This is all based on granular analogies, happening one after another on human based scale. Albeit quicker and quicker iterations. What's missing is when tech change becomes a Continuous Process at human systems speed. Colloquially speaking the singularity. I would like to understand those impacts. And what data about this is saying...
Not a different game, imo, but a different balance to the core variables. As such it should have been a core part of the presentation, through the examples it still took armies to large teams to implement and now AI is allowing implementation at the individual level and thus... Change is becoming independent of human cooperation. That is a very unique variable/aspect which seems important to flesh out.
@pmarca FOREVER MEMES that just auto expands with each new rage wave... There are a few dozen axiomatic FOREVER MEMES. The speed dial replies within X with recursive educational value.
@stonecry@grok@elonmusk@MarioNawfal Simple econ 101, lower prices.. more demand, scale lowers prices, more demand... The truck is physically scaling the point of the tech herein
@dwarkesh_sp IMHO this is exactly why a historical podcast on libertarian ideals is so important... Your questions assume government action versus the need of government at all as our society and culture matures/solves its own problems without government.... Augh!
@elonmusk@MarioNawfal@grok of the total cost of a battery using this new tech how much of the total costs will be saved. Pls estimate the range of total cost savings. Specific of this savings amount split between FC and VC savings. Assume real world full utilization.
Tom Woods (historian, senior fellow at the Mises Institute) He’s a master at blending rigorous explanation of libertarian principles (Austrian economics, natural rights, critiques of statism) with rich historical context—especially American history, the founding era, the 20th-century revival via Mises/Hayek/Rothbard, and how government growth erodes liberty.
Tom Woods (historian, senior fellow at the Mises Institute, host of The Tom Woods Show since 2013) is the standout for a long-form interview format. He’s a master at blending rigorous explanation of libertarian principles (Austrian economics, natural rights, critiques of statism) with rich historical context—especially American history, the founding era, the 20th-century revival via Mises/Hayek/Rothbard, and how government growth erodes liberty.
@lennysan@danshipper@grok the authors list of 9 take ways seem to be counter productive to each other in some ways. Please provide the top 4 examples where the 9 points seem counter productive or down right incompatible with each other.