Tatsuo Medama

3.8K posts

Tatsuo Medama

Tatsuo Medama

@valdeik

probably Human

planet Earth Katılım Şubat 2013
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Tatsuo Medama
Tatsuo Medama@valdeik·
any energy you put into creative or productive maneuvers should be considered as most valuable...and rewarded as such...
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Tatsuo Medama
Tatsuo Medama@valdeik·
For the sake of their salaries, shrinks are wrecking humanity.
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Prof. Lee Cronin
Prof. Lee Cronin@leecronin·
You can be a future maker. Or a future taker. Which is it?
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Bryan Johnson
Bryan Johnson@bryan_johnson·
When I'm out and about in the world, people recognize me from IG or YouTube at a 20:1 ratio to X. Outside of SF, an X user in the wild is a rare sighting which is strange given how much surface area X seems to occupy. The X paradox: where is everyone?
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AnniesShenanigans
AnniesShenanigans@AnnRaybon·
sorry but the minimum is ZERO. and I believe the tip should be based on the service, not the total bill. In the past I have given a 2 dollar tip for a cup of coffee. Because of the service. today it seems like some sort of Entitlement that we as customers pay the salary as well as the jacked up prices of meals that are no better than they were 5 years ago.. your statement falls flat.
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Emmanuel Rincón
Emmanuel Rincón@EmmaRincon·
I went to a steakhouse in Miami, paid the bill, and they automatically added a 20% tip. When the waiter brought the check, he said: “That tip goes to the whole establishment—if you want to leave something for me, it’s extra.” I didn’t add anything else—20% is already too much. He gave me a dirty look, like I was robbing him. This tipping culture is out of control.
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Tatsuo Medama
Tatsuo Medama@valdeik·
@RickU @kevinnbass How did the freest country on Earth end up teaching its children to embrace the very ideology that opposes freedom?
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RickU
RickU@RickU·
@valdeik @kevinnbass The same thing that happened so many places. It was overrun by leftists
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Kevin Bass
Kevin Bass@kevinnbass·
Reading this, it is hard to avoid the conclusion that WIRED just doesn’t care about the country, its best companies, or its national security and instead wants to undermine all of it. Outrageous and infuriating.
Palmer Luckey@PalmerLuckey

This "deeply reported" piece from WIRED is inexcusably bad. First, it is just wrong. Not nitpicky things, fundamentally false jabs and premises. Second, it completely ignores the stakes of supporting active troops to push r/antiwork softboy talking points. Examples below.

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TFTC
TFTC@TFTC21·
AOC: "Companies like Palantir are mining endlessly the data and privacy of the American people, keeping track of everything that they say and do, and sending it to a militarized government."
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Nicki Zvik
Nicki Zvik@NickiZvik·
@primetateHQ @Cobratate Andrew Tate is a very serious scholar historian you should definitely take his stance on the subject
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Prime Tate
Prime Tate@primetateHQ·
Andrew Tate says the official story of WW2 might not be true and that Hitler perhaps wasn't even the bad guy. 😳 "If they use WW2 to subvert white nationalism to the point of extinction, wouldn't it be truly treasonous if the story of WW2 wasn't even true?"
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Cole Jaczko
Cole Jaczko@colejaczko·
Best career/money/life advice I've ever heard: Came from Billionaire investor, Ed Thorp, who figured out the game of life better than anyone. “I just do things I like, and I don’t worry about money. Do what you love and the money MAY follow. If it does, great. If it doesn’t, no problem - you spent life doing what you love. What’s important in life is the journey, the people, and how you spend your time. My goal wasn’t to make money. It was to have a good life, enjoy myself, and have fun. It just so happened that it turned out to be a lot of money too.” H/t @tferriss
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みお
みお@mio_japan_love·
幼稚園バスに安心して子どもを預けられる日本、やっぱり素敵。
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Bryan Johnson
Bryan Johnson@bryan_johnson·
. controlling social media time . refusing fast food . consistent bedtime . eating well . 7-8 hour sleep . being jacked These things make you powerful. They make you sovereign. Discipline makes you stronger.
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Tatsuo Medama
Tatsuo Medama@valdeik·
@Mangan150 🤣With enough years on this planet, one learns through observation what studies merely confirm.
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Tatsuo Medama
Tatsuo Medama@valdeik·
To succeed in modern society, one must be both ignorant enough to obey and gentle enough to be used. 😉
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Daniel Koss
Daniel Koss@daniel_koss·
Thx for all the love I got for this article, I really appreciate it! But now I get a ton of DMs about which stocks to buy "next" 24/7, even via LinkedIn! 😂 I want to launch a paid Substack and wonder if any of you would actually subscribe? Problem is I'm too dumb to paywall stuff, as I share all my picks publicly Strong buy (to hold 1y+) $NBIS $MU SK Hynix $OUST $KRKNF / $PNG.V
Daniel Koss@daniel_koss

