Ben McCarthy

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Ben McCarthy

Ben McCarthy

@BenMcC

Founder of Pocket Genius. https://t.co/kWyh523qPa

Entrou em Aralık 2016
788 Seguindo845 Seguidores
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Ben McCarthy
Ben McCarthy@BenMcC·
Our atoms have been inside of stars, and floated suspended in outer space for longer than our species has existed. Most of the atoms in your body are 13.7 billion years old, and being you is just the latest page in the story of their life... 🧵
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Ben McCarthy
Ben McCarthy@BenMcC·
I asked ChatGPT to analyse my ‘For You’ feed for hidden mood manipulation... it definitely found some things: The emotional atmosphere is: • High arousal: hot takes, ambition, intellectual pressure, outrage • Status-comparison loops: achievements, big-name validation, productivity wins • Cultural noise: memes, jokes, absurdity • Threat cues: DDoS attacks, political chaos Baseline effects: • Slightly heightened anxiety • Constant micro-comparison to others • Pressure to “stay in the loop” • Feeling like the world is fast + unstable • Fragmented attention • Less calm + spaciousness Comment if you want the prompt to analyse your own feed
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Ben McCarthy
Ben McCarthy@BenMcC·
@gregisenberg Wow, huge response. I want to make you an AI that personalises your advice for your audience. It will transform your overwhelmed inbox, and give you hours back every week. DM me.
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GREG ISENBERG
GREG ISENBERG@gregisenberg·
If you’ve ever wanted to work with me, LMK. Looking for exceptional designers, operators, vibe coders, marketers and engineers who think long-term. Like or reply to this tweet if that’s you. I'll DM the 10 most interesting ones this week. I'd be honored to work with you
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Alby Churven
Alby Churven@albysjourney·
My application video for Y Combinator. Just applied to @ycombinator as a 14 year old founder.
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Ben McCarthy
Ben McCarthy@BenMcC·
Deep fake Sinatra covering Schism is the entire purpose of AI
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Ben McCarthy
Ben McCarthy@BenMcC·
Humanity will split. Not class war - something weirder. Those who can steer externalised reasoning vs those who are steered by it. Those who use AI to amplify their agency vs those who outsource agency to AI The differentiator becomes: "do you know what you want?"
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Ben McCarthy
Ben McCarthy@BenMcC·
But also: someone confused becomes more confused (lost in algorithmic slop and AI-enabled confirmation bias). Someone lazy becomes more passive (why think when AI thinks for you?). Bad faith actors cause exponentially more damage.
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Ben McCarthy
Ben McCarthy@BenMcC·
Writing externalised memory. Civilisation became accumulative. Knowledge could compound across generations. You got philosophy, law, science, history. Cities grew because you could coordinate through records. Empires became administrable. Oral cultures died.
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Ben McCarthy
Ben McCarthy@BenMcC·
“Well-written = true” collapsed with ChatGPT The replacement is “feels right = true” We’re returning to belief-based reality
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Daniel Jeffries
Daniel Jeffries@Dan_Jeffries1·
My favorite random output from a test prompt: "Write me some passages on the nature of war in the style of Hemingway." Feels very Hemingway: "The war was in the mountains. It was very cold. The men had thin coats and no gloves. They walked up the road in the dark. Their boots made sounds on the frozen ground. No one talked. In the morning they saw the village. Smoke came from two houses. The others were empty. The lieutenant was young. He had been there three weeks. He did not sleep well. They ate cold food from tins. The food was not good but they ate it. A man said the food was better before. No one answered him. The shelling started at noon. It lasted four minutes. Then it was quiet again. Two men were hit. One died right away. The other one died in the afternoon. They buried them when it got dark. That night it snowed. The snow covered everything. In the morning you could not see where they had buried the men."
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Ben McCarthy
Ben McCarthy@BenMcC·
“No person in the world should worry about economic insufficiency while chasing their uniqueness. This privilege should be socialised”
Prakhar Gupta@prvkhvr

