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Replying to @RupertLowe10
Social media seems to have dumbed down the latest generation, compared to the generations that invented rockets, jets, nuclear reactors, microprocessors, satellites etc. Ppl are less polite & respectful, & more arrogant & "woke". Accordingly, it's good the UK/Oz are limiting it.
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And tell me what your brothers and sisters are doing in other countries abroad? I am sure they are building operating systems, jet engines, microprocessors etc right?
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Replying to @TheRealDeal586
Everything you used to write this post (except the letters) were invented by white people. The Internet The telephone Electricity The battery The antenna Microprocessors The smart phone The computer The Sree Padmanabhaswamy Temple treasure (in Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala, India) Is the largest hoard of wealth ever discovered, not a white man in sight. The second? Tutankhamun’s Tomb. Hmm.
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I was working on microprocessors and anti gravity technology worth a great deal of money and now I am homeless again. I can’t help but feel as tho the fires and all of this dark energy is connected.
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Majority stakes in companies for fed contracts and subsidies. Poaches engineers and programmers from competitors. Pumps the stock prices and never delivered. Pattern’s gonna happen again. Mars colonization and implanting microprocessors in people’s brains? Dude 😑
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The cunt puts microprocessors in ppls heads. My skull is like fort Knox baby, impenetrable 👍
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Captain Ellerby (Alec Baldwin) was another undercover homo on Costello's crew (unbeknownst to Sullivan) Ellerby's surveillance guy had 2 hours notice on the microprocessors transaction w the Chinese that *he* somehow got the scoop on, and then he had to act like a tough guy to sell everyone on the idea that he really wanted to nab Costello In reality, Ellerby is another Sullivan, a closeted homo with an immaculate record One of Scorsese's great gifts as a filmmaker is fooling the audience into thinking the main characters' perspectives are the only ones at play in the story. In Scorsese flicks, just cuz there are characters who are not that important to the main characters, it doesn't mean they're not running commands in the background.
The Departed is all about deeply closeted homosexuality Damon's character Sullivan is a living, breathing, high-functioning sociopath Everything about him is a carefully constructed and curated mask to blend in with his peers He was truly a rat in the sense that he would do and say anything to escape the maze he found himself in at that moment On top of that, he had fertility issues He couldn't get his girl pregnant Which mirrored the predicament of his mentor Costello (Jack Nicholson) "All that fuckin... and no sons?" To Sully, an identity is just a costume you wear, which is why he's perfect at being the mole in the police department. He's a gay man who's been fooling the men around him his whole life. Contrast this with Dicaprio's character Costigan, the only true heterosexual character of the film. To him, his identity is EVERYTHING Throughout the entire film, he gets SICK pretending to be someone he's not. His physical and mental condition progressively worsens and he just wants to end it all. By the end of it all, he goes on a suicide mission just to reclaim his true identity. On top of that, he impregnates Sullivan's girl. Just goes to show how deeply connected our sexuality is to the value we place on our identity
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Replying to @MohapatraHemant
Exactly. Most people talk GPU not talent. It takes 125 best and brightest at all levels of stack to come together. In the US it might cost $1M / person and $9m in equity. One can derate that for India. You need the following. 1) a leader and 2) 124 ( from anywhere in the world - don’t restrict to India ). There will s enough money in India to fund the hardware between the government , venture and the rich families. What you cannot buy is the talent. This is like brining the best microprocessor teams in the 1990s. We happen to build some of the best back then and a team of 120 / chip was needed. In 10 years there will be enough diffusion that like today there are more teams doing microprocessors. You can also do the linux way. Find a benevolent dictator and fund the hardware. That might be the way to go for india. Open source / weights model. There might be more talent volunteering. This was I said here. substack.com/@renuraman/note… AI Leader: Should the government spend $1.2B in subsidizing GPU or find a contemporary mercurial personal of the likes of Vikram Sarabhai (ISRO) or Homi Bhaba (BARC) to create the AI-Manhattan project i.e. if India is serious about AI, it has to find that mercurial leader and give him $5B. Will Nandan step up to be the Oppenheimer or is there a 20-30 year old to be empowered to lead this. [A thought: Or invest in Perplexity and give Aravind Srinivas the charter to be the Oppenheimer] @TVMohandasPai

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Replying to @stats_feed
Them microprocessors 🙌🏻
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Replying to @AkilahObviously
Bought majority stakes in companies he knew would get federal subsidies and contracts. Then lured the best engineers and programmers from competitors. Pumped the stock price of Tesla and never delivered. Same gonna happen with SpaceX. His grand vision was Mars colonization and implanting microprocessors in people’s brains. He was smart enough to get stupid people on board with those fantasies.
