Autonomous companies will become a reality before the end of 2026.
I want autonomous companies to be accessible for anyone with a computer, a dream, and Pancake.
Not just the top 0.1%.
Introducing Pancake: the OpenClaw cofounder that makes your company autonomous.
Autonomous companies will become a reality before the end of 2026.
I want autonomous companies to be accessible for anyone with a computer, a dream, and Pancake.
Not just the top 0.1%.
Introducing Pancake: the OpenClaw cofounder that makes your company autonomous.
A copper shortage is coming next:
The world economy is projected to face a copper deficit of 10 million tonnes by 2040, equivalent to ~33% of current global demand.
This comes as global copper demand is estimated to surge to 42 million tonnes by 2040, from 28 million tonnes in 2025.
Asia alone is expected to reflect 60% of total demand growth over this time, driven by EV adoption and grid upgrades.
At the same time, AI data center copper demand is set to surge +127% to 2.5 million tonnes by 2040.
Meanwhile, supply is expected to peak at ~34 million tonnes in 2030 before declining to ~32 million tonnes by 2040.
Copper is the next global strategic commodity.
So true: "I think Wealthfront was too pure and honest with what was good for people. And robinhood built what they wanted instead."
Somehow, I have the impression that it could be applied to other big cos. Great way of framing it π
@rexsalisbury Sadly, I think Wealthfront was too pure and honest with what was good for people. And robinhood built what they wanted instead.
Iβm a big user of both. Wealthfront execution great over last few years, but robinhood just excellent.
@rexsalisbury Sadly, I think Wealthfront was too pure and honest with what was good for people. And robinhood built what they wanted instead.
Iβm a big user of both. Wealthfront execution great over last few years, but robinhood just excellent.
@cie_papegai@OuranosMK Exactement
et historiquement bcp de technos "revolutionnaires" ont connu des bulles (internet 2000, chemins de fers au 19eme siecle etc...). Donc assez normal au final.
Why did coal, having been used in Britain for centuries, very suddenly take off in London in 1580-1600?
I dove deep into the archives, unearthing a story *never* told before. It was thanks to German inventors, and through brewing, that coal really won.
https://t.co/Jk12gWeCSL