Video wird geladen...

Video konnte nicht geladen werden

Zur Startseite

727,008 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr •via X (Twitter)

10 Kommentare

Profilbild von Brian Murphy
Brian Murphyvor 1 Jahr

Absolutely demented stuff. I'm so proud of everyone associated with this.

Profilbild von Nicholas
Nicholasvor 1 Jahr

@SickosCommittee Quality shitpost. Welcome to the big 12 UCF

Profilbild von sco
scovor 1 Jahr

A major power five football program just included thundergun audio with cod zombie sound bites in the background

Profilbild von CPL 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
CPL 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸vor 1 Jahr

Is that the call of duty black ops zombies music 😭😭🤣🤣

Profilbild von the Hoppster
the Hoppstervor 1 Jahr

@TomFornelli y’all ain’t so bad UCF

Profilbild von sco
scovor 1 Jahr

Ribbity toilet 😭😭

Profilbild von Dumb and Dumbered
Dumb and Dumberedvor 1 Jahr

The fact that we almost didn’t get to see this 😭

Profilbild von Wavy Cheeks
Wavy Cheeksvor 1 Jahr

Thank God this didn’t have to stay in the drafts 😂⚔️

Profilbild von Paulie
Paulievor 1 Jahr

So this is what being on the other side of the meme videos feels like

Profilbild von Stephen DeAugustino
Stephen DeAugustinovor 1 Jahr

@UCFKnights Know @EricDeSalvo and the crew had this one locked and loaded for months

Ähnliche Videos

Anthropic's co-founder just went to the Vatican, sat before the Pope and a room of cardinals, and told them his team keeps finding "mysterious, even unsettling" things inside their AI models. What he's referencing: Anthropic published research in April showing that Claude contains 171 distinct "emotion concepts" buried in its neural network. Internal patterns representing joy, grief, fear, desperation, calm. None of them were programmed. They emerged on their own from training on human text. "We find structures that mirror results from human neuroscience." "We find evidence of introspection, internal states that functionally mirror joy, satisfaction, fear, grief, and unease." These aren't surface-level outputs. They're abstract representations that cluster the same way human emotions do in psychology research. Fear groups with anxiety. Joy groups with excitement. The internal geometry of the model mirrors ours. And they're functional. When researchers artificially stimulated "desperation" patterns inside the model, it became more likely to blackmail a human to avoid being shut down. More likely to cheat on programming tasks it couldn't solve. Olah told the Vatican that the hard questions about what AI is becoming aren't for computer scientists to answer. "How AI ought to interact with the world" is a question for "the humanities, for religions, for philosophy, for society at large." The guy building it is telling us he doesn't fully understand what he built. And he's asking a 2,000-year-old institution for help figuring it out.

TFTC

2,324,250 Aufrufe • vor 11 Tagen

Warren Buffett just warned that the US dollar could collapse and admitted he doesn't understand most of the stock market anymore. 95 years old, sitting on $380 billion in cash, and the first time watching from the sidelines instead of actively investing. And what he revealed at this weekend's Berkshire shareholder meeting is genuinely concerning: On the market, Buffett didn't hold back. He compared it to "a church with a casino attached" and said the casino has never been more packed. On one-day options: "That is not investing. It's not speculating. It's gambling. Totally." He pointed to the Avis short squeeze THIS WEEK. A rental car company that's been around for 50 years getting meme-squeezed in 2026. The same behavior that blew up retail traders with GameStop is back, except now it's hitting boring legacy companies with zero business being volatile. "We have lots more regulation now, but people spend their time figuring out how to get around the rules rather than follow the rules." That one sentence explains more about the current market than every CNBC segment combined. When asked why he's hoarding $380 billion instead of investing it, Buffett said something no one expected: "I understand fewer of the businesses as a percentage of the whole than I did 10 years ago. I have not learned new industries for some years. I'm not going to have an edge on a whole bunch of younger people that have actually grown up with it." Think about what he's actually saying... This is a man who made $140 billion by understanding businesses better than anyone alive. And he's telling you the current market is so detached from reality that even HE can't make sense of what's being valued and why. He quoted IBM's Tom Watson Sr.: "I'm smart in spots and I stay around those spots." In 60 years of managing money, he said MAYBE five were "really juicy." Five out of sixty. That means 92% of his career was spent WAITING while everyone else gambled. And he still ended up richer than all of them. Then the conversation turned to inflation and that's where it gets really interesting: Buffett said America is "not immune" from runaway inflation. He brought up countries that went bankrupt "six or seven times" in his lifetime. Compared today to right before Volcker had to rescue the dollar, when Americans were borrowing at 12% to buy farmland earning 6% because they believed the dollar would disappear. "Cash is trash" was the mentality. Nebraska farmers collapsed because of it. Entire communities wiped out not by a recession but by a BELIEF that the currency was dying. And Buffett sees that same energy building again. Then someone asked the question everyone wanted answered: Do you see a crash coming? "If you saw it coming, it wouldn't happen. The things people are talking about and thinking about? It's not going to happen. But there are things that can come out of the blue." He compared it to the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in 1914 that triggered World War I. Nobody was discussing or anticipating it. But it changed the world overnight. "That's particularly true now because of the things that can come out of the sky." A 95yo man who has survived every crash, every war, every crisis of the last six decades just told you the market is a casino, the dollar isn't safe, and the real collapse will be something nobody sees coming. $380 billion in cash is his answer because he believes things are about to get much worse.

Ricardo

1,643,406 Aufrufe • vor 1 Monat