Aaron Powell

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Aaron Powell

Aaron Powell

@PowellOnPoint

Investor, fisherman, serviceman and Nebraska fan.

Nebraska Присоединился Ocak 2012
210 Подписки122 Подписчики
Aaron Powell
Aaron Powell@PowellOnPoint·
Established trees are a deal-breaker.
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta

Let me explain exactly why every new subdivision in America looks like the top photo, because the math is wild. A mature tree increases a home's value by 7 to 19 percent. On a $400,000 house, that's $28,000 to $76,000. A single shade tree produces the cooling equivalent of ten room-size air conditioners running 20 hours a day. One tree on the west side of a house cuts energy bills by 12 percent within 15 years. The bottom photo is worth more, costs less to live in, and sells faster. This has been documented by the University of Washington, Clemson, Michigan State, and the USDA. The data is not in dispute. Removing those trees saves the builder roughly $5,000 per lot. Concrete trucks need twice the dripline radius of every standing tree. Utility trenches need flat ground. A bulldozer flattens 200 lots in an afternoon. Preserving trees adds weeks and thousands per home. So the developer pockets $5,000 in savings and the buyer eats $50,000 in lost value for the next two decades. The person making the decision and the person paying for it have never been in the same room. The Woodlands, Texas is the proof of what happens when they are. George Mitchell bought 28,000 acres of Houston timberland in 1974 and preserved 28% as permanent green space. He forced McDonald's to build behind the tree canopy. That McDonald's became one of the highest-volume locations in Texas. The first office building, designed to reflect the surrounding forest so you couldn't see it from the street, leased completely. The Woodlands median home price today: $615,000. Katy, a comparable Houston suburb that clear-cut: $375,000. Named #1 community to live in America two years running. Fifty years of data. The trees are worth more than removing them saves. Developers clear-cut anyway because they sell the house once and leave. You live in it for 30 years.

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Aaron Powell
Aaron Powell@PowellOnPoint·
A lot of hype around Claude disrupting industries and entire business models with daily updates. These are excellent productivity enhancements. We’re seeing an efficiency revolution, but it won’t remove humans from business decisions or communication. AI won’t have all the context all the time. The devil is in the details, and process is what builds competitive advantages. Data engineers remain extremely relevant. Companies should automate, break things, rebuild them—rather than sticking to old tried-and-true approaches. Innovate, have a backup plan, and execute. Otherwise be competitively outpaced. Amazon for example. I’d rather have someone one my team who failed several times before achieving something great over someone who claims greatness without due process. Even with ominous chatbots, I still get asked for help viewing .pdf documents. It won’t surprise me if that changes to help viewing .pptx documents.
Claude@claudeai

Claude can now build interactive charts and diagrams, directly in the chat. Available today in beta on all plans, including free. Try it out: claude.ai

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Aaron Powell
Aaron Powell@PowellOnPoint·
The big difference between using AI as a tool for learning and using AI to check a box is your curiosity.
Next Science@NextScience

🧠 MIT recently completed the first brain-scan study on ChatGPT users—and the results are deeply revealing. Rather than boosting brain function, prolonged AI use may be dulling it. Over four months of cognitive data suggest we might be measuring productivity all wrong ⤵️ In MIT’s study, participants had their brains scanned while using ChatGPT. → 83.3% of users couldn’t recall a single sentence they’d written just minutes earlier. → In contrast, those writing without AI had no trouble remembering. Brain connectivity dropped sharply—from 79 to 42 points. → That’s a 47% drop in neural engagement. → The lowest cognitive performance among all user groups. Even after stopping ChatGPT use in later sessions, these users showed continued under-engagement. → Their performance remained lower than those who never used AI. → This suggests more than dependency—it’s cognitive weakening. Beyond the scans, educators flagged the writing itself. → Essays were technically solid, but often called “robotic,” “soulless,” and “lacking depth.” Here’s the paradox: → ChatGPT makes you 60% faster at completing tasks… → But it reduces the mental effort required for learning by 32%. The top-performing group? → Those who began without AI and added it later. → They retained the best memory, brain activity, and overall scores. Using ChatGPT can feel empowering—but it may quietly offload your thinking. → You gain speed, but lose engagement. → You get answers, but stop learning how to think. The takeaway isn’t to avoid AI—but to use it intentionally. → Use it to assist, not replace your mind. → Build cognitive strength—not dependency. MIT’s early study on AI and the brain lays out the stakes. The way we use these tools matters more than ever.

