Samuel Cox

4K posts

Samuel Cox banner
Samuel Cox

Samuel Cox

@SamuelCox

Creative technologist designing, and making things.

London, UK เข้าร่วม Mayıs 2008
370 กำลังติดตาม901 ผู้ติดตาม
Samuel Cox
Samuel Cox@SamuelCox·
@MMOStars @Lentils80 Most large orgs won’t touch a model until it’s gone GA, which leaves Gemini 2.5 as the latest. That’s why cry.
English
0
0
2
300
MMOStars
MMOStars@MMOStars·
@Lentils80 Why cry? That's how it should be done, free up compute for the newest release and not sit on the dated releases
English
2
0
25
2.5K
Lentils
Lentils@Lentils80·
🚨 Google is planning to discontinue Gemini 3 Pro Preview on the 9th of March (less than two weeks from now) with no release of a GA The Gemini 2.0 Pro scenario is repeating again
Lentils tweet media
English
13
7
226
27.4K
Samuel Cox
Samuel Cox@SamuelCox·
@ClausVistesen We lost 15k over just under 7 years. 40% of that loss was softened by HTB. Flip side is I saved significantly throughout those 7 years vs renting in London.
English
0
0
0
67
Samuel Cox
Samuel Cox@SamuelCox·
@Saf78687 @mindofprospect Go off the commuting belt and you’ll find cheaper. Any town that’s on a half decent line ~1 hour away from London keeps getting more expensive. This of course isn’t a new thing though
English
0
0
1
172
Shaf|Saf|Safi
Shaf|Saf|Safi@Saf78687·
@mindofprospect I think there is a correction taking place, especially with the £1M+ properties. Generally, London is still extortionate. What I have unfortunately noticed is properties outside London getting silly, such as in Manchester, Birmingham, Leicester, etc.
English
1
0
5
2.8K
Samuel Cox
Samuel Cox@SamuelCox·
@heygurisingh What the article doesn’t acknowledge is that a lot of humans also imitate thinking
English
0
0
4
390
Guri Singh
Guri Singh@heygurisingh·
Apple has just published a paper with a devastating title: *The Illusion of Thinking*. And it's not a metaphor. What it demonstrates is that the AI models we use every day - yes, ones like ChatGPT - don't think. Not one bit. They just imitate doing so. Let me explain: 🧵👇
Guri Singh tweet media
English
751
2.2K
7.6K
1.5M
Logan Kilpatrick
Logan Kilpatrick@OfficialLoganK·
Introducing Gemini 3.1 Pro, our new SOTA model across most reasoning, coding, and stem use cases!
Logan Kilpatrick tweet media
English
567
588
7.5K
637.7K
Samuel Cox
Samuel Cox@SamuelCox·
@tyleroakley @Olympics I mean, I’ve seen quite a lot of bad AI slop, I think these are of relative high quality, no?
English
0
0
1
316
tyler oakley
tyler oakley@tyleroakley·
@Olympics AI slop?? have some self respect, hire humans
English
8
59
5.4K
43K
The Olympic Games
The Olympic Games@Olympics·
The intensity of the Winter Olympics is here! ❄️🔥 Feel the rush of adrenaline with Alpine Skiing, Cross-Country Skiing, Freestyle Skiing, Luge, Ski Jumping, and Speed Skating. Get ready for the ultimate showdown of speed, skill, and pure passion as athletes push their limits on the world’s biggest stage. Hurry, the last tickets are almost gone! Don’t miss your chance to witness these thrilling moments live - Link here: oly.ch/4ccSkGm 🎟️ #Olympics #MilanoCortina2026 #WinterOlympics
English
328
2.6K
11.6K
2.1M
Samuel Cox
Samuel Cox@SamuelCox·
@MoonDevOnYT I don’t understand, wast this possible before without clowbot? Things like pulsar or other social listening tool alongside an LLM?
English
1
0
0
262
Moon Dev
Moon Dev@MoonDevOnYT·
my clawdbot is going to find me viral companies 6 months before wallstreet while everyone else pretends clawdbot is just slop
English
15
23
396
29.7K
Lisan al Gaib
Lisan al Gaib@scaling01·
Google is not a serious company when their "frontier" model is a preview half of the year
English
41
10
1K
106.5K
Samuel Cox
Samuel Cox@SamuelCox·
@leodoan_ @initjean @cursor_ai Did this the other day. Their customer retention team emailed me the day after and stated that cancelling and resubscribing is the only way. Does seem a bit backwards.
English
0
0
1
47
Thanh Doan
Thanh Doan@leodoan_·
@initjean you actually can do it but it is called “cancel subscription” @cursor_ai hasnt allow to downgrade to another plan yet
English
2
0
1
1.3K
Ian Bach ☯︎
Ian Bach ☯︎@ianbach·
btw i work at open ai now :)
English
36
1
314
28.6K
Samuel Cox
Samuel Cox@SamuelCox·
@waelgenga @modadGeoP It’s absolutely nothing do to with companies such as investment firms and banks continually buying up significant amount of property, reducing stock and pushing up rents.
English
1
0
1
75
Ācwern Deāgol🌱
Ācwern Deāgol🌱@waelgenga·
@modadGeoP It's not immigration either. It's capitalism. Billionaires and millionaires hoard money and assets, causing shortages and inflation. They are parasites.
English
2
1
4
178
Firas Modad
Firas Modad@firasmodad·
£100,000 is actually not very much money, considering that even that, in London, is 1/8th of a three bedroom house's cost. Still in London, the median house is worth ten times what the median earner makes in a year. This is still very little money That only 4% of Brits earn £100k shows how poor Britain has become, largely because of extreme socialism. If you're in Washington DC, for example, you need at least $120k to be comfortable. And you're dealing with a much lower tax rate. British socialists' ideas about wealth are deeply disconnected from reality. They want the state to do more, when it is failing at the basics and doing way too much welfare, including for foreigners. The whole system needs to be redesigned along more libertarian lines for the lower and middle classes, and more nationalist lines for big businesses.
Vote Iris Duane 💚🍉@IrisDuane

