Any post that says ‘hey chime in with some advice’ on a clearly controversial topic. Dont take the bait. Thats clearly a government/alphabet backed account (whether the person knows it or not) and posts like that collect info about YOU and you will get judged and scored
Jane Street pays $750k/ year for quants who can answer how to use Stochastic Process and Markov Chains in quant trading.
This 1-hour MIT lecture on probability gives you the same insights quants get paid $60K/month for.
Bookmark & watch today. Then read the article below.
Anthropic pays engineers $750,000+ a year to understand how LLMs work.
Stanford just put a 2 hour lecture that covers 80% of it for FREE.
Bookmark this. Give it 2 hours today.
It might be the highest ROI thing you do this month:
Instead of watching an hour of Netflix, watch this 2 hour hour Stanford lecture will teach you more about how LLMs like ChatGPT and Claude are built than most people working at top AI companies learn in their entire careers.
Robert Friedland:
"In order to maintain our economic growth at 3%, we have to mine as much copper in the next 18 years as we have mined in the past 10,000 years."
If we want to do electrification, data centers, solar panels and all of the other new stuff, we need even more copper.
"you people have no idea what we are facing"
By 2027 the federal government will require every new car sold in this country to watch your face while you drive it.
Cameras in the steering column. Infrared sensors tracking your eyes, your pupils, your head. An algorithm running inside a machine you bought, in a seat you paid for, deciding whether you are permitted to turn the key.
The pitch is drunk drivers. The pitch is always something. In 1660 it was sedition. In 1998 it was piracy. The pitch is the thing they show the public so the public will not look at the thing being installed.
What is being installed is a federal checkpoint inside private property. A permission gate welded into a machine the citizen owns outright, that scans him every time he sits down in it, that reports to a manufacturer, that the manufacturer reports to whoever the manufacturer chooses, on whatever schedule the manufacturer chooses, with no privacy floor written anywhere into the law that put the cameras there.
The state has run out of public space to surveil and has begun surveilling the inside of the cab.
A car is one of the last objects most people operate by themselves, on their own time, by their own decision, on roads the state does not yet sit inside. That ends in eighteen months. The dashboard becomes the deputy. The driver becomes the suspect. Every ignition becomes a request submitted to an algorithm trained by people he will never meet, refused on grounds he will never see, with an appeal process the manufacturer has not bothered to design.
This is what they mean when they say AI is dangerous and must be controlled. They mean AI in your hands. The AI in their hands gets a federal mandate and a budget line. The AI in their hands gets installed in your car whether you consent or not. The AI in their hands decides whether you are sober enough, awake enough, compliant enough, legible enough to the camera to be allowed out of your own driveway.
The same political class that spent five years warning you about the machine has spent those same five years writing the law that puts the machine inside the only room left where nobody was watching you.
A tool you bought, with money you earned, in a country that calls itself free, will refuse to obey you in 2027. It will obey them.
Decide now what you are going to do about that. The cameras are already in production.
Elon Musk just told a story that should terrify every AI company on Earth.
His son Saxon is autistic.
Saxon couldn’t understand why the family went to restaurants.
You can get the same food delivered.
You can call your friends over.
You can eat better at home for half the price.
So why go?
Musk: “He had an epiphany and said, ‘Oh, the reason people go to restaurants is to hang out with strangers.’”
A kid who takes the world literally just decoded something the rest of us never thought to question.
We like being around people we’ll never know.
Look at what we already built.
Delivery apps so you never wait in line.
Remote work so you never share an office.
Self-checkout so you never talk to a cashier.
Every innovation of the last 20 years was a bet against human proximity.
Every one paid off.
Until it didn’t.
Loneliness is now a public health emergency.
Depression has doubled since the smartphone.
The average American has fewer close friends than any generation in history.
We didn’t remove friction.
We removed the thing friction was hiding.
Now look at what’s coming.
AI agents that handle your emails.
AI companions that replace your conversations.
AI assistants that make every human interaction optional.
