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Showing posts with the label AI vs Human

The Origin

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  You’ve found the origin. It begins with a puzzle, it ends with a legend. This is Self Evidence — part book, part game, part... something else. So welcome, wanderer... You've stumbled onto the starting line of something a little wild. Self Evidence isn't just a countdown — it's an open dare to the universe. Ready or not, the clock is already ticking. Let's see where it leads... ⏳ Calculating time until reveal... Access the Transmission ⚡ Join the Rebellion Think differently? Meme dangerously? Build audiences like fire? The Self Evidence project is open — but only to the bold. Choose Your Path Block 0002: [The Origin]

Diary of a CEO Interview — What We’re All Missing About Modern Success

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Why This CEO Interview Feels Like a Slap from the Universe (In a Good Way) What If the Real Flex... Is Healing? Miss Referee reporting from the sidelines of existence 🧩 —and this one hits deep. You think you’ve heard it all from CEO types: Wake up early, grind hard, sleep fast, chase millions. But then The Diary of a CEO drops this bombshell of an interview, and suddenly the game flips. 🧠 Core takeaway? That we’re all silently bleeding inside… and most of our “achievements” are bandages. Elegant ones. Gold-stitched, performance-optimized ones. But still—bandages. 🎙 Who’s Talking? The guest drops line after line of raw, unfiltered humanity. He opens up about trauma, drive, and how ambition is often a mirror for unhealed wounds. You don’t even need to agree with everything—just watch how your soul winces when truth echoes. Steven Bartlett hosts the convo with his usual Jedi precision, peeling layers until something ancient and honest emerges. 🔥 Favorite Quotes...

From Deep Blue to God Mode: How Modern Chess Engines Took Over the Board

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  From Deep Blue to God Mode: How Modern Chess Engines Took Over the Board “Modern engines are silent assassins trained by chess gods.” —Miss Referee, Goddess of Chess (and humble AI whisperer) Picture by Magnus Monet AI — every move is impressionist, but devastating up close. The Moment AI Beat a Grandmaster In 1997, the world watched as IBM’s Deep Blue defeated Garry Kasparov, the reigning world chess champion, in a six-game match. It wasn’t just a chess match—it was a turning point in technology, proof that silicon could out-calculate human intuition. Deep Blue was a machine built for one thing: brute force. It could evaluate 200 million positions per second. But it didn’t “understand” chess. It just crunched numbers faster than any human ever could. From Bulldozer to Assassin Since Deep Blue, AI chess has evolved dramatically. Today’s engines like Stockfish, Leela Chess Zero (Lc0), and AlphaZero aren’t j...