Blake Seitz

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Blake Seitz

Blake Seitz

@BlakeSeitz

Mobilizing the English language for battle @PalantirTech. Former Senate speechwriter, policy advisor.

Sumali Haziran 2011
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Charles Fain Lehman
Charles Fain Lehman@CharlesFLehman·
The United States is the world's largest exporter of natural gas — a remarkable change from decades ago, when America was dependent on the often-hostile OPEC nations for its energy needs. That's probably saved us as much as $4 trillion in the past two decades. That change is largely thanks to the "Shale Revolution," the development of fracking and horizontal drilling technology that is now responsible for 36 percent of total U.S. production. In a new @nberpubs paper, Berkeley's Lucas W. Davis uses data on gas prices in the United States, Europe, and Japan to estimate the savings generated by the Shale Revolution. The effect is obvious in the plot below: Starting in 2007, American prices diverge sharply from Europe and Japan. We're also more insulated from big shocks. He pegs the total as between $3.1T and $4.3T between 2007 and 2025. That's $164B to $227B per year — between $500 and $700 per person per year. nber.org/papers/w35245
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Brendan Fraser Crane
Brendan Fraser Crane@bf_crane·
Sidestepping the question but Pilate is such a great literary character. Vain, irritated, prickled by a conscience he thought he long killed, projecting power while knowing it’s really a powder keg. “What is Truth?” as both cynical realpolitik & a genuine inching toward the light
Sami Gold@souljagoyteller

Why is it that Pontius Pilate is not more of a villain in Christian history? When reading the New Testament for the first time, I was shocked to see that Pilate is depicted more as doing his Roman duty and not as a satanic force

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Blake Seitz
Blake Seitz@BlakeSeitz·
The East India Company deals with the PR fallout from the regicide of Charles I.
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Blake Seitz
Blake Seitz@BlakeSeitz·
Above and beyond customer service by the East India Company to the Sultan of Aceh.
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Richard Nixon Foundation
Richard Nixon Foundation@nixonfoundation·
This is President Nixon's book recommendations for students interested in history, biography and historical novels.
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Blake Seitz
Blake Seitz@BlakeSeitz·
@DanielMOrnelas I am a big believer in (and seasoned practitioner of) lunchtime austerity, but let's not overstate the case here.....
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First Breakfast
First Breakfast@FirstBreakfast·
We in the West face a stark reality: our weapons are expensive and scarce. Our adversaries' are cheap and plentiful. The race is on to correct this imbalance and build the arsenal of the future. The question is, who will build it? In today's article, @BlakeSeitz assesses the ongoing cold war between legacy defense firms and new entrants—including startups born under existential conditions on the battlefields of Ukraine. This conflict, more than any other, shows the qualities that will determine whether companies sink or swim in the coming years: ⏩ "The firms that win will have to earn it through speed, the ability to iterate, and the ability to ship product in the quantities and at the price point that Western governments demand." So far, the defense-tech cold war is mostly a war of words and propaganda, as companies try to position themselves as the wave of the future—and do down their competitors. But a reckoning is fast approaching. Dollars are being allocated, contracts are being signed, and trials are being held. Who is winning the defense tech cold war? Read the piece and us know what you think. 👇 firstbreakfast.com/p/cleaning-hou…
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René Magritte
René Magritte@artistmagritte·
L'empire des lumières (III) / The dominion of light - 1951 #artbots #magritte
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Alex Hochuli 🧉🎙️🤯📉
Finally, technology has caught up with 1940s Argentinan literature
Nav Toor@heynavtoor

THIS GUY BUILT AN ENTIRE WIKIPEDIA THAT IS 100% AI HALLUCINATIONS AND IT'S OPEN SOURCE ON GITHUB it's called Halupedia. nothing on the site existed before you clicked. every article was generated the second you arrived. the site has one rule: the universe only exists when you visit it. it looks exactly like wikipedia. same fonts. same layout. same scholarly citations. same "stumble" button for random articles. the only difference is none of it is real. here are some actual articles currently in the encyclopedia: > the great pigeon census of 1887 > the ministry of slightly wrong maps > chaldic arithmetic — a branch of mathematics where subtraction is forbidden > armund the river mapper — a cartographer who mapped 14,000 leagues of river without leaving his chair > the society for the prevention of unnecessary tuesdays every article page also tells you how many people are reading it right now. it says: "you alone are consulting this folio at present." the creator's own tagline for the site is the most unhinged sentence i've read this year: "an encyclopedia of a universe that does not exist until you visit it" the entire backend is a single open source repo called vibeserver. one guy. one description on github: "a little webserver making things up just in time." we built the largest knowledge base in human history and the very first thing a guy did with it was make a hallucinated mirror universe and put it on the open web. the internet is healing.