Hi, notes from a guy who was raised by a very successful father, and grew up around friends with very successful fathers: 1. Its true, life with money can be boring. Although my father never bought us anything but economy (he insisted we buy luxury with our own money— more on this in a little bit) he did take us around the world. The world at large is not as exciting to me as to someone who hasnt seen it. For me the world was a factt of life as a child, never an achievement of life as an adult. 2. You dont need to own cars, watches, and big houses to be done with cars, watches and big houses. One is sufficient to show you how meaningless the other things are. What is meaningful post-money is family, purpose and the adventure of your life. The toys are mere jewellery pieces. Exciting for a short while, empty in the long run. My father, who is more in Viraj’s category than I am, would agree. But you only realise it after you can have the cars, watches and resorts to realise they were toys you used as baits to manipulate your own behaviour. 3. Despite having money, all my friends crave status. They know they live on borrowed status from their fathers and it haunts them. You see very capable men under rate themselves because they never escape their fathers’ shadows. They go to clubs, double down on cars and brands, and juice their Instagrams and dating profiles just so they can feel the hit of status. Alas, all those things are empty and cause feelings of more impotence for them in the long run. 4. Life with money is not boring. I have a slight disagreement with Viraj here. Actually, the world is your oyster. You can do ANYTHING without fear of going bust or broke. Thats a super power and frankly, no person in the world should worry about economic insufficiency while chasing their uniqueness. This privilege should be socialised, and we should be careful not to glorify poverty and be careful about which struggles we choose to glorify. However, most people with money are more fearful of losing that money than excited about making their own money. This causes a bigger problem, something far more serious that boredom— the feeling of impotence. 5. The real problem of generational wealth is that kids grow up in an economic superstructure where nothing they do matters. They work in family establishments, make no real decisions, have no real impact, hate their own fortunes for being ‘unexciting’, borrow status from their fathers that doesnt really work, get into power politics with their own father and siblings. Its not that everything is boring, its that nothing is meaningful. 6. A side note about inter generational wealth building: my father would say this often to me “i am the son of a poor father, you are the son of a rich father. Please use my life’s sacrifice to see farther than I do”. And I guess, what I did learn is that Buddha needed to be a prince to see how ‘spiritually empty’ wealth is. This is not to say wealth is not desirable, but that true joy is not in the dopamine hits of a new toy. Its in setting out on your own adventure, and bringing pride and victory to people that love you. Or at least this is how far i see. Buddha saw even further. But then he was the son of a king, and I of a lawyer. 7. My father realised through his lifetime, as many people who make money in their lifetime do, that the resorts and flights are not going to make you happy. They may bring temporary pleasure, but joy is found in other things. Joy is found in meaning. And I was somewhat born with that knowledge. THAT is a privilege- to be set free to chase your own dreams, bound neither by your limitations nor by your desires. Hope that helps.

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Soft Modern Mensch
Soft Modern Mensch@Iwhoaminane·
@jxmnop Radiative cooling is the most efficient form of cooling in space. Also cooling is probably not the main issue here, protecting the data from cosmic rays is probably gonna be a pain
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dr. jack morris
dr. jack morris@jxmnop·
dumb question, how do you cool a datacenter in a vacuum? also H100s are already nearly obsolete oops gotta send a datacenter sysadmin astronaut out there to swap in B200s
Y Combinator@ycombinator

Congrats to @Starcloud_Inc1 on the launch of their first satellite, just 21 months from starting the company. This is the first NVIDIA H100 in space and paves the way for huge, solar-powered orbital data centers.

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Ben McCarthy
Ben McCarthy@BenMcC·
If nature had a way to sustain riskier bets, what would it look like? Yeast contains a protein Hsp90 that inhibits many mutations, but stops working under stress (drought, heat). Suddenly, a multi-generational treasure chest of adaptions appears. Most bad, some just right.
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Ben McCarthy
Ben McCarthy@BenMcC·
Technological change from market investors is like evolution. It enforces a mechanism where change only comes from incremental improvements, not leaps into the unknown. But despite that constraint it delivered all the complexity of nature?
Chris Painter@ChrisPainterYup

It’s kind of scary to think that if there were a technology that was extremely useful to humanity to build, but it was extremely capital intensive, and building it incrementally wouldn’t have a smooth gradient of returns/revenue, we might just never build it.

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