wallawalla

121 posts

wallawalla

wallawalla

@wingwallabang

Katılım Eylül 2021
268 Takip Edilen16 Takipçiler
wallawalla
wallawalla@wingwallabang·
@AlexFinn That is unreal.... But.... i built this exact game 6 months ago as a side project.... like almost exactly this. same geometries, same world.... like tower defense but in 3d. That is weird!
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Alex Finn
Alex Finn@AlexFinn·
I can't believe this is real I have GLM 5.2 running 100% locally on my Mac Studio. 2 bit quant. The results I'm getting are better than Opus 4.8 It's now powering my Hermes Agent and Codex. 100% free, local, private super intelligence on my desk I also have it in a loop coding for me 24/7 now I thought we were at least a year away from this type of event. It happened today. The model takes up about 250gb of memory. So you can technically run it on a Mac Studio with 256gb, but you probably want the 512gb memory version (please tell me you listened to me 5 months ago when these were sitting on store shelves) With Fable gone, I now have Opus 4.8 level intelligence on my desk for free. This is the future. Local, private, secure, personal super intelligence. If you're still writing off local AI as a fad or engagement bait, you are officially delusional
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Andrew McCalip
Andrew McCalip@andrewmccalip·
Get paid to wait The Claude Code spinner might be the most watched line on Earth. So I turned it into an ad marketplace. Advertisers bid on it. You keep 50% of the money. Install the extension → get cash from ads. Introducing Kickbacks
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Raymond Valdes
Raymond Valdes@RaymondValdes5·
this is the right direction the next step is keeping that map alive architecture views and agent memory are only useful if they track the real system as it changes interfaces owners dependencies risk areas test boundaries otherwise the agent is just confidently reading yesterday’s org chart
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divyansh tiwari
divyansh tiwari@DivyanshT91162·
Claude can now make your entire codebase self-explaining 🤯 It maps your app into: → an interactive HTML architecture view for humans → a structured JSON memory file for AI agents The next coding agent instantly understands: APIs, components, dependencies, database flows, auth, background jobs — everything. No more throwing AI into a random repo with zero context. Your codebase literally explains itself now.
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wallawalla
wallawalla@wingwallabang·
@ThreeXGreat @elonmusk Now THAT is a fucking great idea! Could even bank roll it with a go fund me! And give the profits back to the people
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Hermes Trismegistus
Hermes Trismegistus@ThreeXGreat·
@elonmusk Elon, why don’t you make an open offer to any director who could remake the Iliad and Odyssey films? And get Cavill and Sydney to play Achilles and Helen? Be the change you wanna see otherwise nothing will change. Greedy Nolan already has 2 Oscars. He wants a third for DEI 🤡
Hermes Trismegistus tweet mediaHermes Trismegistus tweet media
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Who specifically is the asshole who added DEI lies to Academy Awards eligibility instead of it just being about making the best movie?
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wallawalla
wallawalla@wingwallabang·
@Object_Zero_ How big would the oil/coal/nuclear plant need to be to power it?
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Object Zero
Object Zero@Object_Zero_·
This 100MW data center in UAE is the largest solar powered datacenter in the world. There are currently 1,300 data centers in the world that are bigger than this one, but this one is the largest solar powered one. That’s 10 square kilometres of solar panels you can see. The datacenter itself is 0.02 square kilometres, so a solar powered datacenter is ~500x larger than a data center using any other form of power. A five hundred times larger site. UAE has some of the highest solar irradiance anywhere on Earth, it is an inhospitable desert. Averaging 9.7 hours of sunlight per day with average irradiance above 2,200 kWh/m^2. If you build this somewhere else, you need more solar panels because your irradiance will almost certainly