The most valuable AI systems may not be the ones that think the best, but the ones that preserve causality over time. @TheARCTERMINAL is quietly building for this.
Every research note, decision, and action becomes part of an interconnected graph where future reasoning can trace why something happened, not just what happened. ANIMA is gradually forming decision lineage, giving long-term work continuity that traditional chat-based AI simply cannot retain.
At Fincantieri, people forge our ships - and our success.
The Future On Board is built by the hands, skills and teamwork that are literally behind every spark.
🚨⚪️ Official statement scheduled today for Marc Cucurella, new Real Madrid player on a contract until June 2032.
Six year deal, €55m plus €5m add-ons to Chelsea.
@ChampRDS@IratiPratSC Insulting reality for fighters: the post fight exit says more about processing defeat than the result itself. Emotions don’t switch off on command
Good morning CT
Most people think the next evolution of AI is better answers.
I’m starting to think it’s better execution, @TheARCTERMINAL feels like it’s exploring that direction combining AI, memory, workflows and onchain actions into one place instead of making users rebuild context every single session.
The interesting part isn’t using more tools, it’s creating a system where your work, decisions and progress stay connected.
Still early but early exploration usually creates the biggest edge.
Watching this one closely.
Joan Rivers told reporters Michelle Obama was a Transexual and that Barack Obama was the first gay President in 2014
She died just months after this statement, many speculate there was foul play
Now today in 2026, UFC fighter Josh Hokit openly announces “Michelle Obama is a man” to the entire world live. Everyone cheers
At one point in time people were afraid of making this statement because they thought they could be killed
Now today, no one is afraid
We’ve come a long way
@VigilantFox Selling for $100M doesn’t auto replace structure. A lot of people underestimate how much identity is tied to daily pressure, not just income.
A guy sold his watch company for $100,000,000.
Years later, he was “lonelier than ever and deeply depressed.”
His life was stress-free, “really cushy,” and he could play video games whenever he wanted.
But when he sold his company, he lost something more valuable than money: “the hunt.”
Dr. Andrew Huberman explains:
“Some guy made a [$100 million], and a couple weeks later he said, ‘I don’t know what’s going on, but I feel like I’m depressed.’”
“And I just said, ‘That’s dopamine.’ He got the reward, and what he misses is the hunt.”
“You have to stay in the hunt. This is like the WILL TO LIVE is the HUNT FOR NEW THINGS.”
Below is the post from the guy who discovered that money and unlimited comfort actually didn’t make him happy. It’s a fascinating case study. Well worth reading:
“I sold my company MVMT a few years ago for a lot of money and thought all my problems would be solved. I made my life really cushy and comfortable. I optimized for being as stress free as possible. I play video games when I want, I wake up when I want and really have no reason to get out of bed if I don’t want to. I always thought this was the dream and that I’d be happy forever… until I wasn’t. I realize I’m in an incredibly unique situation and wanted to share some things I’ve learned and am still working through.
“I’m new to this subreddit but it looks like a lot of you feel as I do and did when trying to find a career. I don’t necessarily have any deep passions or skill sets that translate into a career. I started my ecommerce company solely out of the desire to make money. I’m an introvert and being behind a computer felt comfortable. The unhealthy desire for ego and money gave me motivation and fulfillment to build the company. I had no experience aside from the willingness to try and fail and try again. I had an unhealthy relationship with myself and my values in life were not true to who I was. It allowed me to be successful but still I was unhappy. My money and ego were the driving forces. After selling the company, I realized the only way to get the same highs would have been to start a bigger company and make more money. (Also known as the hedonic treadmill) But those were external motivations. I now only cared about authentic motivations, things I wanted to work on if money and ego weren’t the driving forces.
“Fast forward to now, I’ve been separated from the company for 2 years. I’m 31, single and never have to work again. I’ve also been lonelier than ever and deeply depressed. I really believe that we need purpose in our lives to be happy. For some that might be raising a family and for others that’s a career. For a lot of us on this subreddit I don’t think we’re looking solely for money. I think we want a career that has deeper meaning to us. The last couple years I’ve really been working on what my personal values are and what makes me tick. It’s really helped me align with what I care about and trying to find a career that aligns with those values. We’ll never love 100% of our job, I think that’s important to remember. I’d recommend taking a Myers-Briggs personality test. It’s helped realign me with some old hobbies and thought patterns.
“If you don’t know what you’re passionate about, think back to when you were a kid. What did you gravitate towards. Even if you never took it to the next level. It’s literally never too late. What did you enjoy being bad at?
“Last piece of advice that I struggle with still is failing. We need to just start. Fuck it, even if it’s the wrong direction and we fail or realize we don’t like what we’re doing. There are lessons in everything. We can plan and analyze forever but there are lessons that are unknown until you start moving forward. You cannot live without struggle and pain. We either choose our struggle and pain or it will find us through depression and loneliness.
“I have more to say but I’ll save it for another post.
“TLDR:
“1.) Money past a certain point won’t make you happier, in fact it will make you feel lonelier
“2.) Find your values, what makes you tick
“3.) F*ck it, just start and fail. There are lessons everywhere.”