yeah, this is an internal tool i’m describing. but for the masses, it will be one interface as well with access to all the rest. in that way, it makes sense for apple to radically pivot to vertically integrating all apps. one phone experience. command and function based. #monopoly #peterthiel
It reminds me of the 90s and 2000s, when historical movies were at their peak.
Doompost all you want.
I’m genuinely excited about AI’s impact on entertainment. At the very least, it’ll let us bypass the thoroughly captured institution that is Hollywood.
And if (when) all goes well, it’s going to dismantle the grip of woke propaganda.
It’s a tool. People will use it to create what is true and beautiful again.
@peejay291@sflorimm in the end, the singular prompt without need for agents will win. you will prompt one tool that has access to everything and can do every function. winner take all. winner take ai. until quantum comes barking.
When night has become the day
They're sending you far away
So, so far away
When everything starts to fade
You don't have to be afraid
No, you don't have to be afraid
For decades, astronomers and stargazers have been waiting for the return of one of the night sky’s rarest spectacles — a nova explosion. Now, attention is once again focused on T Coronae Borealis — also known as the “Blaze Star” — after researchers identified June 25, 2026, as the statistically most likely date for its long-awaited eruption.
Read more: https://t.co/VDQMN6Yx5M
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If you spend enough time in environments where dark triad and cluster B behavior is normalized, you begin to mistake manipulation for sophistication.
You assume everyone is running social games at all times because that is the only reality you have experienced.
Yet the minute you encounter genuinely high-functioning people you realize they are not performing. They are not constantly destabilizing, humiliating, or competing for psychic dominance.
They simply build, create, host, work, and move through life without feeding on others. Once you see the difference, you recognize love without demonic possession.
The World Cup is coming to America.
But the story actually starts during the Civil War period.
In 1863, while Americans were fighting at Gettysburg and Vicksburg, a group of English clubs met in London to answer a surprisingly difficult question:
“What exactly is football?”
At the time, nobody agreed. Some versions allowed carrying the ball. Some allowed hacking opponents’ shins. Some looked like rugby. Some looked like organized chaos.
So they standardized the rules.
That meeting created the Football Association and the foundation of modern soccer.
Football/soccer reached American shores almost immediately.
By the 1870s, clubs were already playing organized matches in the United States.
America didn’t miss soccer. America simply chose a different football standard.
While most of the world coordinated around association football, the United States coordinated around a rugby-derived version that eventually became the NFL.
In other words, soccer and football are descendants of the same family tree.
The world chose one branch. America chose another.
And now, 163 years later, the world’s game is coming back to the country that took the other path.
In 1863, nobody would have predicted the outcome.
Imagine standing in London and seeing these football variants.
You wouldn’t know that one branch would become the dominant sport in Europe, South America, Africa and much of Asia.
You wouldn’t know another branch would become America’s most valuable sports league.
You wouldn’t know another branch would become rugby.
You’d just see a bunch of people arguing about rules.
Many of the things that shape the future don’t look important when they’re happening.
They look like nerds arguing over standards.
Then 150 years later, tens of billions of dollars, national identities and billions of fans sit on top of those decisions.
Tiny rule choices can compound into completely different worlds.
The ripple effects are real.
The lesson isn’t really about sports. The lesson is that history is often decided by standards.
The thing that wins isn’t always the thing that’s best.
It’s the thing enough people agree to play.