If you earn £100,000 or above you are in the top 4% of earners out of the 65 million people in the UK. You are, by definition, rich.

English
99
65
1K
178.2K
Alex Witt
Alex Witt@AlexLWitt·
@HukAleksandra UK makes NO sense to me. After graduating in the UK, I immediately moved: high taxes, high cost of living, low incomes, limited opportunities. The system is set up to make it almost impossible for millennials and younger generations to get ahead.
English
4
4
79
64K
Aleksandra Huk
Aleksandra Huk@HukAleksandra·
Me: I earn £100k HMRC: That’s nice, we’ll take £45k Me: I bought a car HMRC: VAT applied Me: I want to gift my kid £5k HMRC: Taxed Me: I made money from crypto HMRC: You mean we made money Me: I made £50 profit on Vinted HMRC: That’s income. Tax it Me: I bought a house HMRC: Stamp duty please Me: I want to retire HMRC: Pay tax on your pension
English
2.4K
6K
36.3K
4.1M
richard
richard@richardzphotoz·
Storytelling is one of the most underrated skills in tech. Everyone’s building. Few can explain why it matters.
English
437
498
4.3K
532.3K
Central
Central@WestHam_Central·
Interesting ...
Central tweet media
English
4
7
178
23.2K
Samuel Cox รีทวีตแล้ว
David Perell
David Perell@david_perell·
Jony Ive once said: "Who here would actually want to spend time in a conference room? I can’t think of a more soulless and depressing place.” In their heyday, Apple’s design team used to meet in a team member’s living room once per week. Looking back on it, I swear you can feel the fruits of that ritual in the products Apple released. Think of the click-wheel on the original iPod, the sleek futurism of the original iPhone, or the theatrical elegance of opening up a new MacBook. I doubt that joy could’ve been dreamed up from under the fluorescent lighting of a sleek corporate boardroom. We know our spaces shape our thinking, but our actions betray this obvious truth. It’s a strange feature of our modern world that we doubt the mind-body connection between the spaces we inhabit and the thoughts we produce in those spaces. Take churches. We once built grand cathedrals with vaulted ceilings where light and sound reverberated in ways that awakened a divine connection with us. Now we build square boxes in strip malls. The ornamentation is gone. At some churches, you won’t even find a cross on the walls. Stained glass windows, too, have been replaced with LED screens of the sort you’d see at Coachella. Sometimes I wonder if God is dead because we killed him with bad architecture.
The Cultural Tutor@culturaltutor

