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This chip is justโฆ beautiful. Tesla AI5 https://t.co/NwSNMsg1ZS
most powerful moving object in all of human history hard to comprehend https://t.co/leBh5yuh1J
Starship Super Heavy Booster, the most powerful moving object ever made by far
@bcherny @amorriscode Can you please fix this? Claude Code on Desktop is pretty unusable as this always happens whenever there is a larger change. Breaking it down into smaller changes appears to help sometimes. https://t.co/0RZKkfuM7o https://t.co/OtqngXBS7Q
A famous monkey selfie is becoming relevant again in the AI era. The case around who owns art created without a human author is shaping how we think about AI-generated content and what counts as original work. As AI floods the internet with content, these questions are no longer theoretical. They define what we trust and value. https://t.co/TWkEU9EPgH @bbcnews @bbc @thomasgermain
@theakhileshw https://t.co/uBTzSkBxiz
First 33-engine static fire for Super Heavy V3 https://t.co/m3swZHF7iQ
Wait no way https://t.co/RPlcNU2kjm
ๆ็ปญไธบhermes็ๆๅๅปบ่ฎพ๏ผๆไปฌไปๅคฉๅฐไผไธ็บฟๅคprofileๅๆข๏ผๆจกๅๅ้ข้้ ็ฝฎๅ จ้จๅจweb็ซฏๅฎๆ๏ผๆ ้ๆง่กไปปไฝๅฝไปคใ @NousResearch @Teknium #hermes #agent ๅคงๅฎถๅฆๆๅๆฌข่ฏทๅคๅคๆฏๆไธใๆไผๆ็ปญ่พๅบใ https://t.co/CsSZusa4su https://t.co/Zx6QjF553T
OpenAI updates its Agents SDK to help enterprises build safer, more capable agents https://t.co/o4WU6sAVvN
OpenAI updates its Agents SDK to help enterprises build safer, more capable agents https://t.co/o4WU6sAVvN
Walter Isaacson literally revealed the secret to Elon Musk's productivity in just 6 minutes: Lex Fridman asks about time management, noting that Elon runs six or seven companies depending on how you count. Isaacson responds: "Musk is in a league of his own. Steve Jobs had to run Pixar and Apple for a while. But Musk, every couple of hours, is switching his mindset from how to implant the Neuralink chip and what will the robot that implants it in the brain look like, to the heat shield on the Raptor engine, to human imitation machine learning for full self-driving." He shares a story from the night Twitter accepted Elon's offer: "On the night the Twitter board agreed to the deal, this is huge, around the world, 'Musk buys Twitter', I thought, okay. But then he went to Boca Chica in South Texas and spent time fixating on, if I remember correctly, a valve in the Raptor engine that had a methane leak issue. And what were the possible ways to fix it. All the engineers in that room, I assume, are thinking, 'This guy just bought Twitter, should we say something?' And he's like..." Isaacson continues: "Then he goes with Kimball to a roadside joint in Brownsville. Just sits in the front and listens to music. Nobody noticing him." On how Elon actually works: "One of his strengths, and sort of weaknesses in a way, is that in a given day, he'll focus serially, sequentially, on many different things. He'll worry about uploading video onto X or the payment system, then immediately switch to some issue with the FAA giving a permit for Starship, or how to deal with Starlink and the CIA." Isaacson explains the key distinction: "When he's focused on any of these things, you cannot distract him. It's not like he's also thinking, 'I'm dealing with Starlink, but I've got to also worry about the Tesla decision on the new $25,000 car.' No. He'll, in between these sessions, process information, then let off steam." He describes the release valve: "For better or worse, he lets off steam by either playing a friend in Polytopia or firing off some tweets, which is often not a healthy thing. But it's a release for him." Isaacson clarifies a common misconception: "I once said he was a great multitasker, and that was a mistake. People corrected me. He's a serial tasker. Which means he focuses intensely on a task for an hour, almost has a, what do they call it at restaurants, a palette cleanser. He does some palette cleanser with Polytopia. And then focuses on the next task." On whether others can learn from this: "There are some things these people do where you say, 'Okay, I can be that way. I can be more curious. I can question every rule and regulation.' But I just don't think anybody should try to emulate Musk's time management style. Because it takes a certain set of teams to deal with everything else other than the thing he's focusing on, and a certain mind that can shift. Just like his moods can shift." Isaacson contrasts himself: "You and I go through transitions. If I'm thinking about what I'm going to say on this podcast, I'm also thinking about the email my daughter just sent about a house she's looking at. I'm multitasking. He doesn't actually do that. He single-tasks sequentially with a focus that's hardcore." On the fierce urgency: "The fierce urgency that drives him is important, and it's sometimes ginned up. Like the fierce urgency of getting to Mars. On a Friday night at the launch pad in Boca Chica, at 10pm, there are only a few people working because it's a Friday night. They're not supposed to launch for another eight months. And he orders 'The Surge.' He says, 'I want 200 people here by tomorrow working on this pad. We have to have a fierce sense of urgency, or we will never get to Mars.'" Lex reflects: "That sense of urgency is also a vibrancy, like really taking on life fully. Even the mundane can be full of this richness. You just have to take it in intensely. The switching enables that kind of intensity, because most of us can't hold that intensity on any one task for a prolonged period of time." On knowing yourself: Isaacson offers perspective: "It goes back to: know who you are. There are people who can focus intensely. And there are people who can see patterns across many things. Leonardo da Vinci, he was not all that focused. He was easily distracted. It's why he has more unfinished paintings than finished paintings in his canon. But his ability to see patterns across nature, and in some ways procrastinate, be distracted, that helped him some. But Musk is not that way." He describes Musk's pattern: "Every few months, there's a new surge. You don't know where it'll be. But all of a sudden it'll be on solar roofs, and there has to be 100 solar roofs built by tomorrow. Or 'Make a Starship dome by dawn.' Surge and do it. There are people who are built that way." Isaacson closes with a caution: "It is inspiring. But let's also appreciate that there are people who can be really good, but also can savor the success, savor the moment, savor the quiet. Musk's big failing is he can't savor the moment or the success. And that's the flip side of hardcore intensity."
