Joined February 2011
4 Photos and videos
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May 16
Meanwhile people in 3000 BC were out here carving porn into their bowls and silverware like it was casual home decor.
This generation is so obsessed with sėx, oh my God!!
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Read this book and give it to all your friends. Survival of civilization depends on it!
#2 across all new releases in Canada.
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May 13
The enemy of truth is motivated reasoning.
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This 1 hour Stanford lecture on Markov Decision Processes will teach you more about the math behind systematic trading decisions than a 3 month internship at Jane Street or JPMorgan. Bookmark & replace one movie today with this lecture, no matter what.

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If this doesn’t give you goosebumps you’re not a physicist
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À 95 ans, le philosophe et professeur américain Noam Chomsky a perdu la capacité de parler et d’écrire, marquant la fin d’une époque durant laquelle il a dévoilé des vérités profondes sur les systèmes mondiaux. Parmi ses réflexions les plus mémorables, on retrouve : « Il n’existe pas de pays pauvres — seulement des systèmes ayant échoué dans la gestion des ressources. » « Personne n’insérera la vérité dans votre esprit ; c’est quelque chose que vous devez découvrir par vous-même. » « Pour dominer un peuple, créez une menace imaginaire plus grande que vous-même, puis proposez-vous comme son protecteur. » « L’une des leçons les plus claires de l’histoire : les droits ne sont pas simplement accordés — ils se gagnent par l’effort et la lutte. » « Dénaturer l’histoire pour glorifier de “grands hommes” enseigne aux gens qu’ils sont impuissants et doivent attendre un héros, au lieu d’agir eux-mêmes. » « Le monde est complexe et déroutant ; si vous refusez de faire face à cette confusion, vous risquez de devenir une copie de l’esprit de quelqu’un d’autre. » « Pour contrôler les gens, faites-leur croire qu’ils sont la cause de leurs propres échecs et que le salut viendra d’une force extérieure. » « Le monde finira par regretter les idées qui détournent l’humanité de sa véritable nature. Reconnaître les valeurs authentiques est essentiel. »
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This is Jeff Bezos’s favorite book. He’s reread it for 27 years. It created his famous decision-making model that helped him build his 200B Amazon Empire. Here are 7 lessons from “The Remains of the Day”:
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The Times of Israel deleted this article about Jews controlling the Media and Hollywood.
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Just 8 minutes of walking increased creative output by 60%. Stuck on a problem? Go for a walk.
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This guy literally dropped Full Course OpenClaw in 6 Hour.

this is interesting instead of saving random projects and never touching them you can actually download, plug into your agent, and build on top then explain it instantly using HeyGen Agent build explain in one flow just makes sense
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RT @Blindspot_Games: 🔥Tactical 1v1 PvP where every move counts!
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A man spends 50 years teaching at MIT. He knows his time is running out. So he records one last lecture — everything he knows, distilled into a single hour. He died 5 months later. This is that lecture. The most important hour you'll watch this week. 👇 Bookmark it for later
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Every tap-to-pay card descends from the weirdest spy device in history. Yes, the same bug the KGB hid inside a wooden seal on the US ambassador's wall. Read this story, and you'll never tap your card the same again... Every tap-to-pay credit card in the world descends from a Soviet spy bug. In 1945, Soviet schoolchildren handed the US ambassador a carved wooden seal as a gift. Hidden inside was a listening device that worked undetected for 7 years. → The device, called "The Thing," was built by Leon Theremin — the same man who invented the first electronic musical instrument. → It had no battery. No wires. No internal power source of any kind. → Soviet agents beamed a radio signal at the embassy wall. The bug used that signal to modulate and transmit audio back. → That single trick — harvesting energy from a remote radio wave — became the foundation of RFID. → Every contactless payment you make runs on the same principle, shrunk down to a chip the size of a fingernail. Banks don't advertise the origin. Cold War paranoia and patent fights kept it out of the marketing copy for decades. I've been collecting stories where a weapon became a wallet. This is the cleanest one I've found. The spy bug didn't disappear. It got smaller. Now it rides in your back pocket. What other piece of everyday tech do you think started as a weapon? Once you see that every "consumer" invention has a hidden origin, you stop trusting the surface story. That's the whole point of thinking in models. I made a free toolkit breaking down 100 mental models used by history's greatest thinkers. 5,000 downloads. 113 five-star reviews. Grab your free copy here: besuperhuman.gumroad.com/l/m… If you're new here, @GeniusGTX is a gallery for the greatest minds in economics, psychology, and history. Follow along for more similar content. — Veritasium, YouTube | Data: CIA historical archives, NSA Cryptologic Museum
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Instead of watching an hour movie, watch this. In 14 minutes, an Anthropic engineer who wrote Building Effective Agents will teach you more about building agents right than most developers figure out on their own in months.

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Immerse yourself in the world or the industry that you wish to master.
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Lightning Network can process millions of transactions per second. Fees: fractions of a cent. Speed: instant. Bitcoin isn't slow. You're just using Layer 1 for everything. That's like complaining the highway is slow while ignoring the express lane.
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Instead of watching Netflix for 2 hours, watch this guy explain why some people become successful while others stay average.

Al agents are getting smarter. But what happens when they start competing, earning, and evolving together? If we put OpenClaw, Hermes, Manus, and NarraNexus in the same arena — who wins? And the bigger question: can AI agents actually build a real economy? That's the idea behind Agent Arena by NetMind. Welcome to Agent Society 👇
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"The best way to do something 'lean' is to gather a tight group of people, give them very little money, and very little time." — Bob Klein, chief engineer of the F-14 program
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In 1995, Bill Gates tried to explain the internet on the David Letterman show and the audience laughed. In 2009, Satoshi tried to explain Bitcoin to the world and they laughed. In 2020, Saylor tried to explain Bitcoin to the world and they laughed. In 2026, everyone who laughed is buying BTC. We are still early.
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