AI is making people delusional.
3 companies control the models that shape how billions of people think: @OpenAI, @Google, and @Meta
That’s a huge amount of responsibility in a very centralized number of hands.
At the same time, perhaps the private sector will take the lead on small modular reactors and deploy them at scale. If that happens, broader rollout could lower costs through economies of scale, and UK energy policy already assumes a major role for private investment across the energy system.
The silver lining I’m hoping for is that misguided policies, such as refusing to develop domestic oil and gas resources around the British Isles or to pursue shale gas, will eventually be reversed. The UK has previously framed domestic shale development as a way to improve energy security and reduce import dependence, even as production from the UK Continental Shelf has declined
The last few months have been a reset.
The way I see it, Stride is now at a crossroads:
Our Cosmos LSTs are stable, trusted, and running smoothly. But we think the upside from here is tied to the growth of Cosmos, not product iteration from the team.
And we’re restless: we want to actively ship products that solve real user problems.
So after months of debate, we’re proposing a clear separation that we think brings clarity: we’ll keep STRD focused on Cosmos, and start fresh elsewhere.
As a tokenholder, you get to choose: stay with STRD to bet on Cosmos, or burn for what’s next.
We have over 18 months of runway, and have internally committed to at least 6 months of building entirely new products.
I’m personally more energized than I’ve been in a long time. We’re building fast again, with real clarity of purpose.
It feels like we’ve stripped things back to what matters: building products people actually want.
@PolitlcsUK@zoenora6 We are living in Weimar.
The country is falling to shit. We have a rape epidemic. We are infested with degenerates. The cost of living is spiraling out of control.
What does the government want to focus on?
Dildos. You couldn’t make it up
AI right now is impressive, but the idea that it’s about to take everyone’s jobs feels overhyped. I remember Elon Musk saying years ago we’d have fully driverless cars within months and production scaling insanely fast shortly after. Those timelines were wildly overestimated. AI may be powerful, but people consistently underestimate how long real-world disruption takes.