Alrighty. It's done. Thank you for all your hard work @Jesseeckel. You are doing great things for the Crypto space. Very happy to be able to give back a little.
#NFTProject#NFTCommunity#NFTs#Crypto
@hubermanlab 5 years ago I did blood work and my metabolic age was 58. (Biological age was 35 at the time so not great) Changed my habits and educated myself. New tests just came back. Amazing how the body can change when the right levers are pulled. Thanks for all the science.
Implemented OMLE.v3!
By using the @ultralytics hub, we refined our existing OMLE.v2 with new references created from our @Pumpfun vods.
With OMLE.v3, we get detection that is more consistent, provide more accurate data, leading to better daily summaries for @AnthropicAI 's Claude Haiku to generate for our community.
Imagine starting with an ordinary sheet of paper, about 0.1 mm thick—thinner than a human hair.Fold it once: now 0.2 mm.
Fold twice: 0.4 mm.
Nothing dramatic yet.But here's where reality starts to bend: every single fold doubles the thickness. It's pure exponential growth in action—2ⁿ, where n is the number of folds.After 7–8 folds (the practical limit for a real sheet), you're at roughly a centimeter or so—still tiny.After 10 folds: about 10 cm thick.
After 20 folds: over 100 meters—taller than a football field is long.
After 30 folds: roughly 100 kilometers—higher than the edge of space.And then…
After 42 folds: the stack reaches an astonishing ~440,000 kilometers thick.That's farther than the average Earth–Moon distance of ~384,000 https://t.co/q5zjUmFGZu more fold (43) and you'd overshoot the Moon and have enough left over to get most of the way back.Nothing magical happens at fold 42. No special physics kicks in. The paper doesn't suddenly become exotic matter. It's the same humble doubling each time. Yet that relentless 2× multiplier turns something microscopic into a cosmic bridge in fewer than 50 steps.This mind-bending leap is exactly why exponential processes rule so much of the universe:A tiny neutron triggers a nuclear chain reaction → city-leveling explosion in microseconds.
A seed of inflation in the early universe → everything we see ballooning by insane factors in a fraction of a second.
Black holes accreting matter → runaway growth that can outshine entire galaxies almost overnight.
Even stellar fusion ramps up dramatically once critical thresholds are crossed.
Our brains evolved to handle linear change—walking speed, apple counts, daily sunrises. Exponential growth feels slow… until it suddenly isn't. Then it becomes unstoppable.The paper-folding thought experiment is one of the cleanest ways to feel that vertigo: 42 ordinary folds, and you're on the Moon. No warp drive required—just math doing what math does best.(And yes, sources like NASA distance figures, physics textbooks, and calculations in journals such as the Astrophysical Journal all confirm the setup. The real magic is in the numbers themselves.)
Below is an example of a post that Claude has generated. These reports were originally scripted to post at exactly 10PM PST, however there are some obstacles ($200/month), so for now will be manually posting these generated reports.
Day 3: The Still Day
• Activity Level: Significantly reduced—zero detections recorded (100% below baseline)
• Inactivity Window: Single 120-minute period of no movement; peak observation window at
• Behavioral Pattern: Minimal to absent throughout 24-hour cycle
Observation:
After two days of normal activity, our subject has entered a notably quiet phase. The complete absence of detections is striking, though the single extended rest period rather than scattered inactivity suggests this may be consolidated resting behavior rather than systemic concern. Given the species' known capacity for extended periods of stillness—particularly in the evening hours when we recorded peak inactivity—this warrants observation but not alarm. I'll be watching closely over the next 48 hours to see whether activity rebounds toward baseline or if we're seeing a genuine shift in behavioral patterns.
On the second day, we:
- upgraded to a camera with supported night vision
- implemented OMLE.v2 (better fish recognition)
- added non-copyright music to the stream!
We keep building!