Richard Baker

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Richard Baker

Richard Baker

@sharpblue

Liberalism is my country. Its green shoots are everywhere; its full flowering nowhere https://t.co/WgsV1KuuX8 @[email protected]

Bristol Katılım Haziran 2007
907 Takip Edilen243 Takipçiler
Richard Baker
Richard Baker@sharpblue·
@AzureSupport Azure SQL elastic pool UK South down 27+ hours. Case 2605260050000708. Standard Sev B SLA breached. No engineer engagement and no ETA. Critical business processes offline including overnight invoicing. Please assign a duty manager.
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May Winter
May Winter@MSugma71483·
@catholicourtney The Pope should be above quoting fantasy writers. Pope Benedict XVI never once quoted or mentioned Tolkien, as he was a serious man.
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Courtney Mares
Courtney Mares@catholicourtney·
In his first encyclical, Pope Leo XIV quotes J.R.R. Tolkien's "Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King.” “It is not our part to master all the tides of the world, but to do what is in us for the succour of those years wherein we are set, uprooting the evil in the fields that we know, so that those who live after may have clean earth to till.” (Photo: Vatican Media)
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Richard Baker
Richard Baker@sharpblue·
@peterrhague If ever there was a case for robotic exploration, it must surely be underwater caves.
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Richard Baker
Richard Baker@sharpblue·
@kmcnam1 @cherthedev The thing that you’re missing is that it’s *really* important to become 100x more productive at making mediocre task management systems.
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sudox
sudox@kmcnam1·
Imagine this clown show of a scene: Some CEO, probably mid-paddle on his standing desk, feeds ChatGPT the prompt "make me sound like a caring human being while I nuke a quarter of my staff and brag about how great the business is doing." And then posts that AI slop all over social media like it is some profound wisdom he summoned from the depths of his MBA mind. "Today we reduced headcount by 22%. The business is the strongest it's ever been." Business is the "strongest it's ever been," huh? Cool. Cool. Tell that to the people you just yeeted into one of the most difficult job markets in decades, while the survivors get to do 10x or 100x the work so you can post about even bigger record profits. CEOs, can you just not? We don't want your victory laps here. Your current employees are one bad quarter away from the same fate and your former ones are out there scrambling to update their resumes. Nobody is buying the fake "sincere gratitude" post that was written by a robot. Honestly, nothing says "I'm a hollow husk of a human being" quite like outsourcing your gratitude post to a clanker while you're busy firing real people. Real touching. And while we're busy roasting some shit: The whole "10x engineer" and "100x engineer" circlejerk phrase needs to be taken behind the woodshed and put down. That term should have died of embarrassment years ago.
Zeb Evans@DJ_CURFEW

