@Sweeegu@realaka_truth That’s a dumb discussion too. Jay has the most impactful catalog. Drake has more songs then anybody which in turn means he has more hits I will give him that but when we talking impact Jay inspired way more young rappers than drake has. Hence the looked up to bar Jay said!
@Thechat101 Man fuck what Joe talk about you niggas not about to play with me and my family name and I’m gonna remind y’all non of you niggas on my level! Shout out hov!
Andre Drummond says the Steph/KD Warriors caused Centers to ‘Fizzle out’
“I hated playing them… They changed the NBA and made it very hard for centers to stay around... a lot of people fizzled out not being able to shoot the 3 ball.”
h/t @NBA__Courtside
OK, now it gets really interesting because these UFOs appear to move like a saucer skipping across water, or like when you throw a smooth stone and it skips along the surface. Why is this important? Because one of the earliest pilot reports of a UFO came from Kenneth Arnold, and he described them moving in exactly this way.
When Kenneth Arnold described the objects he saw on June 24, 1947, he said they moved:
"like a saucer if you skip it across water."
Just look at how the four UAPs are moving at the start, almost as if they are swimming underwater. This video lasts eight minutes. You can find it on page 12; it's the first one.
Many of you are on the internet all day concerned about the wrong things.
Agentic Ai is shaping a world that will be unrecognizable in a few years. If you’re one of those people who are “waiting” for the right time to get involved, there won’t be one. If you’re waiting for the housing market to “collapse” to act, don’t. If you’re procrastinating on learning stocks / investments, you’re already behind. If you don’t know where to start I’ve compiled some things to look into. Hope this provides some resolve ✊🏾
Tech :
FYI
Google Gemini
NoteBookLM
Claude
MKBHD
Brandon Butch
Finance / Investment:
Earn Your Leisure
Codie Sanchez
Robin Hood
Schwab
Books:
The Automatic Millionaire
Cash Flow Quadrant
Financial Literacy For All
The 10x Rule
Here’s the longer version of Eric Schmidt’s commencement speech from Arizona State & an AI transcript.
Every mention of AI, instantly booed.
───
Every profession, every classroom, every hospital, every laboratory, every person, and every relationship you have. I know what many of you are feeling about that. I can hear you. There is a fear.
There is a fear in your generation. And that the future has already been written, that the machines are coming, that the jobs are evaporating, that the climate is breaking, that politics is fractured, and that you are inheriting a mess that you did not create.
And I understand that fear. It's rational. And it's amplified every day by social media platforms, with algorithms that have learned with great precision, that fear earns clicks, and that anxiety drives engagement.
But I want to say something to you this evening as clearly as I can. To speak of the future, as though it has already been decided, is to surrender the one thing that actually matters. You are surrendering your agency. The future does not simply arrive. It gets built in laboratories, in dormitories, in startups, in classrooms, in legislators, and the people building it will be you and people like you.
The question is not whether AI will shape the world — it will. The question is whether you will help shape artificial intelligence.
We do not know the precise contours of what this transformation will look like. But what we do know is it will require each of us to adapt in ways that we cannot yet anticipate.
My hope is that you will choose to engage, that you choose to be in the room where these decisions take place, and to have a voice in how they're made. When you are in that room, bring something with you — bring the values that make us human in the first place. The technology on its own is just a tool. It will optimize for what we tell it to optimize for. But somebody has to decide, and in your lifetime, that somebody is going to be you.
So choose freedom. Choose open debates, and the slow, often messy, but beautiful project of learning to live alongside people with whom you disagree. Choose equality. Choose a diversity of perspectives, including the perspective of the immigrant, who has so often been the person who came to this country and made it better.
America is at its best when we are the country that ambitious people want to come to. Let us not lose that. But above all, choose respect for one another, and for the basic unfashionable idea that the person on the other side of the argument is still a person.
If we build artificial intelligence to reflect those values, the world will be unimaginably better for it.
So let me tell you how hopeful I am about that, because on balance, I am deeply optimistic, and I believe that you should be as well.
So consider science. So much of human progress is the story of science and medicine, and artificial intelligence is already accelerating research at a rate that we could not have imagined even five years ago. We have only seen maybe one percent of what is to come. AI is now designing new molecules, running simulations, identifying patterns in genomic data that no team of humans could uncover in a lifetime.
AI has solved the 50-year-old protein folding problem in a matter of months. The next generation of antibiotics will come from this work. The next generation of cancer treatments will come from this work. The materials that will allow us to scale clean energy will come from this work.
Or look at astronomy, a field in which this university excels. The team at the Steward Observatory are building a telescope more powerful than Hubble. That work, which is changing the understanding of the universe, is happening right here in Tucson right now.
Hating AI is a low-IQ move.
It's like hating electricity.
You can dislike what AI changes.
You can hate who benefits from it.
You can even be scared of it.
But pretending it isn't the future?
That's a failure to understand reality.
And this is why you pay $30,000 a year for a Bloomberg terminal.
Founder of the Bloomberg Terminal explaining here the functions.
The most elite information and analytical tools are still nowhere near the hands of the everyday public.