@NikoJilch Danke für deinen spannenden Videos! Die Folge mit Holger Wolff über das Power Law war ein wahres Highlight. Habe mich gefreut dich in Prag persönlich zu treffen! Liebe Grüße Michael
"There will be no humans elsewhere. Only here. Only on this small planet. We are a rare as well as an endangered species. Every one of us, in the cosmic perspective, precious. If a human disagrees with you, let him live. In a hundred billion galaxies, you will not find another."
@kofi2go Tesla hat global über 120000 Mitarbeiter und Elon Musk gehören 13%. Ich finde das Tesla Bashing einfach nur lächerlich und einen Intelligenztest
Everyone thinks Europe is finished. In 20 years, they'll wish they had bought in early.
AGI takes over. Productivity is infinite. Everything is automated.
So, tell me: what actually becomes scarce?
NOT another piece of software — but authentic human experience.
When machines handle everything, what do people crave? Beauty. Meaning. Significance.
And Europe has been accumulating that for centuries.
It's sitting on the most undervalued asset of the AI age:
- 500+ UNESCO World Heritage sites (the US? 25)
- The world's greatest museums
- 50M+ cultural tourists in France alone
- Centuries-old universities, libraries, cafés
- The birthplace of opera, ballet, fine wine
The real arbitrage? Owning land in places machines can't replicate.
In the AI age, people will split into two groups:
- New "landlords" stacking assets
- New "renters" living off AI welfare (UBI, digital credits, whatever comes next)
So where will the new “landlords” want to live?
Not in a sterile AI-optimized city. Not in a hyper-efficient pod.
They'll want Paris, Rome, Vienna. Cities that weren't built for algorithms, but for the soul.
Europe today is like Bitcoin at $10—misunderstood, underpriced, and wildly asymmetric.
I talk to global investors every day. The smartest ones see it:
In an AI-dominated world, the ultimate luxury won't be another software tool. It'll be the ability to feel human.
Europe has that.
What's your take on this?
Remembering 35 Years Of Pale Blue Dot;
35 years ago today, Voyager 1 captured the iconic Pale Blue Dot image
At the suggestion of Carl Sagan, Voyager 1 captured the iconic Pale Blue Dot image on February 14, 1990
(🎥Carl Sagan Releasing Picture of Pale Blue Dot for first time)
Christoph hat das Schicksal ziemlich mitgespielt und die Versicherung windet sich raus.
Bitte unterstütze diese Spendenaktion, indem du eine Spende leistest oder den Link zur Spendenaktion teilst — jede Unterstützung bringt die Spendenaktion ihrem Ziel näher. https://t.co/5hZkBXa0rn
Hey @Tesla, if you need Star Trek-level cell measurement technology, we’ve got it!
We can assess the current state and predict the future behavior of cylindrical cells without removing fuses. By shooting signal like sound waves into the cells without disconnecting any fuses in parallel and analyzing the echo feedback, we provide the best possible warranty framework and a reliable battery prediction method—helping customers know exactly how many more miles their battery can drive. Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy patent waiting “never-seen” before method is new level of independent EV workshop access to the cell health during repair process, or even factory assembly process because it could be implemented into any battery assembly process of any kind of cells. Our mission is always evolving and with great EV community we will never give up.
@teardowntitan@GruberMotor@GruberMotor
@GLoacker@DiePressecom Es wird endlich Zeit, dass die Pensionsbeitragszahlungen zumindest zum Teil breit auf dem Aktienmarkt investiert werden. Dann müsste der Staat nicht dauernd so viel dazuschiessen. Man kann sich da gerne an anderen Ländern orientieren.