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First Breakfast
First Breakfast@FirstBreakfast·
The U.S. military knew that cheap drones were a threat well over a decade ago. Today's guest authors, Jarrett Lane and Dominic Ventimiglia, simulated adversary attacks on U.S. bases for CENTCOM from 2015-17. Drones quickly became one of their go-to tactics. But too many were slow to appreciate the threat: "In our experience, the idea of using cheap drones to degrade or dismantle critical capabilities was typically met with one of three responses. The first was incredulity. To some, drone attacks posed a nominal force protection problem because they were crude and usually unsuccessful. There was little appreciation that new forms of warfare usually begin crudely. The second response was dismissal. Drones could be easily dealt with by shooting them down or taking out the operators. The third response was acknowledgement that drones were a problem—but that they were somebody else’s problem to solve." How can the Department avoid getting caught flat-footed again? Better red teaming, better feedback loops—and a shift in mindset that treats threats seriously even when they're small and speculative. Read, share, and let us know what you think in the replies. 👇 firstbreakfast.com/p/avoidable-su…
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Museum
Museum@DailyClassicArt·
René Magritte - "Architecture in the Moonlight" (1956)
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Aaron MacLean
Aaron MacLean@AaronBMacLean·
The assessment problem in education posed by AI is easily solvable if institutions have the will. Make grades dependent on Oxford-style exams with old-fashioned blue books. You’ll see how much students actually know. There does not appear to be any real alternative.
Luiza Jarovsky, PhD@LuizaJarovsky

🚨 University professors have been saying AI is completely destroying learning and that we'll soon have an AI-powered, semi-illiterate workforce. Here's a glimpse into the educational apocalypse: "Sarah, a freshman at Wilfrid Laurier University in Ontario, said she first used ChatGPT to cheat during the spring semester of her final year of high school. (...) After getting acquainted with the chatbot, Sarah used it for all her classes: Indigenous studies, law, English, and a “hippie farming class” called Green Industries. “My grades were amazing,” she said. “It changed my life.” Sarah continued to use AI when she started college this past fall. Why wouldn’t she? Rarely did she sit in class and not see other students’ laptops open to ChatGPT. Toward the end of the semester, she began to think she might be dependent on the website. She already considered herself addicted to TikTok, Instagram, Snapchat, and Reddit, where she writes under the username maybeimnotsmart. “I spend so much time on TikTok,” she said. “Hours and hours, until my eyes start hurting, which makes it hard to plan and do my schoolwork. With ChatGPT, I can write an essay in two hours that normally takes 12.” - "By November, Williams estimated that at least half of his students were using AI to write their papers. Attempts at accountability were pointless. Williams had no faith in AI detectors, and the professor teaching the class instructed him not to fail individual papers, even the clearly AI-smoothed ones. “Every time I brought it up with the professor, I got the sense he was underestimating the power of ChatGPT, and the departmental stance was, ‘Well, it’s a slippery slope, and we can’t really prove they’re using AI,’” Williams said. “I was told to grade based on what the essay would’ve gotten if it were a ‘true attempt at a paper.’ So I was grading people on their ability to use ChatGPT.” - AI in education is a serious topic, and many schools and universities are blindly jumping into the "AI-first" wave without considering short and long-term consequences. It would be great to hear more from teachers and educators to understand potential solutions. This might be a great opportunity for rethinking the education system and how students are assessed. - 👉 Link to the full article below. 👉 To learn more about AI's legal and ethical challenges, join my newsletter's 94,700+ subscribers (link below).

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OSINTdefender
OSINTdefender@sentdefender·
According to Reuters, citing a report by the Chinese media outlet Ciaxin, a Chinese large refined-products tanker was struck by an Iranian projectile off the United Arab Emirates Al Jeer port this past Monday. Per a source from the owner of the vessel, this is the first time a Chinese vessel was struck by Iranian fires since the conflict began. The vessel was reportedly marked “Chinese owner and crew” and was still targeted.
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First Breakfast
First Breakfast@FirstBreakfast·
The key lesson of modern war from the Second World War to Epic Fury? Industrial power is combat power. America can close kill chains at devastating speed—but this advantage is squandered without the metal and munitions to back it up. The Department of War needs to leverage American tech to connect itself, primes, and sub-tier suppliers into a single system—so it can see, coordinate, and drive production in real time. It needs to build the WAR MACHINE. @ssankar @BigShow2026 @Madeline_Zimm @BlakeSeitz firstbreakfast.com/p/building-the…
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RebK
RebK@TroddenTrail·
Because you wanted a Francis Scott Key Bridge update. *collapsed 2 years ago *primary contractor fired *budget initially 1.8 billion now 5.2 billion *completion initially 2028 now late 2030. Posting this in pencil.
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