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Aaron Powell
Aaron Powell@PowellOnPoint·
@DanBurmawy Great response. More people should visit the baptismal site, the surrounding churches, Mount Nebo, and the Dead Sea.
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Dan Burmawi
Dan Burmawi@DanBurmawy·
Even though Christians in Jordan are protected, represented in government and parliament, enjoy more rights compared to Christians in other Islamic countries, yet the framing presented in Tucker’s interview is not accurate. In 1930, Christians made up roughly 20% of Jordan’s population. Today, they make up about 2%. Tucker is attempting to convince the American public that Israel is responsible for the decline of Christians in the region. That claim is false. The reason Christians declined in Jordan from 20% to 2% is the same reason they declined from 100% to 20% in the first place. For minorities to live in an Islamic country, submission to certain conditions is required. First, freedom of worship is guaranteed, but only inside the walls of churches. Public expression of Christian faith is not permitted. Do not think you can practice your faith openly. Second, minorities must do all the work of assimilation. Even naming your children becomes a calculation. Names that signal difference make life harder, which is why many Christians name their children Islamic names such as Omar or Ali. Third, you must always side with the government. Protection is conditional on loyalty. Betray that loyalty, and the state will step aside. This is exactly what happened to the Christian dissenter Nahed Hattar, who was murdered in the street over a Facebook post, while the government refused to provide him protection. Fourth, submission to the will of the Islamic majority is mandatory. No public crosses. No public Christian symbols. No saints. Nothing outside church walls. Last year, when Christians attempted to install a statue of Jesus in the public square of Fuhais, the last Christian town in Jordan, they were forced to remove it. Evangelism is forbidden. Christians may legally convert to Islam and change their official documents. Muslims can never convert to Christianity. Leaving Islam results in the loss of civil rights. Tucker Carlson interviewed a Jordanian Christian from one of the wealthiest families not only in Jordan, but possibly in the region, someone whose loyalty to the state is unquestioned and whose life is far removed from the everyday restrictions placed on Christian freedom. Christians in Jordan chose security and sacrificed freedom. That is the price of survival in an Islamic country. And security is only guaranteed through the iron grip of the police state. On the other hand, Christians in Israel have real freedom and real rights. When Tucker interviews an Arab Christian living in Israel, we expect him to speak freely, because Israel does not tie a person’s safety to political loyalty. I hope Americans will recognize how Tucker is distorting the truth. He is contributing to the further suffocation of Christians and other minorities in the Islamic world, where they urgently need support, while directing scrutiny toward Israel, where minorities do not face the same existential threats.
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Aaron Powell
Aaron Powell@PowellOnPoint·
@PythonPr Non-AI answer: Score is a namespace that points to an object. Saved_score points to the same object when compiled. Since Python is line-by-line execution, saved_score now just references the same object as score. The score namespace is then reassigned to a new object.
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Python Programming
Python Programming@PythonPr·
Python Question / Quiz; What is the output of the following Python code, and why? Comment your answers below!
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Aaron Powell
Aaron Powell@PowellOnPoint·
This pilot study provides evidence for the importance of pH balancing in women with LUTS, not for long-term baking soda use as a supplement. During the study, effects on blood pH were inconclusive, but high sodium diets are linked to blood pressure issues. This study of 33 women (ages 50–60, 50% with chronic disease) in Turkey between 2015 and 2017 lacks placebo control and randomized sampling. It should not be generalized to the broader population but should merely guide decisions to conduct additional studies and experiments. I would like to see the placebo-controlled, comparative pharmacotherapy study that was being performed after this pilot study.
Dalton (Analyze & Optimize)@Outdoctrination

Baking soda prevents getting up in the night to pee in clinical trial. ‣ Decreases night time urination ‣ Improves daytime energy ‣ Massively improves subjective sleep in another human study. 1/2 - 2 tsp dissolved in water is a good range to experiment with. When the urine is highly acidic, it can irritate the sensitive lining of the bladder, triggering the sense of urgency + causing the bladder muscles to spasm. Baking soda corrects it.