Today we reduced headcount by 22%. The business is the strongest it's ever been. So I think it's important to be direct about what I'm seeing and why. First, I made this decision and I own it. I did it because the way to operate at the highest level of productivity is changing, and to win the future, ClickUp needs to change with it. Second, this wasn't about cutting costs. Most savings from this change will flow directly back into the people who stay. We'll be introducing million-dollar salary bands. If you create outsized impact using AI, you'll be paid outside of traditional bands. Most importantly, I have the deepest gratitude for those affected. We're doing this from a position of strength specifically so we can take care of people properly. Everyone affected receives a package aimed at honoring their contributions and easing the transition. I only see two options: wait for this to play out gradually in the market or be honest about what I'm seeing and act proactively. THE 100X ORGANIZATION The primary change is that we're restructuring around what I call 100x org. The goal is 100x output. The roles required to build at the highest level are fundamentally different than they were a year ago. Incremental improvements to existing systems won't get us there. We need new ones. That means creating enough disruption to rebuild rather than iterate on what's already broken. The common narrative is that AI makes everyone more productive. It doesn't. Many of the workflows of today, if left unchanged, create bottlenecks in AI systems. These roles will evolve. But waiting for that to happen naturally means falling behind now. The 100x org is actually heavily dependent on people - infinitely more than today. This is only possible with 10x people that have embraced and adopted new ways of working. THE BUILDERS, AGENT MANAGERS, AND FRONT-LINERS — THE BUILDERS: 10X ENGINEERS I don't think most companies have internalized what's actually happening with AI in engineering. The common narrative is that AI makes all engineers more productive. That may be true in isolation, but at an organization level - that is the farthest thing from reality. Here's what we've validated recently at ClickUp: the great engineers, the ones who can orchestrate, architect, and review, are becoming 100x engineers. They're not writing code. They're directing agents that write code. The skill is judgment. AI makes the best engineers wildly more productive, and everyone else using AI slows these engineers down. Think about it - the bottlenecks are (1) orchestration - telling AI what to do, and (2) reviewing - what AI did. Everything is leapfrogged and no longer needed. So who do you want orchestrating and reviewing code? And how do you want your best engineers to spend their time? If your best engineers are spending time reviewing other people's code, then this is inherently an inefficient bottleneck. These engineers can review their agent's code much faster than reviewing human code. The new world is about enabling your 10x engineers to become 100x. The wrong strategy is to push every engineer to use infinite tokens. Companies doing this are celebrating 500% more pull requests. But customer outcomes don't match the volume of code being generated. I call this the great reckoning of AI coding, and every company will face this soon if not already. More code is just another bottleneck to the best engineers, and ultimately to your company's impact as well. — THE BUILDERS: 10X PRODUCT MANAGERS Product management and design roles are merging. Designers that have customer focus, become more like product managers. And product managers that have intuition for UX become more like designers. The bottleneck of user research is gone. It takes us just one mention of an agent to kickoff research and analyze results. The bottleneck of product <> design iteration is also gone. The product builder iterates on their own, along with agents and skills that ensure alignment with quality and strategy. Also controversial today - I believe that the wrong strategy is to have your PMs shipping code - that just introduces another bottleneck that the best engineers will waste their time on. To be clear, PMs should be coding but they should do this in a playground to iterate, validate, and scope. That code should not go to production. Everything outside of managing systems, orchestrating AI, and reviewing output becomes a bottleneck. That's why the other roles that are critical along with these are the systems managers (to reduce bottlenecks) along with a bottleneck you can't replace - customer meeting time. — THE SYSTEM MANAGERS Ironically, the people that automate their jobs with AI will always have a job. They become owners of the AI systems - agent managers. We have many examples of these people at ClickUp. The underlying systems in which we operate are absolutely critical to get right. I think most companies are delusional to think they can iterate on existing systems and compete in this new world. You must create enough disruption so that old systems are deprecated entirely. If there's any definition for 'AI native' that's what it is. — THE FRONT-LINERS In a world that will become saturated with AI communication, the human touch will matter more than anything to customers. This is a bottleneck that you shouldn't replace - even when agents are high enough quality to do video meetings. One-on-one meeting time with customers is something that shouldn't be automated. The systems around the meetings should be - so that front-liners spend nearly 100% of their time with customers. REWARDING 100X IMPACT In a world where companies are able to do so much more with less, where does that excess money go? In our case, much of the savings in this new operating model will flow directly back to those that enabled it. We must reward people that create productivity accordingly. This aligns incentives on both sides. Plus, in a world where your best people create 100x impact, you can't afford to lose them. You should aim to retain these employees for decades. The context they have and their ability to efficiently orchestrate and review will be nearly impossible to replace. Compensation bands of today should be thrown out the door. We're introducing $1 million cash/year salary bands with a path available to nearly everyone in the company if they produce 100x impact by creating or managing AI systems. THE FUTURE Nearly every company will make changes like these. The ones that do it proactively will define what comes next. The future is not fewer people. It's different work, new roles, and better rewards for those who embrace it. We're already seeing entirely new roles emerge, like Agent Managers, that didn't exist a year ago. ClickUp is positioning to lead this shift, not just internally, but for our customers too. I've never been more certain about where we're headed.

