Honest to god what do I care how the text for an academic paper comes about. It could be a monkey throwing darts at a board, if the resulting combination of letters conveys original insight, it should be published
NEW VIDEO - Shoutout to the Spurs and NBC for letting me go behind the scenes of all the tech behind an NBA broadcast! Watch this before you watch the game tonight 👀
https://t.co/h9VCAnNGVR
Was recently speaking with a mentor of mine who works as a finance college professor
Said if you just take a walk through any campus library right now, every single student is asking ChatGPT or Claude to do their homework
Imagine it is just as bad for younger students. We are teaching the next
generation to outsource their entire cognitive thinking to AI, instead of empowering them to learn using it
Glad someone is actually trying to address this problem
I didn't cover Claude Opus 4.8 on my pod because I don't think it's MEANINGFULLY better than GPT 5.5 as of May 29th.
We're entering the era where model releases start to feel like iPhone releases. Remember when every new iPhone was a genuine leap? Now it's a slightly better camera and you can't really tell the difference. That's where models are heading. 4.6 to 4.7 to 4.8. Each one is a little different. Nobody can agree if it's better or worse. The benchmarks say one thing, the vibes say another.
The thing that actually matters right now is what's happening around the models. Claude Code shipped dynamic workflows this same week and that genuinely changes what one person can build.
Codex shipped a desktop app with an in app browser that combines coding and knowledge work in one surface. Those are the releases that move the needle for people. The model underneath is becoming interchangeable.
I think we're maybe 6 months from nobody caring which model they're using the way nobody cares which engine is in their Uber. You just want to get where you're going.
When something genuinely changes the game for builders, I'll cover it on @startupideaspod. Opus 4.8 wasn't that. Dynamic workflows was.
I'd rather save you the hour.
At 940 pages, Warren Buffett’s collected shareholder letters sound like homework. Instead, they’re a surprisingly rich read: funny, instructive and full of lessons that go beyond investing. https://t.co/FLwsYrf4z8