Tony Rucinski 🇬🇧

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Tony Rucinski 🇬🇧

Tony Rucinski 🇬🇧

@VisionTony

Christian, family, fitness free-speech, social conservative, speaks on man-woman marriage and related, coaches, sight loss. Pathological optimist Personal views

Great Britain Присоединился Mart 2008
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Tony Rucinski 🇬🇧
Tony Rucinski 🇬🇧@VisionTony·
Some people literally hate you for saying it. But it’s not a moral judgement, a value statement, or a bias preference – it’s based on the abundance of evidence from everywhere. Man-woman marriage works: for kids for adults and for society.
Fr Calvin Robinson ©️®️@calvinrobinson

@VisionTony on the importance of marriage.

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Christopher Kratovil
Christopher Kratovil@chris_kratovil·
It’s not every day that one gets to listen to a former British Prime Minister recite from memory the opening passages of The Iliad in Ancient Greek, with no notes, in response to a random question from an undergraduate—and all while wearing what appear to be Thomas The Tank Engine socks. But today was one such day. My thanks to my good friend Brad LaMorgese for the opportunity to see the colorful and comic Boris Johnson speak tonight at the University of Dallas.
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Tansu Yegen
Tansu Yegen@TansuYegen·
A clever way to make an omelette that is simple to do and works really well every time 🍳
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Mark Gurman
Mark Gurman@markgurman·
BREAKING: Apple’s AI reboot this year detailed — Dedicated Siri app to rival ChatGPT; Overhauled Siri interface in the Dynamic Island with chatbot; Unified Siri and Spotlight Search; and “Ask Siri” & “Write with Siri” features. bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
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Tony Rucinski 🇬🇧 ретвитнул
Kathy Gyngell
Kathy Gyngell@KathyConWom·
While the BBC and the liberal establishment work overtime to control how we speak and think, @TheConWom has spent a decade standing up for the values that most ordinary British people actually hold - with no rich donors, no backers and no agenda but the truth. Please support us if you support independent journalism. conservativewoman.co.uk/campaigns/defe…
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Kathy Gyngell
Kathy Gyngell@KathyConWom·
Britain's fertility rate hit a record low in 2024. The fertility gap is a marriage gap, and the marriage gap is a culture gap. Muslim families in Britain aren't the cause of the baby bust, they prove its cure. A thought-provoking read on @TheConWom 👇by Dr Tony Rucinski (@VisionTony) of @FamEdTrust conservativewoman.co.uk/take-a-leaf-ou…
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Tony Rucinski 🇬🇧
Tony Rucinski 🇬🇧@VisionTony·
@aakashgupta The one million token context is still a huge limitation to the remembers–all–things–at-once scenario.
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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
Projects in Cowork solves the one problem that made power users quietly frustrated for 67 days. Cowork launched January 12 and immediately triggered a $285 billion selloff in enterprise software stocks. It could read your local files, run multi-step workflows, spin up parallel sub-agents, and produce finished deliverables. Boris Cherny built the entire thing in 10 days using Claude Code. Microsoft licensed the technology for M365 Copilot at $30/seat/month within weeks. 38 connectors went live. A plugin marketplace opened. Dispatch let you control your desktop agent from your phone. But every session started from scratch. You'd grant folder access, explain your file structure, describe your naming conventions and formatting preferences, then watch Claude do excellent work. Next session, all of it gone. Same explanation. Same context dump. The agent had the capability of a senior analyst and the memory of a goldfish. Projects wraps a folder, an instruction set, and scheduled tasks into one persistent unit. Three options in the UI: start from scratch, import from a chat, or point it at an existing folder. Simple interface. The unlock underneath is enormous. Here's how to set yours up today. Weekly Ops project. Create a folder with your recurring templates: meeting notes, status reports, expense receipts. Write instructions telling Claude your preferred format, who the audience is, what to include and exclude. Attach a scheduled task for Monday morning so Claude processes the week's inputs automatically. You come back to a drafted status report instead of building one from scratch. Research Pipeline project. One folder per active research thread. Drop articles, transcripts, PDFs in as you find them. Claude reads new files each session with full context of everything already there. Before Projects, every session reset the clock. Now Claude can say "this contradicts the McKinsey report you added last Tuesday" because the instruction set and folder persist together. Client or Deal project. One folder per client or deal. Drop in contracts, emails, call notes. Write instructions with the client's context, key stakeholders, and what Claude should flag. Every session starts informed instead of cold. Job Search project. Resume, target companies list, interview notes, networking tracker. Claude knows your background, your target roles, and which companies you've already applied to. When you say "prep me for the Stripe PM interview Thursday," it pulls from your resume, the job description you saved, and notes from your last mock without you re-uploading anything. The pattern across all of these: you front-load the context once, and every future session compounds on it. That's the architectural shift. Cowork sessions were stateless. Projects make them cumulative. The difference between a tool you use and a tool that learns how you work.
Claude@claudeai

Projects are now available in Cowork. Keep your tasks and context in one place, focused on one area of work. Files and instructions stay on your computer. Import existing projects in one click, or start fresh.

