@ComteDeStechkin Tout français qui aime son pays est juste flatté de l'intérêt que vous portez à notre culture, notre identité et notre histoire.
Je salue votre dévouement à votre passion.
N'écoutez pas une minorité bruyante de personnes haineuses.
Vous êtes le bienvenu, même en uniforme.
@LaHaineMaSouri@clement_molin Il n'a aucunement insulté leurs mémoires.
Pour en arriver à cette réponse, vous lui prêtez un discours qu'il n'a pas tenu.
Relisez le post.
Medallion's humming... that can only mean one thing! It's time to announce The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt - Songs of the Past! ⚔️
This brand new expansion for The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt will take you to the Path with Geralt of Rivia once more. It’s being co-developed with @Fools_Theory and is coming to PC, Xbox Series X|S, and PlayStation 5 in 2027. Stay tuned for more information in late summer. ⏰
@libremax_off Je préfère ça personnellement qu'une chaîne de mal bouffe par exemple.
Je suis pas raccord avec bcp (bcp bcp) de choix de l'état.
Mais pour l'instant on est clairement pas une nation belliqueuse, donc je vois mal la promotion de la guerre.
Elon Musk just measured your existence by how many times your atoms have been inside a dying star.
Musk: “How many times have your atoms been at the center of a star? I think it’s like on average three or four times.”
Every atom in your body has already survived the core of a star.
Multiple times.
Crushed under pressures that would flatten planets.
Superheated to millions of degrees.
Blown apart in explosions so violent they forged new elements.
Then gravity pulled those scattered pieces back together.
New stars formed.
And the cycle repeated.
For 13.8 billion years, your atoms have been fuel for the most violent process in the universe.
And they are not done.
Musk: “In terms of existence as measured by the number of times your atoms will be at the center of a star, we seem to be roughly halfway.”
Halfway.
Your atoms have been through the furnace three or four times.
They will go through three or four more.
But right now, in this impossibly thin sliver between cycles, those atoms are doing something they have never done before.
They are conscious.
For billions of years before you, they burned through stellar cores with no awareness.
No memory.
No sense of what they were or where they had been.
After you, they will return to that state.
Unconscious matter drifting through space until the next star claims them.
This is the only moment in their entire journey where they can look back at the stars that made them and understand.
Musk: “If you want to look at the big picture… that’s the really big picture.”
The big picture is not that we are small.
Everyone already knows that.
The big picture is that we are temporary witnesses to a process that does not need witnesses.
Stars do not need observers to burn.
Atoms do not need anyone to understand where they have been.
The universe ran for billions of years with no one in it.
It will run for billions more after the last conscious thing disappears.
But right now, matter is examining itself.
That has never happened before in 13.8 billion years.
You are not a person who happens to contain ancient atoms.
You are ancient atoms that briefly figured out how to think.
The universe did not design consciousness.
It designed stars.
Consciousness was the accident.
And the accident is half over.
@Dark_Emi_ Tout dépend l'âge et le rapport à l'alcool.
Moi j'apprécie en recevoir pour en profiter avec mes amis.
Mais j'en bois jamais au quotidien, seul ect...
Dans ce cas je vois pas trop le souci.
Vous avez probablement déjà vu cette vidéo absolument incroyable.
Mais ce que vous ne savez peut-être pas, c’est qu’elle est l’œuvre d’une start-up française.
Enfin presque.
Car l’entreprise est désormais installée dans la Silicon Valley.
Pourquoi ?
Parce qu’elle avait besoin de capitaux : elle a levé 105 millions de dollars. Et les États-Unis sont quasiment le seul endroit où il est possible d’accéder à autant de capital-risque.
Yann LeCun vient de le rappeler :
l’IA moderne n’est pas née dans la Silicon Valley, mais à Paris et à Londres.
Sauf que l’innovation seule ne suffit pas.
Il faut du capital pour se développer, puis un accès au commerce mondial pour trouver des débouchés.
Toutes les voix qui, en Europe, s’élèvent pour contraindre davantage le capital affaiblissent encore un peu plus notre capacité à faire émerger de futurs géants.
Et avec elle, la prospérité de demain.