I’ve made a short film. Look at the things around you: doors, bins, staircases, furniture, railings, doorhandles, windows. Do you like how they look, or not? Modern design has become boring, but it doesn’t have to be this way. The word “beautiful” is overused. We don’t need “beautiful” lamps, bus stops, and water fountains – we just need lamps, bus stops, and water fountains that are interesting, that actually mean something. Or, at the very least, not boring. Because the aesthetics of architecture and urban design aren’t just a bonus; they totally change how we think, feel, and behave. Boring environments make us more stressed and less productive; they erode our sense of community; they make us sadder, less trusting, and lonelier. A boring world is one where we spend even more time online and where our addictions are even harder to battle. The Problem There is global, widespread dissatisfaction with how the world looks. In this film, and the series it will lead to, we want to investigate that feeling and give it a voice. The point isn’t that we should return to the past or get rid of modernism. It’s about learning from the past in order to improve the present, and about giving the public what they very clearly want, which isn’t the eradication of modernism but the co-existence of modernism AND traditionalism. Just look where tourists go, where they take their photos, and that tells you everything you need to know about what most people find interesting or beautiful. And look at where people go on holiday. It’s always to cities filled with old architecture and design, with churches and mosques and palaces, with charming little alleyways and stone staircases and wrought-iron railings. Of the world’s fifty most visited buildings, only four were made in the 20th century, and they’re all museums or memorials. There’s a reason why posts about this go viral online all the time. Regardless of why the change happened, it is clearly the case that we no longer make things how we used to. People are rightly confused by the fact that old lamp posts (to take the example we focus on in the film) are usually so pretty, while modern ones are usually so boring. Some people say this is just an example of survivorship bias… and they’re mostly correct. But that’s the whole point! Saying old buildings are usually prettier than modern buildings is not to say that architecture used to be better, or that the past was better. It is simply to say that certain kinds of buildings, because they have been preserved, are good examples of what people like most. In which case... shouldn't we try to design at least some buildings in a way that we know people like? A Unifying Cause Everybody, from all sides of the political spectrum and all backgrounds, stands to benefit from a world that is designed more thoughtfully and imaginatively. The world could be such a colourful, meaningful, and thrilling place! So this isn’t about left versus right or conservatism versus progressivism; it’s about making our world a more interesting and meaningful place to live in. This should be a unifying cause, because everybody loses out when our homes and cities are badly designed. I want this film to unite people who think they’re on opposite sides, and to create a consensus that we need to change our approach to how we design our buildings and the objects – benches, bus stops, bins, lamp posts, aircon units – that fill our cities. The Importance of Details We are incredibly rich and have a sprawling choice of shows to stream, phones to buy, or shoes to wear… but everything feels more and more generic all the time. If you want to understand a society, don’t listen to what it says about itself – look at what it creates. You can learn everything about the Victorians – the good and the bad – just by looking at their lamp posts. And what do the ordinary details of the modern world say about us? That we are technologically advanced, very efficient… and care more about making money, about making things as quickly and cheaply as possible, than making our world an enjoyable place to actually live in. It’s important to learn about why and how things have changed, but that’s for another time. The first step is establishing that the public aren’t happy with modern architecture and design, and that something needs to be done. But what we need isn’t a total revival of so-called ‘traditionalism’; the truth is that traditionalism and modernism can (and should) co-exist. The trouble right now is that we only have one, and that people are tired of it. The Power of Noticing But this film (and the series it will, all being well, lead to) is about more than the specific argument it presents. Above all it’s about a way of seeing the world around us, a way of noticing and thinking. “How you do anything is how you do everything.” That is probably true, and it also applies to whole societies, not just individuals; a single doorbell implies everything else about the whole socio-economic and political system that gave rise to its creation. And, beyond being merely “useful”, the ability to notice details makes the world a richer place to live in, and life a richer thing to lead. This is what the film is about, more than anything: the power and joy of noticing. A Bigger Project This short film is just the beginning. We want to make a full series about the history of art and architecture, both for their own sake and also to see what we can learn about life in the twenty-first century and how to improve it. To keep updated you can join our email list over at our website, linked in the reply below. Final Words You can watch the film here on X, or over on YouTube, also linked in the reply below. So… this is where the dream begins, the dream of a new series and the dream of a more charming, more interesting, more meaningful modern world. Spread the word.

English
64
139
1.9K
311.3K
Samuel Cox
Samuel Cox@SamuelCox·
@moving_charlie They would have paid what, 120k in rent over those 7 years. Would have it been cheaper?
English
1
0
1
38
Moving Home with Charlie
Moving Home with Charlie@moving_charlie·
And don’t forget they weren’t just paying their mortgage, but the service charges and maintenance costs too. Take out transaction costs from their sale proceeds and renting would likely have been cheaper.
English
3
1
8
1.6K
Moving Home with Charlie
Moving Home with Charlie@moving_charlie·
2019, when all first time buyers blindly believed the myth that you can’t go wrong with bricks and mortar. That seems to be changing, finally. More buyers using caution and thinking about what they can actually afford and want to pay.
Moving Home with Charlie tweet media
English
14
1
36
5.2K
Austen Allred
Austen Allred@Austen·
We need more trillionaires
English
121
17
547
165.3K