CoinCircleDreamer7740

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Coinbase has just included $PRL in its listing roadmap.
I'm optimistic about Perle @PerleLabs, and the reasoning is simple, with just two points: a legitimate background and solving AI's "inbreeding" crisis.
First, look at the team. Perle is essentially the core team from Scale AI starting their own venture. Scale AI is currently valued at $30 billion, Meta invested $14.3 billion into it, and the founder has a net worth of several billion dollars. Perle's CEO was previously the head of supply-side growth at Scale AI. The wealth effect in this sector has already been proven, and Perle is c
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Seeing that story about the Peking University master's graduate delivering food, I think the real issue isn't about "wasting education" or personal freedom at all.
In 2023, there were 11.58 million graduates, but the total new employment target for the whole year was only 12 million. That's not even counting the 500,000 mid-level talents being "returned" to society from internet tech giants.
The current job market is like a pressure cooker. Mid-career professionals with 3-5 years of experience are competing for the same positions at lower salaries. HR budgets are fixed, so they naturally prior
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Since its release, o1's biggest complaint has been that it's "too verbose."
I just wanted to fix a simple bug, and it gave me three background explanations, two solution approaches plus error handling, and even wished me good luck at the end.
I was only looking for a spelling error on line 12, but ended up getting a forced refresher on Python naming conventions.
This is RLHF's fault. Annotators tend to give higher scores to longer responses, thinking more text looks more professional.
So the model desperately piles on "seemingly useful" filler, while the actual core information gets diluted.
L
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Lao Huang says AI is a new industrial revolution, and I think he's half right.
The part that's right: The whole world is scrambling for GPUs, just like scrambling for oil back in the day. Training a large model burns enough electricity to power a small town. Big tech companies are lining up to send money to Nvidia, and some smaller companies are even paying in full half a year in advance just to get in line. The hype is real.
But to be blunt—what are you using AI for right now? Writing weekly reports, editing photos, chatting to kill time? Where's the world-changing disruption everyone promise
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# Fear is a signpost, not a roadblock
Last night I was reading through the *Zizhi Tongjian* and came across a detail that really struck me.
At the Battle of Gaixia, Liu Bang offered a bounty of a thousand gold and a marquisate for Xiang Yu's head, yet no one in the entire Han army dared to make a move. A young cavalry officer named Yang Xi was actually frightened back several miles by a single shout from Xiang Yu—but this guy turned around and charged back. He ultimately seized Xiang Yu's body and was ennobled for his service that day.
Same army, same opportunity in front of everyone. The only
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Staring at the K-line chart at 3 AM, you think you can push through for two more hours.
You wake up at noon the next day with a splitting headache, but your positions are adjusted, and the documents are submitted. You think it was worth it.
Until your body starts settling accounts with you in a different way.
There's a bizarre unspoken rule in the crypto circle: not pulling all-nighters = not working hard enough.
The market runs 24/7, time zone differences mean midnight meetings, and on-chain emergencies need immediate attention. Pulling an all-nighter occasionally is an emergency measure, but
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Sam's Club requires queuing at checkout, while Hema lets you scan and go. But Sam's Club steaks have neat cuts, while Hema's salmon has more scraps at the edges.
Both charge 260 in membership fees, but Sam's Club gives you parking spots and free samples, while Hema gives you app push notifications and discount coupons.
The former is like a wholesale warehouse, the latter is like a delivery platform with a warehouse. Going to Sam's Club is planned stock-up shopping, while going to Hema is spontaneous or when you're too lazy to cook.
Middle-class drivers and white-collar cyclists already have tw
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Here's an uncomfortable truth:
The scariest thing about AI isn't that it's "too smart"—it's that it's too standardized.
The copy it writes scores 80/100. The PowerPoint it creates scores 80/100. The code it writes scores 80/100. Everything is an 80.