Anthropic is working on its own AI-powered design tool for its customers. @steph_palazzolo exclusively reports: โit can release as soon as this week or even today.โ โObviously, I think there's a potential risk of competition there for companies like Figma.โ https://t.co/E11jhUP47P
You have to be run by ideas, not hierarchy. The best ideas have to win. Otherwise good people donโt stay. โSteve Jobs (a must watch interview) https://t.co/s1p9iS6APV
Warren Buffett: โIn investingโฆI can look at 1,000 different companies & I donโt have to be right on every one of them or even 50 or even 25 of them. Thatโs an enormous advantageโฆโ https://t.co/koTyf7Iso6
https://t.co/YIZG4hfSTR
https://t.co/YIZG4hfSTR
Rpi pico theremin inspired by Matthias Wandel's latest video. All you need are two wires! https://t.co/iC9beUSmhC
What if you could get 1.3B Transformer quality from a 770M model? That's not a compression result. It's a different architecture. Parcae, from @realDanFu (Together AI's VP of Kernels) and his lab at UCSD, passes activations through the same layers multiple times โ stably, for the first time.
Skills & Apps are here in ChatGPT for Excel. You can now connect ChatGPT directly to the data sources and workflows your teams already use every day. Use apps like @SPGlobal, @LSEGplc, Daloopa, @PitchBook, @Quartr_App, @Moodys, Ramp, @stripe, @MorningstarInc, @SharePoint and many more to pull in the information that matters, then work with it directly inside Excel. You can shape ChatGPT to model the way your team models, use skills built for your workflows, format outputs the way you want, automate repetitive work, and move faster on real analysis.
@801Rob The hindsight rep is in the discord - they manage that memory provider. Can you hop on and I'll tag him when you lmk you're there. https://t.co/5EoJ4EBecb
ByteDance presents Seedance 2.0 - Multi-modal inputs (text/image/audio/video) - #1 on Arena (both T2V + I2V) - Keeps characters consistent across complex scenes - Audio satisfaction: 62% vs <10% for others https://t.co/aI3eE5eWJz
LongCoT: Benchmarking Long-Horizon Chain-of-Thought Reasoning - 2,500 expert-designed problems spanning science, chess, and logic that demand up to hundreds of thousands of reasoning tokens - The best models achieve <10% accuracy https://t.co/dHFroaryGW
Been having fun with local AI stuff. I don't really like the big models and now that some of them want your ID I'm not sure I'll even stick around to care that much. Local shit is really powerful now, these models are capable of doing seriously cool things, privately and safely. https://t.co/5iwCuxBKmE
@weber_cedric Resolved! https://t.co/oi49vgSbxz
Builders! Founders in SF! This Friday Apr 17 join our @GoogleDeepMind team for Gemma 4 night in SF. Demos, Networking and more. Join some of the best folks out there: @DynamicWebPaige @osanseviero @Vish_owl @ivanleomk & Cerebral Valley @cerebral https://t.co/02sop0FOqH
@effect_motion_x This tweet was shown to me auto-translated, which was confusing! For other confused English-speaking people: https://t.co/ibFmSnivCh
Weโre open-sourcing HY-World 2.0, a multimodal world model that generates, reconstructs, and simulates interactive *3D worlds* from text, images, and videos. Outputs can be integrated into game engines and embodied simulation pipelines. Key highlights: ๐น One-click world generation Turn text or image into interactive 3D worlds automatically. ๐น Pipeline-ready 3D outputs Editable 3D worlds for Unity and Unreal Engine, with standard 3D exports including mesh, 3DGS, and point clouds. ๐น Unified world model system One model family for world generation and reconstruction across synthetic and real-world scenes. ๐น Interactive character mode Explore generated 3D worlds in real time with physics-aware movement and collision support. โจ Apply for access: https://t.co/swscD5KGu2 ๐ GitHub: https://t.co/XpUKjBtK5n ๐ค Hugging Face: https://t.co/tv8hOPYABj ๐ Technical Report: https://t.co/s6WGMyw0L7

today project Think is officially out! we bet on agents that run non-stop, survive failures, cost nothing when idle, and enforce security through architecture agents that any developer can build and deploy agents that have sub-agents via Facets, Session API and full execution ladder wired in! https://t.co/CwXvWHX2mE