Mike Peterson

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Mike Peterson

Mike Peterson

@mpvprb

Software and hardware engineer since 1972

Northern California 加入时间 Ocak 2025
492 关注329 粉丝
Mike Peterson
Mike Peterson@mpvprb·
@niccruzpatane Cost was not the deciding factor. I got mine because I believe EVs are the future and Tesla had a great reputation. Then I was extremely disappointed to discover that they didn't sell parts
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Nic Cruz Patane
Nic Cruz Patane@niccruzpatane·
How much money are you saving by driving an Tesla/EV? Was that the deciding factor for you when purchasing it?
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Rand Paul
Rand Paul@RandPaul·
Gas prices are high because Washington limits your choices at the pump. My Fuel Choice and Deregulation Act: ✅ Strips out EPA red tape ✅ Expands access to ethanol and alternative fuels ✅ Lets the market drive prices down We need energy freedom, not government mandates.
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Rand Paul
Rand Paul@RandPaul·
We can't legislate away evil, but we can remove every obstacle to self-defense. No school, no church, no movie theater in America should be left defenseless. More good guys with guns means less crime. Period.
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Mark Kretschmann
Mark Kretschmann@mark_k·
AI systems can accurately predict the future. If an AI could perfectly predict your next 5 years, would you actually want to see the answer? 🤖 🔮
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Nic Cruz Patane
Nic Cruz Patane@niccruzpatane·
The paint is infused into the Tesla Cybercab’s body panels. If scratched, the color goes through the whole panel unlike a traditional car with primer, color, then paint. To repair, simply replace the panel or fix it like you would any other car.
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Zafir@Zafir88538734

@niccruzpatane Wait, this isn’t paint?

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Mike Peterson
Mike Peterson@mpvprb·
@SenMarkKelly Private religious schools suck. Private schools that are more like low effort party houses suck. Private schools that provide hardcore academic rigor and uncompromising excellence deserve support.
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Senator Mark Kelly
Senator Mark Kelly@SenMarkKelly·
I have a bill to protect public education from vouchers that drain money from schools and hurt students. The Wall Street Journal editorial board had a few things to say about that, but here’s what they missed.
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Mike Peterson
Mike Peterson@mpvprb·
@BenSasse Private schools that focus on hardcore excellence are good. Private schools that make parents feel good about their mediocre, lazy kid by giving them high grades are worse than bad.
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Mike Peterson
Mike Peterson@mpvprb·
@JustThink65 @binarybits Agreed. I worked on self-driving tech for a major manufacturer. The problem is hard, really hard. Even if you go in believing it's hard, you keep discovering more hard problems.
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Johnny Dangerously
Johnny Dangerously@JustThink65·
The list below is of auto makers whose predictions were also wrong and late. Rivian is the closest to Tesla and it’s as good as Tesla’s FSD in 2020. I know. I’ve had FSD since 2019. Moral of the story. This isn’t like producing another Honda Accord. Autonomous driving is really, really hard to get the last mile of safety.
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Timothy B. Lee
Timothy B. Lee@binarybits·
At Tesla, rapid robotaxi scaling is always just around the corner.
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Nic Cruz Patane
Nic Cruz Patane@niccruzpatane·
Both of Tesla’s Next-Generation vehicles do not require a paint shop during production. Crazy to think. Tesla is redefining the automotive manufacturing industry.
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Mike Peterson
Mike Peterson@mpvprb·
@davepl1968 String theory is like code that is theorized to run on a computer that doesn't exist
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Mike Peterson
Mike Peterson@mpvprb·
@Microinteracti1 Agreed. The US is unstable and went from a somewhat sane and reasonable government to an insane, corrupt and dangerous government in one election. Even if sanity is restored, the potential remains for insanity to happen again.
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Gandalv
Gandalv@Microinteracti1·
He is right
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Mike Peterson
Mike Peterson@mpvprb·
@PeterDiamandis It's more than recent movies, from the old myths of Eden and Prometheus to Frankenstein, there have always been writers who believed knowledge is dangerous and that there are things we should not know.
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Peter H. Diamandis, MD
Peter H. Diamandis, MD@PeterDiamandis·
Two things are driving social unrest right now: young people can't see a path to a job, a home, or a future. And Hollywood keeps teaching us that AI ends in killer robots and collapse. Am I missing anything?
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Mike Peterson
Mike Peterson@mpvprb·
@reidhoffman Creating AI "art" or "music" can be fun, kinda like playing a video game. But it's personal fun, nobody will want to pay for your art or music since it required no artistic talent or effort to create. Real art and music is made by artists and musicians.
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Reid Hoffman
Reid Hoffman@reidhoffman·
"We won't watch robots play basketball." Netflix co-founder and Anthropic Board Member Reed Hastings on the future of AI and entertainment –– and how human-first is likely to stay on top.
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Mike Peterson
Mike Peterson@mpvprb·
@ahall_research The answer is: AI available to all, preferably open-source, running on local, commodity hardware
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Andy Hall
Andy Hall@ahall_research·
The Musk-OpenAI trial starts today, and it's rooted in fundamental questions about how AI is going to concentrate power. The origins of OpenAI and the battle with Musk were explicitly about "AGI dictatorship"---fears that Demis Hassabis, Sam Altman, or Elon Musk might wield this powerful new technology to become all-powerful. Today, what can we do to prevent these outcomes? OpenAI's governance structure was meant to prevent such an outcome, but the battle over the attempted firing of Altman made it clear that wouldn't work. Anthropic's public trust may be a stronger version, but is so far untested. We could ask the government to intervene, but as Musk's lawyer said this morning, "the government was not stepping up" and it still isn't. The clash with Anthropic shows that not everyone will trust the government, either---because maybe it, too, wants to wield this technology to become a dictator. So we have to explore ways for the industry to govern itself to limit its power. This may be the path that Glasswing is heading down, but previous attempts like the Frontier Model Forum, while useful, aren't proving powerful enough to prevent AGI dictatorship should it come to pass. In the meantime, we need to measure how the models are responding to dictatorial requests, we need to help the companies develop stronger constitutions that help commit them to not helping with such requests -- whether from government or employees -- and we need to give our democracy stronger tools so that we get government back to a place where it can credibly constrain the technology. Here's the "Free Systems starter pack" on this topic. On constitutions to ward off AGI dictatorship: freesystems.substack.com/p/the-enlighte… On measuring how models respond to dictatorial requests: freesystems.substack.com/p/the-dictator… On how to use AI to build "political superintelligence" and get our government where it needs to be: freesystems.substack.com/p/building-pol… Lots more to come as we continue to work on this foundational issue for the future of AI and the world.
Frances Wang@FrancesWangTV

