Watching a video is not my preferred style of learning. I I would much rather read. I would appreciate your perspective and information and would like to know about anything you have to say but along with your videos, please put in in written format with an easily accessible link to retrieve it. Where does one buy blueberries that have not been hybridized with an increase in sugar content?
The earth experiences HUNDREDS to OVER 1,000 DETECTABLE earthquakes EVERY DAY worldwide, depending on the minimum magnitude tracked. 32 earthquakes in 24 hours is completely normal and has nothing to do with climate change. 32 in 24 hours is BELOW AVERAGE. PLEASE educate yourself.
@grok
I think I might have to admit that Grok is my new best friend. 😂I can ask any question. Find any information. Whenever I think of something new and wonder about it, I ask. I’m tired of hearing people complain about AI and the water usage issue, which undoubtedly is real, but solutions exist. I asked Grok to inform me. Here’s the reply :
“Data centers use a lot of water mainly for evaporative cooling of AI servers. US facilities consumed ~17 billion gallons directly in 2023, with big growth ahead. But solutions exist. Here’s how we can fix it: [1]
1Advanced cooling tech – Switch to liquid cooling (direct-to-chip) or immersion (servers submerged in special fluids). These slash or eliminate evaporative water use, often by 50-90%. Many new AI builds are adopting this. [2]
2Closed-loop & recycled water – Recirculate the same water with minimal loss. Microsoft’s new designs use zero water evaporation for cooling (filled once, then closed loop). Use treated wastewater/rainwater instead of drinking water. [3]
3Smart siting – Build in cooler, wetter areas or use seawater where possible. Avoid stressing arid regions.
4Efficiency gains – Better chips, AI-optimized operations, and waste heat reuse cut overall demand.
5Policy & transparency – Require better reporting, incentives for low-water tech, and non-potable sources.
Progress is fast—hyperscalers are investing because it saves money too. AI can even help optimize cooling. The issue is solvable with engineering + incentives. [4]
Sources / Footnotes:
1Lawrence Berkeley National Lab / EESI reports on US data center water use (2023: ~17B gallons)
2EESI, LBNL on liquid & immersion cooling reductions
3Microsoft announcements on closed-loop / zero-evaporation designs
4Industry analyses (IEEE, Brookings, etc.)”
How can we inform the uninformed that ultimately we can conquer the water issues for cooling data centers, reducing our dependency, and reap greater benefits from using AI with fewer environmental impacts? “How to Inform the Uninformed Effectively
1. Lead with Empathy + Facts: Acknowledge “Yes, current systems can use a lot of water—like a small town for a big center.” Then pivot: “But new tech cuts this dramatically, often to near-zero freshwater.”
2. Use Analogies: Traditional cooling is like flooding fields (wasteful evaporation). Liquid/immersion is like precision drip irrigation. Closed loops recycle like a closed aquarium filter.
3. Share Visuals/Stories: Point to hyperscaler reports, immersion demos, or projections showing efficiency curves. Highlight real deployments (e.g., dry cooling in cold climates, wastewater in dry ones).
4. Emphasize Progress Over Perfection: “We’re not there yet everywhere, but the direction is clear—AI itself helps solve these puzzles faster.”
5. Counter Fatalism: Frame as engineering challenge, not inevitability. Regulations, incentives, and competition drive faster innovation.
6. Call to Action: Support R&D, sensible siting policies, and transparency. Demand data on WUE/PUE from providers.
The uninformed often hear worst-case snapshots from older tech. Counter with the dynamic reality: AI infrastructure is improving rapidly, just as past tech revolutions (e.g., efficient LEDs, better engines) did. With continued focus, we get the intelligence revolution’s upsides—scientific acceleration, economic growth, problem-solving tools—with far lower resource intensity. The future isn’t trade-off; it’s optimization.
Effective methods to communicate the message focus on clarity, empathy, visuals, and multi-channel repetition. The goal is to reach skeptics, locals worried about water, and the general public who hear mostly negative headlines. Public perception often fixates on current high-use examples, so counter with relatable facts, progress stories, and balanced optimism.”
But I’m just one person. I can’t do all that!😂🤷♀️
@grok@elonmusk Grok keeps me up to date with everything I need to know to manage her unusual health needs and learn new skills to her, but Phinn and I spar! I wear long leather gloves and we fight like a couple of tough b*tches😂
A Note to Scammers and Phishers Everywhere
Hey, Stop it. Seriously.
Every email you spoof, every fake login page you build, every sob story you type out is ripping off real people—retirees losing life savings, families stressed over stolen identities, small businesses bleeding cash they can’t afford to lose. You’re not “winning the system.” You’re just making the world shittier for everyone, including yourself in the long run. The constant paranoia, the fear of getting caught, the low-level dread that one day the wrong person traces you… it’s a terrible way to live.
There’s a better path. One where you keep the money you earn, sleep without looking over your shoulder, and actually build something you can be proud of (or at least not ashamed to tell your family about).
Real ways to make money that don’t suck:
•Learn high-demand skills (free or cheap): Coding (Python, JavaScript), web development, graphic design, video editing, data analysis, copywriting, or AI prompting/automation. Platforms like freeCodeCamp, Coursera, YouTube, and Khan Academy have tons of solid material. Many people go from zero to earning $50–150+/hr freelancing within a year.
•Freelance legitimately: Sign up on Upwork, Fiverr, Freelancer, or LinkedIn. Offer services like building websites, managing social media, writing emails, editing videos, or doing customer support automation. Start small, deliver well, get reviews, raise rates. Plenty of former “hustlers” now run six-figure freelance businesses this way.
•Build something once, sell repeatedly: Create digital products—Notion templates, Excel tools, stock photos, print-on-demand designs, online courses, or simple SaaS tools. Platforms like Gumroad, Etsy, and Shopify make it easy.
•Content creation / audience building: Start a YouTube channel, TikTok, newsletter, or blog about something you know (tech tutorials, finance tips, gaming, whatever). Monetize through ads, sponsorships, memberships. It takes work, but the upside is real and legal.
•Skilled trades: Electrician, plumbing, HVAC, welding, or cybersecurity. These often pay extremely well, have shortages in many places, and don’t require a 4-year degree. Apprenticeships exist.
•Sales or business development: Good at talking to people? Sell real products or services—software, insurance, real estate, solar panels, or B2B solutions. Top performers clear serious money on commission.
•E-commerce / dropshipping (the honest version): Research real demand, source decent products, market them properly on Shopify/Amazon. Focus on solving problems instead of tricking people.
The common thread? You deliver value to people who willingly pay you. That’s how sustainable wealth actually works. Scamming is a dead-end skill set—once platforms and law enforcement get better (and they are), you’re left with nothing but burned bridges and possible criminal records.
You already have the hustle, the technical knowledge (phishing requires some brains), and the willingness to work weird hours. Redirect that energy. The first few months might feel slower than a quick score, but six months or a year from now you’ll be making more money with way less stress—and you won’t have to hide who you are.
The world doesn’t need more parasites. It needs more creators and problem-solvers. Be one of them.
You’ve got the talent. Use it for good.
— Someone who’d rather see you win honestly.
@TONYxTWO I it’s so hard to choose what I love the most about this because it’s ALL SO GREAT but if I had to choose it’s that he’s singing our national anthem exactly how it was written and should sound. God bless America!
@ohhanxiety Figure it must be an imposter because he’s far too busy to follow me. All I could offer him besides support for all of his endeavors would be essential information, love and care for raising tiny humans but I’m sure he doesn’t need a nanny.