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“Suffice it to say, uh the standard count of how many mitzvot, how many commandments there are in the Torah, has it as 613, which is no small number.”
“It's a skill to get 4,000 views versus 13. to get 40,000 views versus 4,000 to get 4 million views. So, you've got to get good at the things.”
“The world is going to extreme tech or extreme analog.”
“I am asking all of you to call, text, write an email or a letter to every client you've ever had.”
“Google Adwords as we sit right now is in the same place that the yellow pages were in 2001. You might still be getting business from it, but it is declining rapidly.”
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All Summaries
48mPodcastGreat Books #10: Dante's Hierarchy of Hell
Dante's 'Inferno' posits that hell is a self-created prison stemming from unforgiven sins, not a divine punishment.
1h 21mEducationStanford CS336 Language Modeling from Scratch | Spring 2026 | Lecture 8: Parallelism
Training modern LLMs requires complex "4D" parallelism, combining data, tensor, pipeline, and expert strategies to overcome compute and memory bottlenecks across vast GPU clusters. However, this complexity comes at the cost of intricate system engineering and sophisticated hardware.
1h 22mEducationStanford CS336 Language Modeling from Scratch | Spring 2026 | Lecture 7: Parallelism
Training massive language models requires techniques like data, tensor, and pipeline parallelism to overcome GPU memory and speed limitations, but each introduces communication overhead.
1h 27mEducationStanford CS336 Language Modeling from Scratch | Spring 2026 | Lecture 6: Kernels, Triton, XLA
GPU programming requires deep hardware understanding, as performance hinges on managing memory hierarchy, warp execution, and bank conflicts, not just algorithmic correctness.
56mPodcastGame Theory #22: Twilight of the Nation-State
21st-century warfare has shifted from destroying military might to crippling nations by turning their populations against their governments through economic strangulation and infrastructure attacks, making the civilian population the primary target.
32mEntertainmentNobel Prize Just Given for Proving the Universe isn't Real
The universe is proven to be 'not locally real,' meaning it functions more like a video game simulation than a physical reality, and distant objects are not truly separate.
26mNews & PoliticsComedian and actor Lee Mack Q&A at the Oxford Union
Comedian Lee Mack reveals his secret to successful comedy: relentless self-doubt and a 'one in 25' joke success rate, explaining why the funniest people often don't pursue comedy.
1h 41mEducationStanford CME296 Diffusion & Large Vision Models | Spring 2026 | Lecture 4 - Latent Space & Guidance
Variational Autoencoders (VAEs) compress images into a structured meaningful latent space, but often produce blurry outputs, requiring perceptual or adversarial losses to fix.
30mEducationOn Vibe Coding
AI coding agents can now build custom apps instantly, potentially ending Apple's hardware dominance by shifting user interaction to conversational AI interfaces.
30mNews & PoliticsComedian and Actor Lee Mack Interview at the Oxford Union
Lee Mack believes comedy takes 15-20 years to master as 'being yourself' is difficult when starting out, and current stand-up is oversaturated, making it harder to earn a living.
2hPodcastSex Expert: What Women Actually Need To Enjoy Sex
Sexual function is declining due to distraction and stress, but can be revived by focusing on diet, exercise, stress management, and open communication about needs.
52mPodcastHow Do I Reverse Brain Rot?
Cognitive fitness requires a five-part routine, not just avoiding digital distractions. Cal Newport argues that daily reading, writing, thinking walks, phone-free time, and learning hard skills build mental resilience and focus.
1h 59mEntertainmentThe Real Reason A 3rd Assassin Just Tried to Kill Trump — And Who Hired Him
A third assassination attempt on Trump, fueled by rampant online conspiracy theories, highlights the breakdown of institutional trust and a dangerous societal trend of prioritizing sensationalism over verifiable facts.
1h 31mEducationPeterson Academy | Dr. Charles Calomiris | The History of Financial Crises | Lecture 1 (Official)
Financial crises aren't accidental bugs but 'adaptive' political choices stapled to desirable societal goals like democracy, innovation, and privacy. This suggests we're choosing to risk crises for other benefits.
1h 56mPodcastThe Extreme Crisis of Young Women - Freya India
Young women are increasingly unhappy and pessimistic despite societal gains, driven by a lack of genuine connection and the commodification of their lives by social media and a flawed mental health industry.
42mEntertainmentHow to find your thing
Forget 'follow your passion'; instead, 'follow your bliss' by embracing the 'blisters'—the enjoyable suffering—that indicate true enthusiasm and lead to mastery, not fleeting happiness.
2h 36mScienceMale Roles, Obligations and Options for Building a Fulfilling Life | Scott Galloway
Big Tech's algorithms exploit human vulnerabilities to foster isolation and anger, creating a generation of anxious, depressed young men lacking critical life skills — yet simple, proactive steps can defy these trends and bridge societal divides.
1h 11mPodcastSnapchat CEO: Why distribution has become the most important moat | Evan Spiegel
Distribution is the new moat for consumer tech, surpassing even AI-driven product advantages. Snap's success and hardware investments highlight the need for human-centric innovation beyond pure technology.
35mEducationWhy Mattering Matters | Rebecca Newberger Goldstein
Humans have a deep-seated "mattering instinct" to prove their self-importance is objectively warranted, but this drive can lead to destructive behaviors when misapplied.
40mScienceReplit's CEO On The Only Two Jobs Left In The Company Of The Future
Replit uses AI to let anyone build software with natural language, but traditional developers may not be its primary user base.
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