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⏰ Just 3 days left on our biggest discount ever! Lifetime 50% OFF. Locked in forever. Try TDI-Terminal today: Real-time financials, deep dives, portfolio tracking & pro tools. 14-day risk-free guarantee: Full refund if you don’t like it. Don’t miss it →
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What is an extra $6,563 a year worth to you? A hot tub? A house in the countryside? Privacy on the web? According to new findings from the @Web3foundation, that’s the estimated annual commercial value of the average American’s personal data. Up to $393,785 over a digital lifetime. Except users don’t get the money: platforms, advertisers, and data brokers capture the value instead. Want to know what your data is really worth? Download the full white paper here 👇
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In 1990, the World Wide Web was invented on Steve Jobs' computer. Steve ignored it. This is the story I tell in my new book Steve Jobs in Exile. Here is what it should tell the rest of us about the moment we are in now. Steve was running NeXT, an unsuccessful computer company. He had been pushed out of Apple five years earlier and was burning his fortune trying to build a successor to the Macintosh. The machine NeXT sold was a matte-black magnesium cube -- expensive and beautiful and not selling. In October of that year, on the other side of the Atlantic, a British physicist named Tim Berners-Lee took delivery of a NeXT Cube at CERN, the physics laboratory on the Swiss-French border. He used it to invent the World Wide Web. The web ran on the Cube for its first year of existence. The revolution was happening on Steve's hardware, and yet Steve ignored it. Here is the question I keep thinking about from my book. If Steve Jobs, the most visionary tech mind of his generation, missed the Web, the most civilization-shaping tech of his lifetime, how are the rest of us supposed to see anything coming? Berners-Lee had been asking his boss at CERN for a NeXT Cube for months. His boss finally signed off, hoping to test the exotic Cube. "He suggested that I should buy one of these NeXT machines I'd been talking about so enthusiastically," Berners-Lee later told Fresh Air. "And if we needed a sort of test project to run on the NeXT machine ... 'Why not just do this hypertext thing you're talking about?'" The "test project" evolved into the World Wide Web. The problem Berners-Lee was trying to solve was not a glamorous one. CERN employed thousands of scientists from over a hundred countries, most cycling through on short assignments and taking their knowledge with them when they left. Berners-Lee was trying to keep institutional knowledge from walking out the door. He wanted a system that worked the way human memory does, where any piece of information could connect to any other without permission or central control. Through late 1990, he coded in his gray-floored office. The Cube's object-oriented system let him build in months what would have taken a year on anything else. By December, the first website went online. The World Wide Web now existed, running on a single black NeXT Cube in CERN's Building 31. Berners-Lee scrawled a warning on it in red ink: "This machine is a server. DO NOT POWER IT DOWN!!" Underneath the elegant interface he was building HTTP, HTML, and the server software that would deliver web pages. These three inventions would form much of the invisible plumbing of our modern connectivity. When a colleague of Berners-Lee's brought a demo of the Web to NeXT's headquarters in California, he could not get anyone there to pay attention. Nobody even dared show it to Steve, afraid he would dismiss it. NeXT was busy with its own internet plans, which Steve eventually killed. So back to the question. If Steve Jobs missed the web, how are the rest of us supposed to see whatever comes next? The honest answer is that we cannot. Nobody can. The rest of us are not going to outpattern-match Steve Jobs. But here is what I learned writing Steve Jobs in Exile. Transformations almost always begin in obscurity, on the margins, solving boring problems with boring tools. The web did not look revolutionary in 1990. It looked like a tool for sharing physics papers. We are in another such moment now. AI is the obvious changemaker. But the biggest transformations are rarely the obvious ones. The next one is happening somewhere right now, and it is trickier to spot than any sweeping proclamation about AI. We will recognize it, if we recognize it at all, from the unglamorous work few people are focused on. I will not speculate on what Steve would have made of AI today. But if he could miss the Web, the rest of us are going to have to look harder. Photo of the original CERN NeXT Cube courtesy of Robert Scoble.