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I think the West is now entering civilizational failure driven by catastrophically low birth rates. This is not just a pensions problem. On current trends, we are heading toward roughly 1 employed worker per person over 65 later this century. That is not sustainable. Who maintains the grid? Who staffs the hospitals? Who drives the trucks? Who repairs the machines? Who builds the machines that repair the machines? Look beyond pension costs. Look for supply chain stress, collapsing service quality, industrial hollowing-out, rising tax pressure, military weakness and permanent political crisis. And THAT may be the key driving motivation behind Mr Musk’s two strangest-looking ambitions: Humanoid robots An ark on Mars The robots are obvious: if the human workforce collapses, you need synthetic labour. But Mars may be the deeper play. Not “colonising Mars” in the shallow sci-fi sense. A fallback and recovery mechanism for humanity after civilizational collapse. That is very close to Isaac Asimov’s Foundation concept: preserve enough knowledge, skill and industrial seed-capacity outside the collapsing system so humanity can recover faster after the fall. Because if modern civilization falls far enough, we may never climb back to this level unaided. Why? Because the easy resources that lifted us from the pre-technological world have already been consumed: accessible coal, oil, gas, high-grade ores, metals, minerals. The skills would vanish too. No microprocessors. No advanced software stack. No semiconductor fabs. Maybe not even reliable combustion engines after a few generations. Civilization is not just knowledge in books. It is a living chain of mines, factories, ports, engineers, machinists, software, precision tools, energy systems and accumulated know-how. Break enough links, and the chain does not simply repair itself. Think on that.
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Jun 12
Replying to @profstonge
Love your post yet have to push back on Jobs. I can yield on the strict use of the word invention. That said, Jobs was a creator, having changed the world, twice. So he didn’t invent microprocessors. He applied them in a way no one else envisioned. Respect to both Jobs and Musk!
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It is the fastest, safest, strongest car in the world. It is also completely fuel efficient and is operated entirely by microprocessors which make it virtually impossible for it to be involved in any mishap or collision, unless of course specifically so ordered by its pilot
I calculated Tesla FSD's reaction time
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We also gave you microprocessors, television, TCP/IP, space flight, air conditioning, carbon fiber, microwave ovens, LEDs, stretch denim, riding lawn mowers, stealth technology, fiber optics, satellites, voting at 18, hip hugger jeans, nintendo, scanning electron microscopes, artificial hearts, smart bombs, credit cards, pantyhose, DNA fingerprinting, viagra, the World Wide Web, polio vaccine, transistors, birth control pills, lasers.... hell my fingers are getting tired typing it all. You are officially banned from continuing to use Tecumseh's likeness on account of you being so much dumber than he was. 🤣
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Jun 12
Replying to @ArtemIoha79094
I’d like to clarify that, unfortunately, unlike gold, BTC has virtually no physical use. It’s practically impossible to replace gold in microprocessors, and on top of that, there’s the space industry. I agree that DeFi allows for more flexibility in strategy formulation, but DeFi is very unsafe, with regular hacks, especially now. It is precisely for this reason that big capital has not yet entered it, let alone the government apparatus. Big capital takes risks in DeFi but gets an extra reward it’s just that in this case, you can’t allocate the bulk of your funds to it, because the conservative approach involves limiting risk you’ll hold assets but on the balance sheet with increased risk. In short, I agree with you I just think we still need to work on it to make this a reality.
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The US deal with Iran which lifts sanctions means Iran will grow into a strong regional power (which they are already) They'd be richer than South Korea if allowed to trade. Their people have the 4th highest IQ in the world. They developed hypersonic missiles in-house, invented cheap drones, and built their manufacturing capacity underground. The Persians are a 5000 year old civilization (like China). Without their currency being manipulated and sanctions, they will not be held back. This is what Israel fears and their domination of the US political system post WWII has stymied Iran's growth (along with British and US medaling in their oil reserves and political system and the installation of dictators like the Shah). Once such restrictions are lifted, expect to be buying Iranian TVs, microprocessors and cars in 25 years. Their success in this war has announced their arrival on the world stage. China and Russia will ally with them and further their aims at stability and dominance in the Middle East. The post World War II order is changing which means the diminishing power of the US and the rapid growth of the Asian landmass and the dawning of a multi polar 21st century.
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Replying to @D2Chattoway
this is actually taught in most EE programs, this was literally on a slide in my microprocessors class
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Hammering $SIDU 3.78 Now that $SPCX (SpaceX) IPO hype is over. The next logical play is "ai data centers in space" Right now these are dips buys but they have real DD, tons of cash, and this partnership with Vorago Technologies they are the frontrunners imo. "Vorago produces radiation-hardened and radiation-tolerant microcontrollers (MCUs) and microprocessors (MPUs) using their patented HARDSIL® technology. These chips are designed to withstand the harsh radiation and extreme temperatures of space, which would cause standard commercial AI chips to fail or malfunction."
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Replying to @NormanDodd_knew
So that scene in The Departed where the Irish mob was selling microprocessors to the Chinese was Zio propaganda obscuring their own role?
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📰 In the newest issue of “Economic Weekly”: 🌐 The European Union is strengthening its technological sovereignty ☁️ The European Commission proposes specific criteria for sovereign cloud computing services 🔬 Poland’s dependencies in microprocessors are among the five lowest in the EU 🤖 The European Commission is betting on the further deployment of AI in the energy sector ⚡ The European Commission seeks to accelerate the deployment of smart metres 📊 Digital sovereignty is becoming crucial for the collection of data on international migration 🛡️ The European Union reconciles fiscal rules with spending on defence and energy 🏆 Hosting the World Cup is becoming too expensive for a single country See more about 👉 pie.net.pl/en/economic-weekl…
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