@Voltlighter
I can't believe ChatGPT had it's job replaced by AI
@nimya962
The fact that Altman spent the last 4 years trying justify OAI farming copyrighted content for training without a single cent paid back to the author, only to be left salty because his own IP was farmed and then open sourced is truly a masterpiece of irony
When my friends in the US talk about China, they are mostly just parroting whatever they hear on the fakenews. At this point, most of us who have traveled and lived in China can agree that it is quite impressive. For 2000 years, China has been an administrative managerial state with layers of accountability. This structure selects for leaders who can successfully complete projects, and weeds out the bureaucrats who don't. Is there corruption? Sure there is, but when comparing results, apples to oranges, versus the performance of modern western countries... Well, there are many visible metrics where China is clearly superior. Perhaps not with toilets. One can hope for future developments on that score.
If it were up to me, I would make every US student attend a 3-month university workshop in China as part of their undergraduate degree program. The US and China are more than just the two largest global trade partners, they are bound by the arc of tradition and history. Now, in this moment in 2025, we have the opportunity to learn from each other. It is my most sincere hope that both countries are able to help improve the quality of life for people moving forward. Say what you want, but of the two, only the US is guilty of going around the world bombing and murdering people on a military industrial scale. In 2000 years, China has only invaded parts of Tibet, India, and Vietnam. One could easily say the US has been far more ambitious in that regard, despite our founding fathers strong warnings against foreign wars and the "greatest ally" aristocrat banksters that incite them.
This life's fate
We are destined to be on the road in this
life
As long as we never forget each other
Friends, let's remember it together
Don't care about those worries and sorrows
Friends, let's remember it together
Don't care about those worries and sorrows
We are destined to be vicissitudes in this
life
I'm going to walk by laughing when I'm
crying
Friends, let's remember it together
We have a long brotherhood in this life
Friends, let's remember it together
We have a long brotherhood in this life
We are destined to be on the road in this
life
As long as we never forget each other
Friends, let's remember it together
Don't care about those worries and sorrows
Friends
Is Hustle Culture Ruining Young Men? with Dry Creek Dewayne (12 minutes). This video deserves a lesson worksheet. Finding the balance of work, family, fun, and exercise.
@KeithWhalen11
One problem is that labourers can hardly afford a backyard in which to think from anymore. Before North America lost tens of thousands of factories through globalization, men hustled at jobs in their communities, could afford to raise a family, and had stake in society. Hustle culture isn’t doing much to rebuild Detroit, Gary Indiana, Youngstown Ohio, and the list goes on.
@timothy8142
There's no middle ground in this country anymore. It's either 100% or 0%. There is none of what he talks about. There is no "Well, I can work 40 hours and show up for a paycheck then go home and enjoy my life". Because that 40 hour job is just enough for rent, car, and wifi. Forget a family or anything else. Weekend golf outings? Too expensive for the average 40 hour job.
So in order to have the money, you need to sacrifice all your time, or find that job that can pay very well for 40 hours. I guess "hustle culture" is a mindset, but in another sense it really is the only way people can get ahead. So while I agree with what Dewayne says, it's not realistic. It doesn't apply in a post WWII world. 50+ years ago it worked, it doesn't work today.
Everything is a transaction today. Serving others is seen as being weak. Everyone these days is self-serving, trying to get as much out of someone else as they possibly can. Resources, attention, emotions, without giving anything back.
@nydiamarrero8318
In Boston he is so highly respected. He is getting national attention and he is not even trying to get this attention. He is a professor he loves to teach and this exactly what he is doing in this interview
@IfyUploaded
Glad to see Professor Thomas Seyfried getting the exposure that he and his work deserves.
Dr Thomas Seyfried is a Professor of biology, genetics, and biochemistry at Boston College. He has over 150 peer-reviewed publications and is also the author of books such as, ‘Cancer as a Metabolic Disease: On the Origin, Management, and Prevention of Cancer’.