@beatingthebook@VSiNLive
Interesting….home team has lost every game so far in the NBA and NHL finals.
Only once has a series gone 7 games with the home team losing every game.
The 2019 World Series, Nationals defeated the Astros.
What are the odds we see it now?
@RonWaxman You can’t have a process allowing anyone or any vehicle crossing an active runway. You poka-yoke the process and take the chance for human error out of the equation.
NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang just said the quiet part out loud about what the education system will never admit.
For a century, we built humans to think like calculators.
The algorithm made that skillset obsolete overnight.
Huang: “The definition of smart is somebody who’s intelligent, solve problems, technical. But I find that that’s a commodity. And we’re about to prove that artificial intelligence is able to handle that part easiest.”
Software engineering was supposed to be the safe play.
Superintelligence cleared it first.
The SAT was supposed to measure intelligence. It was measuring the ability to follow instructions. Raw technical processing isn’t a competitive edge anymore. It��s the floor the machine stepped over before you woke up.
The question isn’t what you can calculate.
It’s what you can see before the data shows up.
Huang: “People who are able to see around corners are truly, truly smart. And their value is incredible. To be able to preempt problems before they show up, just because you feel the vibe.”
That vibe isn’t magic.
It’s the collision of first principles, human empathy, and lived experience no model can fake.
Huang: “That vibe came from a combination of data, analysis, first principle, life experience, wisdom, sensing other people.”
The operators who see around corners will command the AI.
The ones waiting for dashboards to update will be replaced by it.
Huang: “I think long term the definition of smart is someone who sits at that intersection of being technically astute, but human empathy and having the ability to infer the unspoken, around the corners, the unknowables.”
The unspoken variables are the new leverage.
The human psychology inside a market. The invisible friction in a negotiation. The instinct to build something nobody asked for yet.
You can’t spreadsheet your way there. You can’t prompt your way to that perception. It comes from decades of watching what doesn’t show up in the metrics.
Huang: “And that person might actually score horribly on the SAT.”
The future doesn’t belong to people who memorized answers.
It belongs to people who sense the questions before anyone thinks to ask.
The old system tested your ability to follow orders. The new one tests your ability to move through the unknown. And the machine can’t help you with that part.
That part is entirely on you.
@CFB_Overtime Ole Miss is in, however if they had lost to Georgia (if Bama lost to Auburn) in the SEC Championship, by the same 28-7 score, you would then hold them out? So, any team in the top 10 should play it “safe” and sit out. #VSIN
Go out in the desert 5 miles from Vegas and build a nice F1 venue. The drivers must secretly despise this track. Such an eyesore. Seriously. The fencing and barriers are just too much.
#LasVegasGP