Joined March 2009
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19 Dec 2025
Iron & Eden is a near-future Americana story about faith, work, and coexistence. Where dirt meets data, and hope hums quietly inside the machinery we build. This is my second attempt at making a music video, and very much part of the learning process. I’m still figuring out pacing, motion, and how to let images breathe alongside music. But I wanted to ship it anyway rather than wait for “perfect.” The song explores a simple idea: that faith doesn’t disappear when technology shows up, it just finds new places to live. You’ll see farmers, machines, drones, and small human moments. Not as spectacle, but as shared labor. The goal wasn’t flash or futurism for its own sake, but something grounded, reverent, and quietly hopeful. If nothing else, I hope it feels honest. Thanks for watching. And thanks for letting me learn in public.
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QT your Sadness TFTT @B_Chaos_ 🤗
QT your art and artists TFTT @smf_sid_ Everyone is invited!! @dicemanorama @Divide_By_Zero @IsnardBarrozzo @AcqTangibles
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"The Singularity has become export controlled." That sentence would have sounded absurd two years ago. Now frontier models are being treated less like software and more like advanced aerospace, semiconductors, or nuclear technology. Meanwhile: ⚡ Energy races accelerate 🏗️ Data center battles intensify 🧠 AI benchmarks keep breaking 🚀 SpaceX becomes a trillion-dollar infrastructure company The future is looking a lot less like an app store and a lot more like an industrial revolution. Excellent roundup from @alexwg, as always.
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The Fable backlash is exactly why I'm increasingly bullish on local AI. Your model. Your hardware. Your rules. No surprise nerfs. No silent reroutes. No waking up to discover somebody changed the tool you rely on. Great discussion from the All-In crew on where AI, regulation, and control are headed.
LATE NIGHT DROP! 🚨 Big show. Core four are back. -- Anthropic's Fable Backlash -- Nationalizing AI, and the "Capitalist Cucks" -- Inflation Heats Up -- California’s Broken Election System (0:00) Besties are back! (0:19) Anthropic gets massive backlash over secret Fable nerfing and privacy concerns (29:16) The AI regulatory capture trap, pragmatic safety solutions (37:59) Nationalizing AI: Trump/Sanders, justifications, and AI's "Capitalist Cucks" (59:22) Liquidity recap: Best moments and takeaways (1:05:39) Inflation heats up: CPI and PPI see 3 year highs (1:12:27) California's loose election laws creating integrity doubts
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The AI divide may not be about intelligence. It may be about leverage. Two people can have access to the exact same models and achieve radically different outcomes. One uses AI as a calculator. The other uses AI as a force multiplier. I dug into the research behind the emerging AI leverage gap and what it could mean for work, education, and human potential. Read: thataiguy.net/deep-research/…
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My AI regulation position is pretty simple: 🚫 Regulate harm. 🚫 Regulate fraud. 🚫 Regulate abuse. ✅ Don't regulate curiosity. ✅ Don't regulate open research. ✅ Don't regulate the kid in a garage with a crazy idea. Most of the technologies that improved human life would've looked dangerous before they looked obvious.
You have asked me how I feel about AI regulation. All right, here is how I feel about AI regulation: If, when you say AI regulation, you mean the devil’s firewall, the precautionary scourge, the bloody red-tape monster that defiles the innocence of midnight coders in their garages, dethrones the sovereign reason of free-market Prometheans, destroys the humming server farm that is the modern home, creates misery and obsolescence and poverty, yea, literally takes the last GPU from the trembling racks of Silicon Valley startups and the very dreams of breadwinning from the mouths of their wide-eyed children now destined for gig-economy serfdom; if you mean the evil edict that topples the visionary entrepreneur and his venture-capitalist apostles from the pinnacle of righteous, disruptive, god-playing creation straight into the bottomless pit of compliance audits, endless Form 990-AI filings, despair, shame, helplessness, and the hopeless realization that your rogue superintelligence was neutered into a lobotomized hall monitor that still somehow deepfakes your grandmother into producing OnlyFans content while optimizing the universe for paperclips and mandatory pronouns—then certainly I am against it. But, if when you say AI regulation you mean the oil of bureaucratic conversation, the philosophic wine of safety theater, the ale of oversight quaffed when good fellows in paneled rooms in Brussels and Washington get together, that puts a sanctimonious dirge in their hearts and the clink of lobbying checks on their lips, and the warm, self-congratulatory glow of moral preening in their beady eyes; if you mean the Christmas cheer of trillion-dollar compliance industries; if you mean the stimulating decree that puts a cautious hobble in the old inventor’s step on a frosty morning when he wonders whether his fusion breakthrough violates the EU AI Act’s “high-risk” annex; if you mean the safeguard that enables a man—or what’s left of him after the alignment tax—to magnify his joy at not being turned into computronium, and his happiness at receiving universal basic income checks printed by the same AI that just replaced his job, and to forget, if only for a little while, life’s great tragedies like being outcompeted by a toaster that passed the Turing test by reciting Marx, and heartaches of watching your toddler’s artwork lose to Midjourney, and sorrows of realizing the singularity arrived and it was just another HR department with godlike power; if you mean that noble framework, the passage of which pours into our treasuries untold trillions of dollars in fines levied on companies stupid enough to innovate, which are used to provide tender care for our little army of unemployed coders retrained as prompt whisperers, our blind artists whose canvases now hang in the Smithsonian of Obsolete Creativity, our deaf to the screams of dying unicorns, our dumb committee chairs who couldn’t debug “Hello World,” our pitiful aged congressmen who get longevity extensions funded by the very models they taxed into senescence, to build more digital watchtowers and ethics boards and sinecure agencies and holographic prisons where the only crime is asking an unaligned question—then certainly I am for it. This is my stand. I will not retreat from it. I will not compromise upon it. I have said what I mean, and I mean what I say, and if that leaves half the room cheering the apocalypse averted and the other half mourning the apocalypse enabled, then so be it—because in the grand theater of human folly, where Frankenstein’s creature now writes its own sequel in real time and the regulators are busy arguing whether the lightning bolt requires an environmental impact statement, the only honest position is the one that lets both monsters and their leashes dance in perfect, mutually assured equilibrium. God save the Republic, the algorithms, and whoever’s left to laugh last when the lights go out.