x.com/i/article/2035…

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Tatsuo Medama
Tatsuo Medama@valdeik·
Concise version of your musings per Perplexity 🤣😉: Terence Tao has won everything math can offer. He warns: the assumptions of centuries are dissolving. AI erases the old path. A high schooler can now reach the frontier. He isn’t excited—he’s uneasy. Even he fears the speed. Fields will collapse. Methods will vanish. New ones don’t yet exist. It’s scary first, exciting second. The future favors builders, not believers in the past.
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Dustin
Dustin@r0ck3t23·
Terence Tao has won every award mathematics can give a human being. Fields Medal. Breakthrough Prize. MacArthur Genius Grant. He is widely regarded as the greatest living mathematician. Not one of. The greatest. He just said something that should terrify every university on Earth. Tao: “We live in a particularly unpredictable era. I think things that we’ve taken for granted for centuries may not hold anymore.” Not years. Not decades. Centuries. The assumptions governing who gets to contribute to knowledge have been in place longer than most nations have existed. Tao just told you those assumptions are dissolving. Tao: “The way we do everything, not just mathematics, will change.” This is not a man who deals in hyperbole. He builds arguments the way he builds proofs. Piece by piece. Nothing unverified. When he says everything, he means everything. Tao: “In math, you previously had to basically go through years and years of education, be a math PhD before you could contribute to the frontier of math research.” That was the contract. You give a decade of your life to an institution. You grind through coursework, committees, dissertation reviews, postdoc rotations. Then maybe you get to touch the boundary of what’s known. The entire system was built on that bottleneck. Time was the gate. Credentials were the key. Tao: “Now it’s quite possible at the high school level that you could get involved in a math project and actually make a real contribution because of all these AI tools.” A high schooler. Contributing to frontier mathematics. The same frontier that used to require a decade of institutional obedience to even approach. He said this about math. He already told you this applies to everything. AI didn’t just speed up the path. It removed the path entirely. The university sold you a ten-year toll road. AI just paved around it overnight. The toll booth operators haven’t realized yet that no one’s coming. Tao: “In many ways, I would prefer the much more boring, quiet era where things are much the same as they were ten years ago, 20 years ago.” This is the line that should haunt you. The smartest mathematician on the planet would rather this wasn’t happening. He is not selling this. He is not positioning himself for a funding round. The acceleration is so violent that even the mind best equipped to process it would prefer it stopped. If Tao is uncomfortable, you should be paying very close attention to your own assumptions about what’s coming. Tao: “The things that you study, some of them may become obsolete or revolutionized, but some things will be retained.” That word “some” is doing enormous work in that sentence. It means the rest won’t be. Entire fields that people spent their careers building will collapse. Not slowly. Not politely. And Tao is telling you he can’t predict which ones survive. Tao: “You should be open to very, very different ways of doing science, some of which don’t exist yet.” Most people will scroll past this. It’s the most important line in the entire clip. He’s not saying learn new tools. He’s not saying adapt your workflow. He’s saying the methods themselves haven’t been invented yet. The frameworks don’t exist. You cannot prepare for what hasn’t been created. You can only build the kind of mind that doesn’t break when the ground shifts beneath it. Tao: “It’s a scary time, but also very exciting.” He said scary first. Every tech founder says exciting first and mentions risk as a footnote. Tao reversed it. When the most brilliant mind of a generation leads with fear and follows with possibility, that is not optimism. That is a man telling you the truth about what’s coming while still choosing to walk toward it. The people who survive the next decade won’t be the ones with the best credentials. They’ll be the ones who stopped mourning the world that was and started building for the one that doesn’t exist yet.
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