LinSD
82K posts

LinSD
@LinSD13
Inhabitator of The Echo Chamber. Love dogs & recipes. Meme ento Mori. Don’t follow - i often respond. Blocked by discerning folks.

A guy on Reddit turned $53,000 into $181 million on GameStop while the hedge fund betting against him lost $6.8 billion and shut down In June 2019 Keith Gill was a financial advisor at MassMutual making a normal salary He noticed hedge funds had shorted more GameStop shares than actually existed in circulation 140% short interest on a stock trading at $5 He put $53,000 into GME and started posting about it under three different names nobody knew were the same person DeepFuckingValue on Reddit Roaring Kitty on YouTube Keith Gill in real life For over a year people called him an idiot January 2021 millions of Reddit users started buying GME went from $17 to over $500 in three weeks His position peaked at $48 million Melvin Capital lost so much money they shut down permanently Robinhood halted the buy button to stop the bleeding It got so out of control that Congress opened a hearing Keith Gill testified with a red headband and a cat poster behind him "I like the stock" Reuters had to cross reference public records and social media posts just to figure out all three accounts were the same person Then he went completely silent for three years In may 2024 he posted one image of a guy leaning forward in a chair GME jumped 74% before the market opened Three weeks later he revealed a $181 million position in GameStop $53,000 into the most hated stock on Wall Street turned one man into a legend and one hedge fund into a Wikipedia page

@wayofftheres @jockowillink Water also has magnetic qualities


My company rolled out AI tools 11 months ago. Since then, every task I do takes longer. I am not allowed to say this out loud. Not because there is a policy. There is no policy. There is something worse than a policy. There is enthusiasm. There is a Slack channel called #ai-wins where people post screenshots of AI outputs with captions like "this just saved me an hour." There is a VP who opens every all-hands with "the companies that adopt fastest win." There is a Director who renamed his team from Operations to Intelligent Operations. There is a peer review question that now asks: "How have you leveraged AI tools to enhance your workflow this quarter?" If the answer is "I haven't, because I was faster before," that is a career decision. So I leverage. Emails. Before the tools, I wrote emails. This took the amount of time it takes to write an email. I did not measure it. Nobody measured it. The email got written and sent and it was fine. Now I write the email. Then I highlight the text and click "Enhance with AI." The AI rewrites my email. It replaces "Can we meet Thursday?" with "I'd love to explore the possibility of finding a mutually convenient time to align on this." I read the rewrite. I delete the rewrite. I send my original email. This takes 4 minutes instead of 2. The 2 extra minutes are the enhancement. I do this 11 times a day. That is 22 minutes I spend each day rejecting improvements to sentences that were already finished. In #ai-wins I posted a screenshot of the rewrite. I did not post the part where I deleted it. 23 people reacted with the rocket emoji. That is adoption. Meetings. We have an AI notetaker in every meeting now. It joins automatically. It records. It transcribes. It summarizes. After each meeting I receive a 3-paragraph summary of the meeting I just attended. I read the summary. This takes 3 minutes. I was in the meeting. I know what happened. I am reading a machine's account of something I experienced firsthand. Sometimes the account is wrong. Last Tuesday it attributed a comment about Q3 revenue to me. My manager made that comment. I spent 4 minutes correcting the transcript. Before the notetaker, I did not spend 7 minutes after each meeting correcting a robot's memory of something I personally witnessed. I attend 11 meetings a week. That is 77 minutes per week supervising a transcription nobody requested. I mentioned this once. My manager said "think about the people who weren't in the meeting." The people who weren't in the meeting do not read the summaries. I checked. The read receipts show single-digit opens. The summaries exist not because they are useful but because they are there. I read them for the same reason. Documents. I write a weekly status update. Before the tools, this took 10 minutes. I typed what happened. I sent it. My manager skimmed it. The system worked. Now I open the AI writing assistant. I give it my bullet points. It produces a draft. The draft says "Significant progress was achieved across multiple workstreams." I did not achieve significant progress across multiple workstreams. I updated a spreadsheet and sent 4 emails. I rewrite the draft to say what actually happened. Then I run my rewrite through the grammar tool. It suggests I change "done" to "completed" and "next week" to "in the forthcoming period." I click Ignore 9 times. Then I send the version I would have written in 10 minutes. The process now takes 30. I have been doing this every week for 11 months. I have added 20 minutes to a task that did not need 20 more minutes. I call this efficiency. I have been calling it efficiency for 11 months. That is what efficiency means now. It means the additional time you spend to arrive at the same outcome through a longer process. Nobody has questioned this definition. I have not offered it for review. I kept a log once. 2 weeks. Every task, timed. Before-AI and after-AI. The after number was larger in every case. Every single one. Not by a little. The range was 40 to 200 percent. I deleted the log. I deleted it because it was a document that said, in plain numbers, that the AI tools make me slower. And a document like that has no place in a company where AI adoption is a strategic priority. I could not send it to my manager. He championed the rollout. I could not post it in #ai-wins. I could not raise it in a meeting because the notetaker would transcribe it and the summary would read "[Name] expressed concerns about AI tool efficacy" and that summary would be the first one anyone actually reads. So I do what everyone does. I use the tools. I spend the extra time. I post in #ai-wins. I write "leveraged AI to streamline weekly reporting" in my review and my manager gives me a 4 out of 5 for innovation. I have innovated nothing. I have added steps to processes that were already finished. I have made simple things longer and labeled the difference with words that used to mean something. Every week in #ai-wins someone posts a screenshot. And 20 people react with the rocket emoji. And nobody posts the part where they deleted the output and did the task themselves. Nobody posts the revert. Nobody posts the before-and-after timer. Nobody will. Because "I was better at my job before the AI tools" is a sentence that cannot be said out loud in any company that has decided AI is the future. Every company has decided AI is the future. So we leverage. Quietly. Adding steps. Calling them optimization. Getting slightly less done, slightly more slowly, with slightly more steps, and reporting it as progress. My yearly review is next month. There is a new section this year. "AI Impact Assessment." It asks me to quantify the hours saved by AI tools per week. I will write a number. The number will be positive. It will not be true. But the AI writing assistant will help me phrase it convincingly. That is the one thing it does well.

Right off the freeway in San Diego, on state property run by Newsom’s Caltrans, you’ve got homeless encampments in every direction. Fire risk. Debris. Health hazards. Local residents have been asking for action for years. Nothing’s been done. In 2024, Newsom said: “If we don’t deal with this, we don’t deserve to be in office.” It’s now 2026. He didn't deal with it, and he doesn't deserve to be in office.

WATCH: Thune says Republicans intend to respect the parliamentarian and NOT overrule her on which parts of the SAVE America Act are eligible for a simple-majority budget reconciliation bill.

Ok, how many of you grew up with this? 😂😂

Gavin Newsom with no hair gel is tripping me out It’s giving 90’s sex pervert





MSNBC speakers, who have never created jobs, are having a meltdown over the U.S. having trillionaires. Stephanie Ruhle: “And let’s be clear, monarchs have chump change compared to the wealth of Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos.”




