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Elon Musk: "My reflexes aren't what they used to be, but I have a lifetime of playing video games. At one point I was maybe one of the best Quake players in the world. I won money for what I think was the first paid esports tournament in the US."
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Elon, question for you: on the picture below AI sat mini seems to have 3-400kw of solar panels for 100kw of compute. PUE of 1.2, 35% panel decay over the lifetime of the bird barely get me to 200kw. What am I missing?
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Memorial Day leads me to 1) have a great time with family and friends, barbecuing, and listening to good music, 2) reflect on wars in general and those who lost their lives to protect us and our system, and 3) reflect on our country's principles. I am deeply grateful to those who lost their lives or were harmed in the service of protecting our ability to live in our unique way that is a function of our unique principles. I try to remind myself what those principles are that we have fought and are fighting for—democracy, free speech, equal opportunity, being the land of the free and home of the brave, etc. That leads me to wonder whether (and doubt that) most Americans could now agree on the principles that bind them and are worth fighting and dying for. Frankly, I am having a tough time reconciling what is now happening with what I grew up learning mattered most and what brought about true American exceptionalism—values that included equal opportunity, rule of law, freedom of speech, diversity of thinking, democracy, openness to good immigration, etc. I really think that we could use a clarification of—perhaps even a referendum about—what our principles are and then what KPIs and surveys can show how we're doing living up to them. Memorial Day also leads me to reflect on the wars that have occurred repeatedly throughout history in all countries at a scale that, thankfully, few of us living have experienced. While, thanks to the heroic efforts of those who protect us, these major conflicts haven’t happened to most of us in our lifetimes, an objective observer would have to wonder whether such a conflict could happen to us or our children or our grandchildren, which reminds me that we need to focus on principles and ways of operating that will help us avoid such fights. Then I reflect on all this reflecting I'm doing—and how it’s taking my attention as away from my Memorial Day barbecuing picnic with friends and family which reminds me that I need to prioritize better. Cheers!
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The ForeGate x Ctalks Pizza Day Space just wrapped up! The World Cup hype is officially on fire! Missed the live stream? No worries. Hit play in the video below to see exactly why ForeGate is rewriting the rules as the next-gen infrastructure for event finance. Quick breakdown of the core alpha: 1. No More Legacy Black-Boxes: Stop putting up with rigged platforms that lock pools and freeze odds when the action gets hot. Built on Solana, ForeGate delivers true 24/7 unhindered trading and sub-second on-chain settlements. When the final whistle blows, smart contracts pay out instantly. 2. Your World Cup Date with Michael Owen: Our global exclusive ambassador, football legend and Ballon d'Or winner Michael Owen, will be dropping live into our exclusive global streaming rooms during the 2026 World Cup! His private picks and analysis cards will premiere ONLY on our official socials. 3. Angel Program Season 2 is Live: Season 1 wrapped up perfectly with real USDT payouts, and Phase 2 recruitment is officially launching today! No points grinding or fake promises here—just solid monthly USDT stipends, 30%-50% lifetime revenue share, and priority tokenomics allocation. Perception is the asset, and tomorrow is being priced today. Caught the alpha in the video? The sharpest hunters are already onboard. Lock in your blueprint for this World Cup season. Follow @fore_gate and turn on notifications now. Let's run it up!