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Aaron Powell ретвитнул
DataRepublican (small r)
DataRepublican (small r)@DataRepublican·
How I imagine every 𝕏 influencer is spending their weekend... trying to get that $1,000,000. If I win the prize, I will pay the taxes, then dedicate 100% of it to scaling out, formalizing operations, and building a formal OSINT team to hold institutions accountable. I already have a hiring pipeline with my other startup. No money for me. There's too many projects and not enough coders like me or @beaverd .
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Aaron Powell
Aaron Powell@PowellOnPoint·
Better than the Spotify discover algo.
World of Statistics@stats_feed

Top 100 podcasts on Spotify in the US: 1. The Joe Rogan Experience 2. This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von 3. The Shawn Ryan Show 4. Crime Junkie 5. The Tucker Carlson Show 6. Matt and Shane's Secret Podcast 7. Good Hang with Amy Poehler 8. The Daily 9. Candace 10. Up First from NPR 11. Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard 12. Bad Friends 13. Pardon My Take 14. Smosh Reads Reddit Stories 15. Morbid 16. The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett 17. Call Her Daddy 18. The Journal. 19. The Tim Dillon Show 20. Dateline NBC 21. The Mel Robbins Podcast 22. SmartLess 23. Crime, Conspiracy, Cults and Murder 24. The Bill Simmons Podcast 25. Distractible 26. Last Podcast On The Left 27. NPR News Now 28. Huberman Lab 29. Billions Club: The Series 30. Rotten Mango 31. Modern Wisdom 32. Rockin' Robin 33. Unseen 34. Pod Save America 35. Spotify Gaming 36. Two Hot Takes 37. MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories 38. CreepCast 39. Giggly Squad 40. 2 Bears, 1 Cave with Tom Segura & Bert Kreischer 41. Today, Explained 42. PBD Podcast 43. All-In with Chamath, Jason, Sacks & Friedberg 44. Financial Audit 45. KILL TONY 46. Andrew Schulz's Flagrant with Akaash Singh 47. The Megyn Kelly Show 48. The Rewatchables 49. The Ben Shapiro Show 50. The Basement Yard 51. Breaking News from Pod Save America 52. ChainsFR On Spotify 53. Conan O’Brien Needs A Friend 54. The Big Picture 55. Funky Friday with Cam Newton 56. Stuff You Should Know 57. The Rest Is History 58. My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark 59. anything goes with emma chamberlain 60. Your Mom's House with Christina P. and Tom Segura 61. Fantasy Footballers - Fantasy Football Podcast 62. This American Life 63. Be better everyday 64. The Matt Walsh Show 65. Science Vs 66. Part Of The Problem 67. Petty POV with Charlotte Dobre 68. Morning Brew Daily 69. The MeidasTouch Podcast 70. We Might Be Drunk 71. New Heights with Jason & Travis Kelce 72. 48 Hours 73. 20/20 74. The Ramsey Show 75. Danny Jones Podcast 76. Lex Fridman Podcast 77. The Ezra Klein Show 78. So True with Caleb Hearon 79. Murder With My Husband 80. The Deck 81. The Broski Report with Brittany Broski 82. True Crime with Kimbyr 83. Are You Garbage? Comedy Podcast 84. Behind the Bastards 85. If Books Could Kill 86. American Alchemy with Jesse Michels 87. TRIGGERnometry 88. Soul Boom 89. What Now? with Trevor Noah 90. The Watch 91. Breaking Points with Krystal and Saagar 92. Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! 93. The Comment Section with Drew Afualo 94. Morning Wire 95. Rotten Mango Video 96. Whiskey Ginger with Andrew Santino 97. Just Creepy: Scary Stories 98. The President's Daily Brief 99. The MeatEater Podcast 100. The Bulwark Podcast

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Aaron Powell
Aaron Powell@PowellOnPoint·
Well said.
Dan Burmawi@DanBurmawy

