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> there is no dispute that Einstein "invented" General Relativity.

Just like there is no dispute Newton invented calculus, gutenburg invented the printing press or columbus discovered the americas...


> Reportedly, a lot of people who choose to study psychology are motivated originally to figure out what's going on in their own heads

People who go into psychology are more interested in what's going on in other people's heads and more importantly manipulating other people. It's more about controlling others than controlling oneself. It's why psychology was founded in the first place.

> people who lack a native impulse to be honest / ethical and are curious about people who do.

Ethics isn't about studying people. It's about studying principles. IE what does ethics mean. What makes an act ethical vs non-ethical. So on. You can delve into the ethics of gods, god, AI or even animals. Are ethical principles universal or not. So on and so forth.


> manipulating other people. [...] It's why psychology was founded in the first place.

What are you referring to here? Which specific founder(s) wanted to (or did) manipulate people?


> Can you buy and sell shares tax-free if the cash > security > cash conversions all happen inside the IRA?

No taxes on Roth IRAs. Even on distributions/withdrawals at a certain age ( I think it's 58 or 60? ).

Roth IRAs are as good a retirement vehicle as you can have.


"Roth IRAs are as good a retirement vehicle as you can have."

Except that contributions are after-tax, and have a lower cap than 401(k) accounts. So there is a tradeoff.


Certain age = 59 1/2 years


> Greatness comes from character and character isn’t formed out of smart people—it’s formed out of people who suffered.

Or 'Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them' -- Shakespeare

There are many paths to greatness. The article mentions a lot of hurdles and racism that he had to overcome. But those are specific to him. I'm sure there are plenty 'great' people who haven't suffered.

> One of my great advantages is that I have very low expectations.

I don't think people with low expectations start companies. Certainly those with low expectations don't rise and achieve greatness.

In essence, he is saying people should be resilient and try to persevere through hard times. The rest are just fluff to fill time.

But even with resilience and perseverance, you aren't guaranteed success. It also takes a bit of luck. Being at the right place at the right time. There isn't a magic formula to be successful. And there are only X number of billionaires the economy can suppport...


> I don't think people with low expectations start companies. Certainly those with low expectations don't rise and achieve greatness.

I think this is a common misinterpretation of "expectations", to the point that it honestly just isn't a very clear way to make the point he's making. Here's a restatement of your quote that I would agree with:

> I don't think people with limited aspirations start companies. Certainly those with limited aspirations don't rise and achieve greatness.

But aspiration is not the same as expectation. It is perfectly plausible - and indeed, I agree with Huang, increases the likelihood of success - to shoot for the stars while expecting to miss.


expecting to see what happens


> Introducing SIMA: the first generalist AI agent to follow natural-language instructions in a broad range of 3D virtual environments and video games.

If it can be done in 3D virtual environments and video games, it shouldn't be much of a leap to do it in the real world. After all we have cameras, voice recorders, sensors, etc that can map the real world into 3D virtual environments already. Have they tried linking this generalist AI to a robot to see how the robot does in the real world?


Reality has a surprising amount of detail, though.


And variation. Video games cheat at everything.



Not only that, don't insurers offer 'discounts' for installing tracking apps on your phones and devices?


> Wow. That's a new low standard for journalism. Whatever happened to keeping opinions and news separate?

You seem to have some idealized view of journalism that has never existed. The fact that you linked to the nytimes...

> And no, modern Congress is not more corrupt than historical standards

That's a straw man. He didn't say congress was 'more corrupt' than before. He just wrote 'grotesquely corrupt congress'. You surely can see the difference. If not, you'd make an excellent journalist.


What are your issues with the linked NYT article?


No issues. I didn't read it. It was a general remark about your 'idealized view of journalism' rather than about a specific article.


> Because no chance in hell is China selling this thing, and Trump is already talking about how much he loves TikTok now.

Which is insane because in 2020, Trump was the one trying to ban tiktok and Biden was defending it. Now the script flipped? In the meantime, all they've done in the past 5 years is give tiktok free advertisement.


> He is widely believed to have memorized the entire international-English Scrabble lexicon, more than 280,000 words

Definitely helps.

> Nigel extended ZAP to ZAPATEADOS

My problem is I try to extend the word rather than create new words. So I'd look for zapped, unzapped, zapping, etc. Actually, if I had 'ATEADOS', I would waste my time looking for a 7 letter word ending in S.

> Nigel placed all of his letters between the P and TED, spelling out PERNOCTATED and turning NON into ANON. The play tallied 92 points.

Now that is genuinely impressive.

I wish scrabble had platforms as widely available and free as chess does.


Check out https://woogles.io (disclaimer I am a cofounder). AGPLV3 platform with world class bots, puzzles, a free analyzer, clubs/tournaments, and more to come. You can see the source code at https://github.com/woogles-io/liwords. We recently hit 5M games played and have hosted a few major tournaments.


Plane occupants? Don't we just call them passengers? Did AI write the article?


Hopefully one of them was a pilot


Good point. I guess plane occupants it is.


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