What does that mean? It means people who used to get by on "pretty good" work are getting wiped out. Your output quality is basically the same as AI's, but you need a salary, you need rest, and you have mood swings. The boss isn't stupid.
McKinsey's data from last year: 60% of jobs have at least 30% of their tasks that can be AI-standardized. Notic
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# Aave's "Massive Slippage" is Actually Quite Interesting
This Aave "massive slippage" incident is actually pretty interesting. Many people's first reaction was: did the protocol get hacked? Not really that dramatic—it's more like a "chain reaction" caused by liquidity + mechanism + market sentiment stacking together.
Here's roughly what happened—
A large trader executed an extremely massive transaction in an Aave-related pool, with a single transaction size close to tens of millions of dollars (visible on-chain data). The problem is: the pool's actual liquidity depth wasn't nearly as deep as
AAVE-0,86%
UNI-0,66%
CRV-1,43%
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# AI-Generated Content Has a Tell: Every Sentence Tries to Be Right
One characteristic of AI-written content: every sentence wants to be correct, so every sentence plays it safe.
When humans write, we go off-topic, suddenly insert something unrelated, use the wrong word but are too lazy to fix it. These "flaws" are actually markers of authenticity.
The problem now isn't that AI writes poorly—it's that it writes too *perfectly*. In 280 characters, there's not a single wasted word, not a single emotionally abrupt turn.
You finish reading and can't remember a single sentence, but you also can't f
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Gate founder once again mentions AI+Web3.
The previous cycle was the Metaverse, and before that was DeFi 2.0. Every bull market, exchange founders look for a new narrative.
AI training data indeed requires incentive layers, but not every incentive layer needs to issue tokens.
Problems that Web3 can solve can also be addressed by Web2 databases + smart contracts, just without the liquidity premium.
Teams truly building AI infrastructure rarely mention token economics in their fundraising decks.
Instead, exchanges need new listings of assets.
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There is a statistic in the United States: the failure rate of veteran entrepreneurs is 30% lower than that of the general population.
Most people think that entrepreneurship requires creativity, passion, and the courage to go all in. But veterans bring a different set of skills: processes, discipline, and tolerance for uncertainty.
The core of military training is not to make you smarter, but to enable you to make decisions with incomplete information. On the battlefield, there are no perfect solutions—only moments when you have about 70% confidence to act. This mindset transfer to entrep
DEFI-3,46%
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You open your computer ready to write code, but suddenly remember that bug from yesterday still hasn't been fixed. You switch to the browser to look up documentation, and halfway through, you remember you need to reply to a customer email. After handling the email, you've already forgotten what you were just looking up. This kind of scenario repeats every day, fragmenting your work.
Hermes Agent's design logic is: prevent you from jumping back and forth between tools. It can directly integrate into your workflow, turning what normally requires opening five windows into a single conversation.
T
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OpenClaw's regulatory trouble isn't whether it will come, but when it will come.
On-chain automation sounds cool, but in the eyes of regulators, it's unlicensed financial services. The SEC's approach to DeFi protocols is simple: if you provide financial functions, you need a license. What is OpenClaw's current compliance strategy? It's unclear.
Geofencing can block access temporarily, but it can't prevent long-term tracing. The lessons from Tornado Cash are clear—technological neutrality is not a shield.
If you really want to survive, you either proactively engage with regulators and get licen
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Using an iPhone in China to activate eSIM is finally hassle-free—no more waiting in line at the carrier store!
1️⃣ The new iPhone 17e supports "AirDrop" transfer: just place your old iPhone (like an iPhone Air that only uses eSIM) nearby, and you can transfer the eSIM in a few steps.
2️⃣ You can also scan the carrier's QR code for instant activation, completely eliminating the need to visit the counter.
3️⃣ The 17e still features a physical SIM slot + eSIM dual solution, making it easy to switch numbers or carriers.
4️⃣ Following this trend, the iPhone 18 Pro/Max debuting this fall is likely t
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