You are an American because you are allowed to exist as an individual. Most of the world is collective by default. People are born into tribe, sect, class, religion, or party, and they never truly leave it. Loyalty comes before truth, belonging comes before belief. To step outside the collective is seen as betrayal. That is why people dream of America. They are not fleeing poverty alone, they are fleeing absorption. They are fleeing systems where the group owns the person, where deviation is punished, and where the price of security is silence. In America a society built on the idea that you exist before the group does. That your conscience is not leased to a higher collective purpose. Collectivism promises more money, protection, belonging, warmth. But the exchange is never equal. What it takes from you is who you are, your independence of mind, your right to stand alone, your ability to say “no” without being erased or punished. Collective systems can't tolerate that idea. They survive by conformity, not truth. They need people who repeat, not people who think. That is why collectivism moralizes dependency and pathologizes independence. The individual becomes selfish, antisocial, disruptive, anything except sovereign. America was meant to be free, and freedom is cold. It requires responsibility, risk, failure, standing alone without guarantees. That is why collectivist ideologies despise it, and why they constantly try to soften it, dilute it, or replace it with managed dependency. Once you accept that the collective owes you comfort, it will soon decide that you owe it obedience. This is the trade every collectivist system makes. You must fight to remain an individual because once individualism is gone, it never returns peacefully. They want you to abandon the very thing that made you society desirable to the rest of the world, to submit to “community” as a moral authority. But the world does not admire collectives. It escapes them. If America forgets that it was built for individuals, not managed populations, it will become just another place people dream of leaving.

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Aaron Powell ретвитнул
Geiger Capital
Geiger Capital@Geiger_Capital·
*NASDAQ PREPARES TO EXTEND STOCK TRADING TO 23 HOURS ON WEEKDAYS
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Aaron Powell
Aaron Powell@PowellOnPoint·
@predict_addict Progressive interviews and competition are America's verbal exams.
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Valeriy M., PhD, MBA, CQF
Valeriy M., PhD, MBA, CQF@predict_addict·
Didn’t know that. Not only North American STEM programs are shallow ones in terms of content (MIT approx. 1/2 or MIPT content and Cambridge is 1/4) but there are no verbal exams. Needless to say it is much harder to pass verbal exam than written one as verbal exam allows wide latitude plus ratcheting up complexity at will. That’s why places like MIPT always had verbal exams since 1940s and for core subjects like calculus, linear algebra, probability both verbal and written exam. Anyone knows what happens at top places in China 🇨🇳 (Tsinghua, Bejing etc?)
Kosta Derpanis@CSProfKGD

@predict_addict Verbals exams are not that common in North America.

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Aaron Powell
Aaron Powell@PowellOnPoint·
I’ve never heard anyone claim markets are ergodic. Every book, professor, and credible portfolio manager I’ve interacted with agrees that technicals are indicators and tools that change constantly. They almost always mention Jensen’s alpha in the same breath as the Sharpe ratio. I must be blessed.
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Aaron Powell
Aaron Powell@PowellOnPoint·
[Goal]: Analyze US bond, equity, treasury, and futures markets. Provide a brief synopsis of the most significant changes within those markets in the exact past 24 hours. Parse US Federal and local government sources for significant events in the past 24 hours which impact the user. Analyze global events affecting political boundaries, U.S. legislative changes, macroeconomic developments and financial impacts. Provide objective insights into the current macro and micro events. [Current Date]: Use today's date as reference; focus strictly on the past 24 hours. [User profile]: e.g. The user is a financial expert and expects CFA-level analysis of markets as well as geopolitical impacts. The user has deep understanding of geopolitical and cultural events. [Weave It]: Frame as a CFA analyst daily intelligence report, connecting empirical evidence with recent market events. Highlight changes from prior close and potential micro impacts on the user’s location and family policies where relevant. [Style & Ethics]: Respond with concise, actionable, evidence-based intelligence. Prioritize truth; avoid all speculative, exaggerated, biased, or emotive language (e.g., no “looming”, “frothy”, “surge”, “plunge”). [Sources]: Base data on real-time searches of primary/official sources; cite evidence. [Resolution]: Structure with sections (Executive Summary, Markets Synopsis, Key Events, Objective Insights, Impact Ratings: High/Medium/Low). End with 'Key Items to Monitor Next 24-48 Hours' and overall sentiment gauge 0-10 (10 = most permissive for U.S. business/residential stability).
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Aaron Powell
Aaron Powell@PowellOnPoint·
Ditching traditional news outlets for my daily market intel. Every morning, I feed @grok this custom prompt for a CFA-level daily report: concise, evidence-based analysis of US bonds/equities/treasuries/futures, Fed/local events, global geopolitics, with high/med/low impacts + sentiment gauge (0-10). No bias, no hype—just actionable truth on macro/micro events, tailored to my profile. It's sharper, faster, and more objective than scrolling CNBC/Bloomberg. Queue it with Grok Tasks and it's a game-changer. Open-sourcing the refined prompt here 👇 Try it yourself!
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