@hadiKaempfer@gregor_brunner@Donuncutschweiz Ja, aber da war noch der demente Biden im Amt, die Lage noch gefährlicher, was die USA betrifft. Was Europa betrifft, konnte man zu Kriegseintritt auch nicht sicher wissen, ob die sich einmischen und einen Atomkrieg riskieren.
@gregor_brunner@hadiKaempfer@Donuncutschweiz Warum sollte Russland Europa drohen, wenn es seinerseits nicht bedroht wird? Russland war und ist Europa (noch) freundlich gesinnt. Europa ist zunehmend feindselig ggü. Russland und mischt sich in der Ukraine ein.
@hadiKaempfer@gregor_brunner@Donuncutschweiz Kenne ihn nicht. Meinetwegen. Aber wenn DE droht, darf auch er drohen, oder? Dennoch darf man wegen einer einzelnen Person nicht ein ganzes Volk verurteilen. Denn das ist Rassismus.
@newsand_more@ischinger Das Problem ist nur, dass Russland, China UND die USA großteils einig sind - nur die EU Bockt wie ein kleines Kind und denkt, sie könne den Großen Vorgaben machen? Diese Selbstüberschätzung ist kolossal!
@ischinger Über WAS will die EU reden? Status Quo einfrieren und akzeptieren ist ein Anruf in Moskau und der Krieg ist aus. Alle ukrainischen Gebiete zurückfordern?😂
@OliviaFLNative@HilzFuld The "king" or "god". "Black" or "Lipstick", "eternity" or "word", "word" or "matter". It's everything, it's nothing. A fool's talking.
Steve Jobs stood at a podium in 1983 and described something the human species has been trying to build for three hundred thousand years.
He was twenty-eight. Standing in Aspen. The room thought he was giving a tech talk.
Jobs: “If we really can come up with these machines that can capture an underlying spirit, or an underlying set of principles, or an underlying way of looking at the world…”
Not data. Not documents.
Spirit.
That word was not poetic. It was precise.
Because what we lose when a human being dies is not their knowledge. Knowledge survives. Libraries hold it. Papers carry it. Students pass fragments forward.
What dies is the architecture underneath. The way a mind moves through problems it has never been handed.
That is what Jobs called spirit. The part no book has ever kept alive.
Books were the first attempt. Plato writes his worldview down. Two thousand four hundred years later you can read his exact thoughts.
Jobs: “A book was a phenomenal thing; it got right from the source to the destination without anything in the middle.”
But a book is a recording. It plays back what someone thought. It cannot do what they did.
Jobs: “The problem was, you can’t ask Aristotle a question.”
Nine words holding the entire trajectory of human civilization.
Then he described something that did not exist yet.
Jobs: “When the next Aristotle comes around… maybe someday after the person’s dead and gone, we can ask this machine, ‘Hey, what would Aristotle have said?’”
Not what did Aristotle say.
What would he have said.
That is not retrieval. That is reconstruction.
The difference between a photograph of a fire and a fire that is still burning.
For three hundred thousand years, every human mind that ever existed has been temporary. Every architecture of thought. Every pattern of reasoning built across a lifetime, gone the moment the person carrying it stopped breathing.
Einstein’s papers survive. The mind that wrote them does not. The architecture that looked at a beam of light and saw time bending is gone.
Da Vinci’s notebooks survive. The mind that filled them does not. The wiring that moved between anatomy and engineering and art as one discipline is gone.
Every generation inherits books.
Never minds.
That is what Jobs was pointing at. Not faster computers. Not better storage.
The moment human consciousness stops being sentenced to the body carrying it.
If the pattern survives, death is no longer the end of a mind’s contribution to the species. It is a hardware failure.
The substrate stops. The pattern does not have to.
Steve Jobs died on October 5, 2011.
No machine captured his spirit. The pattern left the way every human pattern before it had to.
He told a room in 1983 exactly what needed to be built.
We are building it now.
He just arrived one generation too early.
We built an entire education system to prepare kids for a world that no longer exists. We test memory in a world with infinite memory. We punish collaboration and call it cheating.
This needs to end.
When you start a company, you do it with conviction and hope. But you never really know where the journey will lead.
Today is a very special day on this journey: Three and a half years after founding DREAM, we have successfully completed a $260 million Series C financing round, bringing the company’s valuation to $3 billion.
I am deeply grateful for this significant milestone. But what matters far more than the valuation is that it allows us to further drive our vision forward.
When we founded DREAM, we started with the conviction that artificial intelligence would become a strategic capability for nations. From defense and cybersecurity to public services and critical infrastructure, AI is rapidly becoming a strategic asset. At the same time, dependence on foreign AI capabilities creates new vulnerabilities. Sovereignty in the AI era requires more than access to technology. It requires ownership of infrastructure, control over data, and the ability to build institutional knowledge that remains under national control.
This is exactly why we are building DREAM.
I want to thank my incredible co-founders, Shalev Hulio and Gil Dolev, our extraordinary team, and of course our partners and investors for their trust and support.
We are still only at the beginning of this journey.
I am excited for what comes next.
https://t.co/bJoN3SjJOe