"Your Masterwork360 is the imprint of your lifetimeโyour identity, reputation, relevance, and remembrance. Live so that every moment aligns with your core enhavim, lifting the world a little higher."
The Future of Trust in the Masterwork Years: Why human credibility becomes the most durable competitive advantage in a synthetic environment.
https://t.co/IIGtgEA82G
The book acknowledgements are as important as the book.
๐ง๐ต๐ฒ ๐ ๐ฎ๐๐๐ฒ๐ฟ๐๐ผ๐ฟ๐ธ ๐ฌ๐ฒ๐ฎ๐ฟ๐
Coming soon!
https://t.co/w34yk09wZ8
Cicely Saunders was a hero. Her Masterwork gave terminal patients a place to die with dignity. She was the creator of what we know as modern hospice care that became her legacy. Her memory is for a blessing.
https://t.co/53dZY7DwjN
Cicely Saunders fell in love with a dying man.
London, 1948. David Tasma, a 40-year-old Polish Jew who escaped the Warsaw Ghetto, was dying of cancer in agonizing pain. Cicely, a 30-year-old medical social worker, sat with him for weeks. He told her there was no proper place for people like him to die with dignity.
Before he died, he gave her his life savings โ ยฃ500 โ and said:
โIโll be a window in your home.โ
She built that home.
Born June 22, 1918, in north London, Cicely trained as a nurse during WWII and witnessed hospitals abandon the dying โ isolating them, leaving them in pain, treating death as failure.
After a back injury, she became a medical social worker, then, at 33, entered medical school on a doctorโs challenge. She qualified as a doctor in 1957.
At St Josephโs Hospice, she pioneered regular morphine dosing to control pain without addiction or drowsiness, and developed the concept of โtotal painโ โ addressing physical, emotional, social, and spiritual suffering.
In 1967, she opened St Christopherโs Hospice in Sydenham โ the first modern hospice combining expert care, teaching, and research. David Tasmaโs ยฃ500 seeded it; a plain window honors him.
She pioneered home care, outpatient services, and bereavement support. Her words:
โYou matter because you are you, and you matter to the end of your life.โ
Her model spread globally, birthing the modern hospice and palliative care movement.
Cicely married Polish painter Marian Bohusz-Szyszko in 1980. She worked at St Christopherโs into her late 80s and died there of breast cancer on July 14, 2005, at 87 โ cared for by the principles she created.
Before Cicely, the dying were forgotten.
She turned love and grief into a revolution of dignity that has comforted millions.
Every hospice on Earth owes its light to her window for David Tasma.
AI actors are getting scary good..
spent 2 day making this short film.. if you still think actors are safe, ihave nothing to say.. this is so over
check my prompts and workflow on buzzy now:
"Sherrie Rose @SherrieRose is a business and masterwork development author and speaker with valuable IP assets in her authored books, unique coaching methodologies, and brand identity."
via instantip app
๐ง๐ต๐ฒ ๐๐ฒ๐ฐ๐ผ๐ป๐ฑ ๐ต๐ฎ๐น๐ณ ๐ผ๐ณ ๐ฎ๐ฌ๐ฎ๐ฒ ๐ถ๐ ๐๐๐ถ๐น๐น ๐๐ป๐๐ฟ๐ถ๐๐๐ฒ๐ป.
The greatest investment is your long game.
Every week brings a new model, a new tool, a new breakthrough taking your attention.
Almost nobody is asking about your decades of wisdom.
Who will benefit from the value you have to offer?
Are you capturing yours to share?
AI isn't going to replace any of it.
โIt was one of the most monumentally unselfish things one group of people did for another.โ
-#DDay veteran Andy Rooney on the young ๐บ๐ธ ๐จ๐ฆ ๐ฌ๐ง soldiers who stormed the beaches of Normandy 82 years ago.
Required watching for every young person today!
Before Neil Armstrong could take his historic first steps on the Moon, NASA first had to master the techniques that would let an astronaut safely exit a spacecraft in space.
On June 3, 1965, Gemini IV pilot Ed White made that first step with the first American spacewalk.
Children of the past spoke and carried themselves better than modern adults. Before the new age of slang and hypermodernity, youngsters were raised with a good vocabulary, a moral compass, and high societal standards. (1967) โณ๏ธ
The Golden Gate Bridge opened to the public for the first time on this day in 1937. About 200,000 people paid 25ยข to walk the bridge, equal to about $5.75 in today's dollars. The next day it opened to cars. This footage is from the Prelinger Archives, acquired by the Library in 2002.
Parents gave their kids just 4 minutes to figure out how to use a rotary dial phone.
The confusion was instant.
Gen Z vs old school tech is pretty hilarious
Roger Penrose, Nobel Prize-winning physicist and mathematician, explains why we should stop calling it AI and start calling it "artificial cleverness":
He believes the entire field is mislabelled, and the label itself is doing damage.
His objection is simple but cuts deep:
"The name is wrong. It's not artificial intelligence. It's not intelligence. Intelligence would involve consciousness. Well, if it's a machine, it's not conscious."
For Penrose, people have confused raw computing power with genuine understanding.
"People have lost the plot. They've lost it in the power of computing. The thing is that computers have got so powerful that they've lost the thread of what they're doing. But I think consciousness is something different. It's not computational."
He believes the term itself has hypnotized people into a category error:
"People are so hypnotized. The trouble is that AI is a bad term. It means artificial intelligence. Now intelligence in my view is conscious. That's what intelligence is about."
So he proposes a rename. Artificial Cleverness. AC instead of AI.
To illustrate the distinction, Penrose draws on his experience teaching mathematics:
"You have mathematics students. Some of them understand what they're doing. Some are just clever. They can repeat what they've learned. They know how to do it very cleverly. They can calculate very well, but they don't necessarily understand what they're doing."
That gap, between calculating well and actually understanding, is the gap Penrose sees between today's machines and genuine intelligence.
Cleverness can be manufactured. Consciousness, in his view, cannot.
So the question worth sitting with: when we call a system "intelligent," are we describing what it does, or quietly assuming something about what it is?