Same playbook. Same bet.
Except this time we’re not engineering out strangers.
We’re engineering out humans entirely.
The coffee shop where nobody knows your name.
The subway where no one speaks.
The restaurant where you’ll never see that couple again.
Those aren’t failed connections.
They’re the background radiation of belonging.
We don’t just need people who know us.
We need to exist in rooms full of people who don’t.
That’s what a kid understood at a dinner table that billion-dollar companies still can’t grasp in a boardroom.
We spent 20 years building a world you never have to show up to.
AI is about to finish the job.
And nothing it builds will ever replicate sitting in a room full of strangers and not feeling alone.
The massive Utah data center, called the Stratos Project, will be as big as 2,000 Walmarts, will need 9GW of electricity to run, and will generate the heat equivalent of 23 atom bombs detonating every single day in Hansel Valley. The expected impact of wildlife is catastrophic.
https://t.co/pZjrpcTaIe
Robert Sapolsky is a Stanford neuroscientist who proved chronic stress is the silent killer doctors ignore.
On Chris Williamson's podcast, he revealed 10 "normal" habits you do every day that wreck your sleep, mood, and nervous system:
1) Replay conversations in your head
🚨🚜 AI Is Now Farming… Lasers Are Killing 600,000 Weeds Per Hour🚨
Post
This is not sci-fi.
This is modern agriculture.
What you are looking at is the Carbon Robotics LaserWeeder, one of the most advanced AI farming machines operating in the world today.
It is mounted behind a standard @JohnDeere tractor and runs entirely off the tractor’s diesel engine through the PTO shaft.
Here is what is actually happening.
The machine uses high-resolution cameras and NVIDIA-powered AI processors to scan the field in real time.
The system analyzes every plant it sees.
Crop or weed.
In milliseconds the AI identifies the difference with sub-millimeter accuracy.
Once the weed is identified…
A laser fires.
The laser instantly destroys the weed at the cellular level without disturbing the soil or harming nearby crops.
No herbicides.
No chemicals.
No tilling.
Just pure precision.
And the scale is staggering.
Up to 10,000 weeds per minute
That is roughly 600,000 weeds per hour while the tractor simply drives across the field.
The NVIDIA GPUs are the “brain.”
They run the AI computer vision model that identifies plants in real time.
The tractor’s engine powers a generator on the implement which supplies electricity to the lasers, cameras, cooling systems, and computing hardware.
This is why farmers are excited.
Less chemical spraying.
Lower environmental impact.
Higher precision farming.
And dramatically reduced labor.
AI is not just changing software or social media.
It is transforming the physical world.
Even the weeds don’t stand a chance anymore.
#SilentMajoritySpeaks
#AStoneGroove
GOOD NEWS 🚨 TESLA SECURES A MASSIVE TEXAS FACILITY FOR A NEW MEGAFACTORY 🎉
Stream Realty Partners just announced the sale of Buildings 9 and 10 at the Empire West industrial park in Brookshire, Texas. These two massive structures span over 1.6 million square feet. They are currently completely leased to Tesla under a long-term agreement. BGO acquired the properties on behalf of an institutional investor, which marks a significant milestone for this rapidly growing commercial area.
Tesla has big plans for the space: they are transforming it into a brand-new Megafactory dedicated entirely to manufacturing their Megapacks. To make this happen, the company is investing nearly $200 million into the site to bring in heavy machinery, assembly stations, and state-of-the-art automated robotic welding cells.
To keep operations running as smoothly as possible, Tesla is using the dual-building setup to efficiently separate its intensive manufacturing processes from its distribution needs:
🏭 Building 9 (1 Million Sq. Ft.): This massive facility will serve as the main manufacturing floor where the batteries are actively assembled.
🏘️ Building 10 (600,000 Sq. Ft.): Located right next door, this space is dedicated strictly to warehousing and logistics. It gives Tesla plenty of room to safely store the completed batteries before shipping them out to renewable energy projects across the country.