@abc7newsbayarea "As AI became more advanced, Elon became more worried.” - Molo presenting Musk as a businessman who was vocal of his concerns re AI safety risks, even citing a visit with President Obama where Musk tried to warn him of the dangers. "But the government was not stepping up."

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Mike Peterson
Mike Peterson@mpvprb·
@Dan_Jeffries1 I see a new economic system where the old idea of a job disappears and something better emerges. Of course, the future is becoming increasingly unpredictable, so my predictions are not to be trusted.
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Daniel Jeffries
Daniel Jeffries@Dan_Jeffries1·
I see a surge of new jobs coming. Agents and people working together on ever more complex software and problems. Smaller, more agile teams. Abstracting up the stack. That is true intelligence. Coordination. Communication. Working together. Abstraction. Solve lower level problems and move to ever more complex ones higher up. We already have superintelligence. It's people working together. It's us as a whole. No one human agent is responsible for all. It's specialization all the way down. It's iteration and refinement. Sharing ideas. Learning from each other and from our tools. Comparative advantage. These are the foundations of civilization and true intelligence. It's mass coordination that took us out of the dark ages and into the globe striding civilization that we are now. Have no fear. We will defeat the sociopaths who can't tell the difference between their dark dreams and reality. We will defeat the psychotics whose job it is to sell fear and produce nothing for society, living off it as parasites. We will build a better tomorrow, step by step. Together.
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Mike Peterson
Mike Peterson@mpvprb·
@PeterDiamandis Elon hired smart people and gave them the freedom to "go orbital". The tech was invented by his engineers. He created the environment that supported them.
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Peter H. Diamandis, MD
Peter H. Diamandis, MD@PeterDiamandis·
When SpaceX launched Starlink, traditional satellite internet was stuck at dial-up speeds using the same old spectrum. Elon went orbital... literally. Building a constellation of 6,000+ low-Earth orbit satellites delivering gigabit speeds to places cable companies won't touch. Elon doesn't stand still.
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Austin Justice
Austin Justice@AustinJustice·
"Blue cities are radical hellscapes that can't fix crime." Counterpoint: Baltimore. Baltimore had 334 murders in 2022. Last year it had 133, the lowest since 1977. The turning point was that voters defenestrated a Soros-backed prosecutor Marilyn Mosby who averaged 333 homicides a year across eight years and declined to use mandatory minimum sentences. (She was later convicted of mortgage fraud, so there's that too.) Her replacement, Ivan Bates, ran on the Democratic ticket with a simple message: repeat violent offenders belong in prison. Maryland law already allowed five years with no parole for convicted felons caught carrying a gun, but Mosby never used it. Bates used it a lot. In just two years, his office sent more than 2K repeat violent offenders to prison, double his predecessor's TOTAL. The city paired that with a precision intervention program that identified the small number of people driving most of the violence, which led to 631 arrests (94% haven't reoffended). Police also seized 2,480 firearms last year alone, including hundreds of ghost guns, while maintaining a 64% homicide clearance rate. When shooters know they'll get caught and actually prosecuted, behavior changes. Sandtown-Winchester, once the most violent neighborhoods in the city, just went a year without a killing! Carjackings (-51%) and robberies (-24%) are also down. Baltimore didn't change demographics, or its culture, its rules, or much of anything else in those years. It simply voted in a new Democratic prosecutor, who decided the city needed to finally put violent criminals in prison.
Austin Justice tweet mediaAustin Justice tweet media
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