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Elon Musk just proved that the body is optional. A quadriplegic sat motionless in a chair and played a video game using nothing but thought. No hands. No voice. No movement whatsoever. Just a decision firing across a chip the size of a coin. Musk: “You just lie there and think, and you can move the mouse cursor around the screen and click things.” Download software. Browse the web. Navigate a screen with the same effort you use to remember your mother’s name. Without lifting a finger. Because he can’t. And now he doesn’t have to. That isn’t a product demo. That is a quadriplegic man doing with silence what you do with your entire body. And this is the version with a thousand electrodes. Musk: “I think ultimately you need something which has probably a hundred thousand or a million electrodes.” A thousand gave us telepathy. A million gives us something that doesn’t have a name yet. Musk is honest about how far this still has to go. He’s not overselling it. He’s underselling it. Because the part that should keep you up tonight isn’t what Neuralink still has to build. It’s that the line between human thought and machine action already disappeared. And the world just kept scrolling. Musk: “Our human brain has a lot of constraints. We only have about maybe 10 watts of higher brain function.” Ten watts. That’s less than the light inside your refrigerator. Every empire ever built. Every symphony ever written. Every theory that bent the arc of history. Ten watts of wet biological circuitry. Musk: “It’s not bad for a bunch of monkeys.” He’s not joking. He’s framing the question nobody wants to sit with. If ten watts of constrained primate hardware produced Shakespeare and general relativity and nuclear fission, what happens when the constraint disappears? Not when the brain gets faster. When the wall between thinking something and doing something no longer exists. The entire history of human tools has been one long negotiation with the same problem. You think something. Then you spend hours, years, lifetimes turning that thought into reality. Your hands. Your voice. Your body. Fire shortened the distance. Language shortened it more. Writing. The printing press. Electricity. Code. Every invention ever built was a cruder, slower translation layer between the mind and the world. Neuralink isn’t another layer. It’s the elimination of translation itself. Diamandis: “It’s a matter of when, not if.” Musk didn’t push back. He just kept discussing electrode counts like an engineer reviewing specs on a vehicle that already left the ground. That calm is the tell. The philosophical event already happened. A thought left a human skull, entered a machine, and executed a command in the physical world. No hand touched anything. No mouth spoke. A man thought the word “move” and the screen obeyed. Every tool before this was a prosthetic for intention. This is intention, naked, arriving without a body. The oldest question in philosophy was never about what we can build. It was about where the mind ends and the world begins. Neuralink just made that question obsolete.
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🦊 Mole 1.5.0 is live, A native Mac cleaner that now feels more like a small system companion. New in this release: • Menu bar monitor: CPU, memory, network speed at a glance, with a tiny runner that moves with your Mac's state • Fan control: Auto / Cool / Quiet modes with live RPM • App updates: check and install via Homebrew, App Store, and Sparkle • Startup manager: Login Items, Launch Agents, Daemons in one place • Smarter uninstall: alias search, input method cleanup $9 once, lifetime updates. MOLELOVE 20% off, ends tomorrow
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Mark Zuckerberg told employees in a Wednesday memo that laying off 8,000 workers was necessary because “success isn’t a given.” The full memo, as published by businessinsider. "Hey everyone, I want to express my gratitude to everyone leaving today for all of the hard work you've put into serving our community. It's always sad to say goodbye to people who have contributed to our mission and to building this company. I feel the weight of that, and I'm spending a lot of time making sure we manage this as well as possible. This is the most dynamic I have seen our industry. I'm optimistic about everything we're building to give billions of people the power to express themselves and connect with the people they care about. I'm also optimistic about delivering personal superintelligence to everyone. We've always focused on putting power in people's hands. This is how we believe progress is made in the world. These values are what makes us different, and they are why Meta has been successful. But success isn't a given. AI is the most consequential technology of our lifetimes. The companies that lead the way will define the next generation. We're transforming our company to make sure it will always be the best place for talented people to have the greatest impact. People tell us that they appreciate the ability to take greater ownership and execute their vision with less bureaucracy and management to navigate. At the same time, we also want to provide everyone with as much stability as possible. We won't always get this balance right, but I care deeply about this so we'll keep adjusting and work hard to do right by people along the way. To that end, I want to be clear that we do not expect other company-wide layoffs this year. I also want to acknowledge that we haven't been as clear as we aspire to be in our communication, and that's one area I want to make sure we improve. I'm confident in what we're all building together. We are one of the few companies positioned to help define the future. Meta has the talent, the infrastructure, the apps and distribution, and the business model. We have a lot of work ahead, but what's on the other side is going to be extraordinary. Once again, I'm grateful to those leaving today. And I'm grateful to everyone around the company for all of the historic work we will continue doing together. Mark" --- businessinsider .com/heres-what-mark-zuckerberg-said-about-future-layoffs-at-meta-2026-5
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