be lower. Even if the world had an infinite supply of free solar panels, solar power will not be free. Anyone who has ever done major capital projects, who looks at where data centers need to be in the next 5 years and the next 10 years… we know it aint solar. Sorry. You struggle to even build a train track that’s 100 miles long and 10ft wide anywhere in the West, there is zero chance of build 100 square mile solar farms for GW compute. This is why people are talking about space compute. Deploying into space is one strategy to solve the constraints. But there are faster and more scalable strategies, that get you to mass deployment of multi GW data centers. There are strategies that also allow you to power the 10 billion robots and their newtonian actuators, that immediately follow the inference demand cycle. Step back and look at the full cycle of this industrial revolution… There will be billions of chips, but there will be trillions of actuators. This biggest part of this revolution is the embodiment cycle, and it’s big by a factor of 20 or 50x over the stuff that comes before it. There is no analogy in human history for the scale of this economy, of the demand it will place on energy and commodities. The humans own the Earth, and if you exist inside their legal system, they won’t let you turn the surface of their planet into glass. But they do want your chips and your actuators to serve their needs and desires. There is a way to do all of this, and so it will happen.
Object Zero tweet media
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wild cuts
wild cuts@publicfreekout·
Dad and son in a Ford Raptor take road rage way too far
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wallawalla
wallawalla@wingwallabang·
@j_bambrick Honestly… this seems far more plausible than an infinitely more plausible than a god existing forever and somehow being omnipotent.
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Jay
Jay@JibbaJabb·
@TomCotterillX If they operate within the law they have nothing to worry about. Says more about the SAS tbh.
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Tom Cotterill
Tom Cotterill@TomCotterillX·
🚨EXCLUSIVE🚨 SAS soldiers are resigning in significant numbers over fears they will be subjected to “witch hunts” by human-rights lawyers. Multiple sources have claimed that personnel from across 22 SAS, the Army’s most elite fighting force, have applied for premature voluntary release. The Telegraph is withholding the exact figure for security reasons. However, several SAS sources have described the recent losses as “significant” and a “threat to national security”. At least two squadrons, D and G, are believed to have been affected, with insiders saying outrage over recent war crime probes into Afghanistan and Syria, which have been branded “witch hunts”, are believed to be the main driving forces. Among those understood to have resigned include several senior warrant officers, who are the backbone of the special forces and among the most experienced troops in the regiment. A number are understood to have applied for release “on principle” just before Christmas. “Morale is s--t at the moment,” one insider with knowledge of the recent losses told me, while another said there was “considerable disquiet” in the regiment as a result. The SAS resignations are a major blow to the famed special forces unit, which is the tip of the spear in any military operation and is deployed globally. Full story: telegraph.co.uk/gift/ee5ad8ccb…
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wallawalla
wallawalla@wingwallabang·
@JoelWBerry Unless the engineers optimise the simulation for huma led discovery and to convince us that its not a simulation. It could just be procedurally generated the closer you look.
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Joel Berry
Joel Berry@JoelWBerry·
Brilliant nano-engineering like this loudly points to God, but it’s also a blow to simulation theory. Such complexity at the cellular level, every cell being a miniature city, every bacteria requiring an actual motor to move, seems to me an insanely inefficient way to design a simulation, when you could simply program these things to move and operate the way they do. If simulation theory is true, it seems to me we should see less physical complexity the closer we look, not more.
Natalie Wolchover@nattyover

