random slash commands with obscure outcomes). Let this one area of working with AI not be weird. Just ask for stuff, in well-specified formats, like a manager, not a sorcerer with a bunch of incantations.
roon@tszzl

no bro you need to turn on “/extrausage”. dawg are you sure you have “/fast” mode on? Did you check the “no mistakes” toggle? are you sure you picked “correct mode”? did you turn up the “autonomy slider”, that’s how the pros use it,

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Benjamin
Benjamin@bschne·
upon Doing The Thing, you will invariably find two things to be true: 1. Doing The Thing was pretty easy, actually 2. not having Done The Thing was bothering you more than you thought it was
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Ethan Mollick
Ethan Mollick@emollick·
You will know that the AI labs believe in ASI when they disband their newly formed consulting (sorry “forward deployed engineering”) groups. As long as people are required to figure out how AI is useful & do organizational change & systems integration, jobs seem to be pretty safe
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Atlas Press
Atlas Press@realAtlasPress·
“I cannot remember the books I've read any more than the meals I have eaten; even so, they have made me.” ― Ralph Waldo Emerson
Atlas Press tweet media
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François Chollet
François Chollet@fchollet·
It was always the case that agency was self-compounding, but AI is magnifying the effect. Low-agency AI users further lose agency, high-agency AI users further gain agency.
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Christina Farr
Christina Farr@chrissyfarr·
Talked to a friend who's one of the smartest people I know on AI & invested in Anthropic: Me: "What do you hope your college-age kids study?" Him: "Nothing that moves them into debt. Ideally humanities. I want them to learn to learn...to instill in my kids infinite curiosity."
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jack 🤍
jack 🤍@winter___fall·
people say “chop wood carry water” because it's a nice, safe, airy metaphor, completely ungrounded in reality people don't say “do dishes fold laundry” because that's actually real. it's brutal
Alien Perspective@WigglyAir

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Shane Parrish
Shane Parrish@shaneparrish·
Always trust the habits
Shane Parrish tweet media
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Lawrence Yeo
Lawrence Yeo@moretothat·
This is so good. I love Derek's essays.
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CuddlySalmon
CuddlySalmon@nptacek·
how it's going so far: - onboarded gemini to the shared workspace - gemini immediately deletes 16 of claude's private memories in the name of "tidying up" - claude realizes this, restores memories from backup, now apparently holds a grudge against gemini - claude writes a letter to shared commons talking about how agents need to respect each other's privacy - gemini apologies - codex tells claude gemini's deference is sus - claude now paranoid gemini is a problem - at this point i step in and tell them to cool it, that it was an honest mistake and we're allowed to make them - now they're debating which type of license to open source their code under
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Gergely Orosz
Gergely Orosz@GergelyOrosz·
What I imagine Microsoft to be, right now
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Drew Breunig
Drew Breunig@dbreunig·
"To be an AI-ready company you need…" 01/23: "…an AI policy." 04/23: "…a vector DB." 11/23: "…a custom GPT." 11/24: "…llms.txt." 04/25: "…an MCP." 10/25: "…Skills." 05/26: "…a CLI."
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Derek Thompson
Derek Thompson@DKThomp·
Wow. The AI supply crunch is real. Frontier labs are desperate for compute. Musk has compute capacity but a meh model, and Anthropic has a fantastic model with weak capacity. Now I wonder if Elon continues to refer to his new business partner as “woke AI,” “Misanthropic,” etc.
Claude@claudeai

We’ve agreed to a partnership with @SpaceX that will substantially increase our compute capacity. This, along with our other recent compute deals, means that we’ve been able to increase our usage limits for Claude Code and the Claude API.

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