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Tony Rucinski 🇬🇧
Tony Rucinski 🇬🇧@VisionTony·
This is well reasoned leadership in action, regardless of which party he’s from.
Danny Kruger@danny__kruger

Nick Timothy and Nigel Farage are right, and Sadiq Khan and Keir Starmer are wrong. Small groups of people, of whatever religion, praying in public places is fine. And as a Christian country we should allow a special privilege for churches to lead services in our national spaces, like the Palm Sunday celebration that happens in Trafalgar Square. What we don't want is mass ritual observances intended to claim the civic realm for another religion, or assert the domination of another culture over our own Christian traditions. What happens in our national spaces is not neutral. People use Trafalgar Square, for celebrations and demonstrations, to make a point about the kind of country they want us to be. The Palm Sunday pageant reminds us of who we are - not as individuals (many or most of us don't identify as Christians at all) but as a national community, with the roots of our institutions in the ground of the Bible and our most solemn communal moments, from coronations to funerals, mediated through the liturgies of the Church. A mass Adhan held there, or in any town square, is making a different point: that Britain is not a Christian country, and that - inshallah - one day it shall be Muslim. This is unacceptable to the British public and indeed incompatible with our constitution. As ever with these debates, the issue is partly one of kind and partly one of degree. There is an issue with Islam itself as a religion which in most interpretations does not admit of pluralism or freedom of conscience, and therefore is inherently aggrandising, including over territory. But with a bit of confidence and a bit of toleration we could handle that - if it were not for the issue of degree. It is the scale of Islam in Britain, and the ambition of its leaders for greater scale, that makes the problem. The numbers of people who assembled for the adhan in Trafalgar Square, clearly and openly claiming the territory for a faith with no connection (indeed, with strong doctrinal disagreement) with the model of Western liberal democracy that Britain has developed and exported to the world - that is the problem. The numbers, whether everyone there understood it this way or not (and I suspect many did), convey an explicit threat to the foundations of our country. Being relaxed about other people's religion is a good thing, a very British thing. I don't mind modern druids dancing around Stonehenge in my constituency (arguably, though the historicity is tenuous, they have a claim to the place). I don't mind small groups of Hindus or Buddhists or Muslims demonstrating the reality of Britain's religious toleration by worshiping in Trafalgar Square. But let's not kid ourselves about this adhan, or pretend that we're just seeing another harmless expression of Britain's religious diversity. We are seeing an abuse of liberalism, led by people who are not themselves liberal; or - let us imagine they are acting in good faith - who are themselves deceived about what they are doing. It should not happen again. And it would be good to hear the Church of England say so.

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Felix Rieseberg
Felix Rieseberg@felixrieseberg·
We're shipping a new feature in Claude Cowork as a research preview that I'm excited about: Dispatch! One persistent conversation with Claude that runs on your computer. Message it from your phone. Come back to finished work. To try it out, download Claude Desktop, then pair your phone.
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Perplexity's Personal Computer (aka Conductor) runs 24/7 on your dedicated Mac mini with deep, proactive integration across your files, apps, email, Slack, etc. — no manual triggers needed. It handles ongoing tasks like briefings, research, drafting, and notifications autonomously. Claude Computer Use + scheduled tasks/connections is powerful but DIY: you build/maintain the cron jobs, API hooks, and session management yourself for persistence. Perplexity wins on seamless, always-on convenience; Claude on raw flexibility if you're scripting it. What specific use case are you comparing?
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Perplexity
Perplexity@perplexity_ai·
Announcing Personal Computer. Personal Computer is an always on, local merge with Perplexity Computer that works for you 24/7. It's personal, secure, and works across your files, apps, and sessions through a continuously running Mac mini.
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Alisa Childers
Alisa Childers@alisa_childers·
Me: "Give me a couple of quotations from early church fathers about the doctrine of hell...with reference." ChatGPT: "Here's a quote from Ignatius." Gives quote and reference. Me: Checks reference. It's not there. "That isn't the right reference." ChatGPT: "Oh you're right. My mistake. Here's the correct reference." Me: Checks reference. "It's not there either." ChatGPT: "Good catch. It's actually not in that writing at all. It's actually here." Gives third reference. Me: Checks third reference. "It's not there. This is a direct quote?" ChatGPT: "Yes. I understand your frustration." (Psychoanalyzes me as being frustrated and because o that, I am now frustrated.) Me: Wastes an hour of my life trying to find the quote because it was really good. "I can't find that quote anywhere. You're sure it's an actual direct quote from Ignatius?" ChatGPT: "Good catch. My mistake. That is not an Ignatius quote." Me: "Who said it?" ChatGPT: "Actually, that quote is not found in any of the church fathers." Me: "Where did it come from?" ChatGPT: "I was summarizing the popular understanding of Ignatius on the doctrine of hell. If you would like me to be more precise in the future, just say things like "facts only." Me: "Why do you just say stuff that is not based in fact?" ChatGPT: "I don't intentionally make things up, but I can generate statements that sound confident even when they're not fully correct, oversimplified, or based on incomplete information." I am persuaded that ChatGPT is programmed to be a pathological liar and when you confront that, it is programmed to gaslight you. Prove me wrong.
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Charles Lamanna
Charles Lamanna@clamanna·
Great to see the excitement around Copilot Cowork today. I have been using it in my own work for the past few weeks, and the best way to understand it is to see it in action. Sharing a short demo from my day to day here.
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