Bacteria move around using a molecular machine called the flagellar motor that rotates faster than the flywheel of a race car engine and switches directions in an instant. After 50 yrs, scientists have finally figured out how it works. “My lifelong quest is now fulfilled.” Link⤵️

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wallawalla
wallawalla@wingwallabang·
@Zigmanfreud Not quite. We’ve barely surveyed nearby exoplanets, let alone “all” of them. Intelligent life could’ve arisen billions of years before us and sent probes long ago. Our physics isn’t the final word on interstellar travel. Fermi Paradox has many answers besides “impossible.”
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John Ziegler
John Ziegler@Zigmanfreud·
Let me save everyone a lot of time on the UFO/Space aliens issue… It is mathematically/logically impossible for us to have been visited by outside life because we have investigated all the planets close enough for them to have even theoretically left for Earth AFTER we existed!
Rapid Response 47@RapidResponse47

.@POTUS: I recently directed @SecWar to begin releasing government files relating to UFOs and unexplained aerial phenomena. I am pleased to report this process is well underway. We've found many very interesting documents — and the first releases will begin very, very soon. 👽

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World of Statistics
World of Statistics@stats_feed·
MORE DISGUSTING FACTS ABOUT YOUR LAUNDRY 🧺💀 1. Underwear washed with towels transfers fecal bacteria straight to the towel you dry your face with. 2. Cold wash doesn’t kill bacteria — your “clean” clothes can still be carrying live staph and strep. 3. Leave wet clothes in the machine just 30 minutes… and mold starts growing. 4. That front-loader rubber seal? It’s secretly lined with black mold you’ve probably never cleaned. The stats that make it worse: - One underwear load can release 100 million E. coli into the wash water. - 90% of bathroom towels test positive for coliform (fecal) bacteria. - Cold-water washing now dominates households… and leaves viable pathogens behind. Your “fresh” laundry drawer might be grosser than you think.
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wallawalla
wallawalla@wingwallabang·
@TheRabbitHole Murder registry isnt enough. It should be a violent crime registry.
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The Rabbit Hole
The Rabbit Hole@TheRabbitHole·
Murder registry is a good idea from Elon. People should know if they are close to a murderer so proper precautions can be taken.
The Rabbit Hole tweet media
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
450 children a year used to die in the U.S. from swallowing pills they found at home. The morning-after pill weighs less than a raisin, and its pack is the size of a chocolate bar. That annoying oversized design is the main reason the death count dropped to 33. I looked into this because the waste really bothered me. Turns out the U.S. passed the Poison Prevention Packaging Act in 1970 specifically because of those deaths. By 2005, child-resistant packaging had brought the annual number down to 33. The Consumer Product Safety Commission credits designs like blister packs with saving around 700 kids' lives since the '70s. That foil you push through with your thumb is slow and annoying on purpose. A toddler's fingers can't do it. The packaging also keeps the pill alive. Blister packs made with aluminum foil block roughly 259 times more moisture per day than regular plastic, based on pharmaceutical packaging tests. That matters because the hormone in Plan B (called levonorgestrel) breaks down when it gets wet or too hot. The FDA says it needs to stay between 68 and 77°F, away from moisture. You might toss this in your nightstand and forget about it for two years. That foil seal is the reason the pill still works when you finally need it at 2 am on a Sunday. The card is also that big because of labeling laws. The government requires the drug name, dose, instructions, and expiry date printed directly on the blister card, separate from the outer box. The card needs enough flat surface to fit readable text next to a single tiny pill. Manufacturing specs also require at least 2.5mm of sealed border around each pill pocket to keep the foil from peeling apart. I went looking for the waste data next, and yeah, it's bad. Researchers in Germany measured pharmaceutical blister cards and found that 69% of the material is literally just the gap between pill pockets. Germany alone throws out roughly 8,533 tons of this stuff every year. The WHO estimates the entire pharmaceutical industry produces around 300 million tons of plastic waste annually, half of it single-use. And blister packs, plastic fused to aluminum, can't be recycled. No facility can pull those layers apart. The German researchers also found something frustrating: just rearranging where the pill pockets sit on the card, using the same machines, same materials, same everything, would cut that waste by 37%. No new tech needed. Nobody has done it. So the packaging is big for three real reasons: child safety, drug stability, and legal text requirements. All of those are legit. The part that actually deserves criticism is that this blister pack design hasn't changed in any meaningful way since the 1960s, and a 37% waste reduction has been sitting in a published paper, collecting dust, while billions of these packs end up in landfills every year.
millán 👑@Millxn265

Nunca he entendido por qué se usa tanto plástico para una sola pastilla del día después

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wallawalla
wallawalla@wingwallabang·
@aakashgupta I feel like this wont last. With ‘making/building’ being so easy now thanks to the tools, people will go rogue in an organisation or product team and build off plan. There will be too many chefs in the kitchen. You need someone steering the ship.
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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
Executive compression is happening faster than anyone expected. Workday's CTO took "Member of Technical Staff" at Anthropic. Atlassian's CTO took "Business Lead" at Stripe. Mike Krieger went from CPO to MTS on the Claude Code team. Instagram cofounder voluntarily dropping "Chief" from his title to write code. Four senior executives in six months all made the same bet: get closer to the work. AI tools are collapsing the ratio of managers to makers. One senior IC with Claude Code and deep domain knowledge is starting to outproduce a 15-person team with three layers of oversight. The management layer that made sense when shipping software required 200-person orgs is compressing fast. When that happens, the value of "Chief" anything drops and the value of "person who actually builds" spikes. A CTO managing 500 engineers is less differentiated than an engineer who can ship with frontier models. The smartest executives in tech are dismantling the ladder and moving to the floor where the work happens. The org chart of 2030 is going to look nothing like today, and these moves are the first draft.
mandy@mandyxyz123

First, Workday CTO becomes a software engineer at Anthropic. Now, Atlassian CTO is a business lead at Stripe? What? Are they that bearish on their own software companies?

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Flightradar24
Flightradar24@flightradar24·
Airspace clearing after strikes by the United States and Israel in Iran.
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barney
barney@barneyxbt·
somebody explain to me what regular people are supposed to do when AI takes their job and everything still costs more every month. what’s the actual plan here because i haven’t heard one
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