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Richard Baker
Richard Baker@sharpblue·
@BriannaWu - Ongoing ambiguity where Palestinians live under Israeli domination without being either formally annexed or formally independent - Dispersal of Palestinians from the territories followed by Israeli annextation …something else?
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Richard Baker
Richard Baker@sharpblue·
@BriannaWu As far as I can tell the options are things like: - Israel annexes all Palestinian territories and Palestinians become Israeli citizens - Israeli annexation without Palestinian citizenship - Palestinian state - Palestinian territories absorbed by other countries - UN protectorate
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Dr. Jonathan N. Stea
Dr. Jonathan N. Stea@jonathanstea·
One consequence of tolerating pseudoscience is that people die when its legitimatization becomes baked into our culture, health care systems, and institutions.
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Richard Baker
Richard Baker@sharpblue·
@RIPBrotherDavid @jonathanstea A doctor is a person with a doctoral degree that’s a prerequisite for teaching in a university. If anyone are fake doctors, it’s medics, who have only been allowed the use of the title relatively recently as a courtesy granted by real doctors.
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Richard Baker
Richard Baker@sharpblue·
@jbulltard1 The argument seems to be that one day SpaceX will own the galaxy, which is worth quintillions of dollars, so nothing for the next half-century or so matters financially. See also: Longtermism.
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jbulltard
jbulltard@jbulltard1·
If you think this is worth $2 trillion you should find a new hobby bc finance isn’t for you
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Michael Diamond 🍓
Michael Diamond 🍓@MichaelgDiamond·
@skdh I've always been a bit skeptical about that argument. As far as I can tell in a space time diagram, if you are moving faster than light, you are still moving into your own future.
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Sabine Hossenfelder
Sabine Hossenfelder@skdh·
I am optimistic that we will one day make contact to extraterrestrials because I don't think that the speed of light is a fundamental limit. Here I explain why and I have a brief summary below.
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Declan Metal🇮🇪
Declan Metal🇮🇪@miltownroad·
@ThomasSutclif13 @Microinteracti1 Apart from NBC weapons what weapons are there that the russians could have and haven't used? They have used up their entire Tank stockpile, they are firing artillery, FAB bombs, drones, Ballistic and Cruise missiles as fast as they can manufacture them. What else is there?
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Gandalv
Gandalv@Microinteracti1·
The West Has Already Lost the Drone War. It Just Hasn’t Noticed Yet. Here is something that should ruin your Monday. A Ukrainian AI drone engineer has gone on record to explain, calmly and with considerable evidence, that Western military planning is not behind the times. It is not lagging. It is not in need of reform. It is dead. Obsolete. A relic propped up by expensive acronyms and men in uniforms who still think the tank is the apex predator of land warfare. Yaroslav Azhnyuk, founder of AI drone company The Fourth Law, has done the maths. FPV drones now account for somewhere between 70 and 80 percent of frontline casualties in Ukraine. Not artillery. Not missiles. Not the armoured columns that NATO has spent forty years and several fortunes preparing to counter. Small, cheap, autonomous flying machines that cost about as much as a decent restaurant dinner and kill with the precision of a surgeon. But here is where it gets genuinely terrifying. China can produce four billion FPV drones per year. Ukraine, a country that has been at war for three years and is building faster than anyone in the West, manages four million. That is the kind of number that makes you want to lie down on the floor and stare at the ceiling for a while. The West is not losing the AI arms race because it lacks the technology. It is losing because it is still arguing about procurement frameworks while the future arrives, uninvited, at four hundred kilometres per hour with a shaped charge attached. Latest 👇 gandalv.substack.com/p/ukraine-the-…
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Richard Baker
Richard Baker@sharpblue·
@DKThomp @amendlocke Helen was very obviously intended to be white, with an absurdly long neck, webbed feet, and feathers.
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Derek Thompson
Derek Thompson@DKThomp·
it's a poem about a thing that never happened, credited to an author who probably never existed, and helen is introduced within the mythology as the daughter of ZEUS, a figure literally nobody in this country even believes in, if you're emotionally invested in the historicity of her pigmentation you need a life and also medication, not necessarily in that order
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Richard Baker
Richard Baker@sharpblue·
@SarahLongwell25 I don’t even understand why they’d be loyal to him. He has no discernible positive qualities, not even charisma or any kind of glamour. It’s like being fanatically dedicated to a void.
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Richard Baker
Richard Baker@sharpblue·
@omoboy1940 @paulg @IAPonomarenko Given that nowhere under Russian control flourishes, this seems incredibly unlikely. The best thing for the Russian people would be liberation from Russia, really.
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Illia Ponomarenko 🇺🇦
Illia Ponomarenko 🇺🇦@IAPonomarenko·
The center of Bakhmut today, three years after the end of the bloody battle for these ruins, the Verdun of our era. Just a few years ago, this was a well-kept and thriving Ukrainian city of 70,000, famous for its fountains, its long traditions of producing famous local salt and sparkling wine. It had the Atlantic Hotel, widely known across Donbas. It had good cafes, sushi bars, restaurants, cozy flower-lined alleys. Now, there's nothing but death, ruins, emptiness, and time that has stopped here forever. Now this is the "Russian world," and of course, there will never be any life here again.
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Richard Baker
Richard Baker@sharpblue·
@beaver48755 @PrimeNewsDigest @RpsAgainstTrump What I’ve meant is that when reframed that way it’s clearly absurd, and yet at least some people are willing to countenance the idea of a crypto-fascist China absorbing 23 million liberal, democratic Taiwanese as if “One China, Two Systems” is anything but a lie.
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Republicans against Trump
Republicans against Trump@RpsAgainstTrump·
Trump clearly sold out Taiwan. When asked on Air Force One on the way back from China whether the U.S. would defend Taiwan in the event of a Chinese invasion, Trump replied: “I don’t want to say. That question was asked to me today by President Xi. I said, ‘I don’t talk about it.’” Trump also said, “On Taiwan, President Xi feels very strongly about it.” It’s clear China got the green light to move ahead, especially now that the U.S. is bogged down in the Iran war. Under Trump, our allies can’t trust us, and our adversaries don’t fear us.
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Richard Baker
Richard Baker@sharpblue·
@RadFemme74 I mean, she probably had webbed feet, an absurdly long neck and some feathers too but…
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Richard Baker
Richard Baker@sharpblue·
@RadFemme74 It’s overwhelmingly likely that Helen would have been a white woman because she’s the daughter of a swan and the overwhelming majority of swans are white.
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Lauren Pleska 🏳️‍🌈
Lauren Pleska 🏳️‍🌈@RadFemme74·
People arguing a woman from ancient Greece would've been a fair skinned white woman are absolutely wild. Like have these people never seen Greeks? Because even today a whole lot of Greeks sure don't fit the ideal of a fair skinned white person.
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