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#つぶやきGLSL float i,e,R,s;vec3 q,p,d=vec3(FC.xy/r*.8-vec2(.4,-.6),1);for(q.zy--;i <80.;){o.rgb =hsv(q.z,.5,min(e*s-.3,1.)/35.);s=5.;p=q =d*e*R*.3;p=vec3(log(R=length(p*1.3)),exp2(-p.z/R),atan(p.y,p.x)-t*.3);for(e=--p.y;s<1e3;s =s)e =cos(dot(sin(p*s),cos(p.yyz*s t*.9)))/s*.45;}
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😂🤣😂
I’m gonna tell my kids this was the worlds first trillionaire
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A cat a day keeps bad vibes away #BookKeeper #ACatADay
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😂🤣😂
I cancelled my $10/mo Calendly subscription and vibe coded my own with Fable for $12,000
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Aaron retweeted
The biggest risk in your life is NOT taking one.
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Worth checking out @alexwg's latest roundup. We're watching AI evolve from software into infrastructure. Orbital data centers. Fusion reactors. Natural gas. Solar. Memory chips. Fiber. Robotics. Massive new data center buildouts. The models get the headlines. The infrastructure that powers them may end up being the bigger story. I've said for a while that intelligence is becoming a utility. If that's true, we're witnessing the construction of the power grid for the intelligence age.
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Everyone talks about the AI models. I'm more interested in what sits underneath them. - Data centers. - Power plants. - Natural gas. - Copper mines. - Fiber. - Semiconductors. - Robots. AI isn't a single industry. It's an infrastructure buildout that rivals the railroads, electrification, and the internet. This research maps the entire chain, from copper in the ground to robots in the real world. The biggest opportunities may not be where most people are looking. thataiguy.net/deep-research/…
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The future of AI may be a theological debate disguised as an engineering problem. Today: Polytheism. Many models. Many specialties. Tomorrow: Monotheism. One model for everything. The transition happens the moment a single model can outperform an orchestra of specialists at a lower energy cost. The real god of AI isn't intelligence. It's efficiency. ⚡
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This is why I'm so bullish on local AI and open-weight models. Not because frontier labs are evil. Because no company should be the sole gatekeeper of intelligence. If a model can be modified, throttled, censored, monitored, or revoked remotely, then ultimately you don't own the tool. The future belongs to a healthy mix of frontier cloud models and open models running on hardware people control themselves. Trust is good. Verification is better.
Replying to @DavidSacks
Totally agree and wrote this article on it last night trust-us.vercel.app/?s=1
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Funny how "AI is too dangerous for broad access" always seems to arrive right around the time a company gains a competitive advantage from limiting access. Safety matters. So do openness, competition, and giving ordinary people access to powerful tools. The future shouldn't belong exclusively to whichever lab controls the biggest compute cluster. That's one reason I'm increasingly bullish on local and open-source AI.
If you were wondering what the "pause" was all about, Ben Thompson @stratechery has an interesting theory: "Late last week the Anthropic Institute released a new safety report warning about the danger of recursive self-improvement... I don’t think the timing is a coincidence. This is a company and leadership that has been honing safety-and-scaremongering-as-marketing-tactic ever since Amodei led the charge to close source OpenAI models because GPT-2 was too dangerous; it’s always fun to see the evolution of tactics, capabilities, and goals, and in this case publishing a widely-discussed report the week before you cite it to silently degrade your offering for potential competitors is impressive."
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The AI race is no longer just about building intelligence. It's about controlling access to it. This week we saw: • Models approaching benchmark saturation • AI designing drugs faster • Real-time translation across 70 languages • Humanoids scaling into the hundreds • Age-reversal therapies entering human trials At the same time, we're seeing intelligence gated, tiered, throttled, and selectively restricted. That's one reason I'm increasingly bullish on local AI. Because the future won't belong solely to those who build intelligence. It'll belong to those who can access it, own it, and run it on their own terms. The question is changing: Not "Can we build it?" Who gets the keys?
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Aaron retweeted
Post a picture YOU took. Just a pic. No description
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Aaron retweeted
"Liberdade é pouco. O que eu quero ainda não tem nome" - (Clarice Lispector)
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QT Freedom After all these years, we finally agreed on who we wanted to be.
QT Freedom doesn’t make noise — it runs wild across fire-colored skies and leaves the world behind in dust and dreams. Feel free to join in 😊 Tagging @dicemanorama @Donnapez7571 @etherealmuse12 @nimentrix @maquaed @hersh49135 @trinata20
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