• just fxck around until you accidentally find the infinite money glitch
    just fxck around until you accidentally find the infinite money glitch
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    That's Fire
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  • You’re born onto a planet you never asked to exist on…


    and society immediately hits you with: “Okay, now go earn the right to eat, sleep, rest, and have shelter.”


    Like… zoom out for a second.


    We’re floating on a rock in infinite space and we created a game where you have to spend most of your life working just to not starve or freeze to death.


    The whole concept is actually insane when you think about it.

    You’re born onto a planet you never asked to exist on… and society immediately hits you with: “Okay, now go earn the right to eat, sleep, rest, and have shelter.” Like… zoom out for a second. We’re floating on a rock in infinite space and we created a game where you have to spend most of your life working just to not starve or freeze to death. The whole concept is actually insane when you think about it.
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    That's Fire
    Wow
    Ughh.... Sad
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  • Elon Musk just put an expiration date on the medical profession.

    And he gave it three years.

    The interviewer asked when Optimus would be a better surgeon than the best surgeons on Earth.

    Musk didn’t hesitate.

    Musk: “Three years. I’d say three years at scale.”

    Not a prototype. Not a lab experiment. At scale.

    To understand why that timeline is plausible, you have to understand the fundamental problem with human medicine.

    Musk: “Takes a super long time to learn to be a good doctor. And even then, the knowledge is constantly evolving. It’s hard to keep up with everything.”

    Musk: “Doctors have limited time. They make mistakes. How many great surgeons are there? Not that many.”

    That is the brutal reality of the greatest healthcare system humanity has ever built.

    It runs on exhausted humans with biological limits, trained over decades, who can only operate on one patient at a time.

    Optimus has none of those constraints.
    It doesn’t get tired.

    It doesn’t forget a study published last week.

    It doesn’t have an off day. It doesn’t have a caseload limit.

    And once you train one, you can manufacture ten thousand more with identical precision.

    Musk: “At that point, there will probably be more Optimus robots that are great surgeons than there are on Earth.”

    Think about what that actually means.

    The scarcity of elite surgical skill has been one of the defining limits of human healthcare since the beginning of medicine.

    Geography determined your odds of survival.

    Zip code determined your access to expertise.

    That bottleneck disappears overnight.

    Because you can’t train human surgeons fast enough to meet global demand.

    But you can manufacture infinite robots running identical perfect code.

    The most valuable skill in the world is about to become software.

    Infinitely replicable. Infinitely scalable. Available to every human being on Earth regardless of where they were born.

    Medical scarcity doesn’t fade gradually under that reality.

    It ends.
    Elon Musk just put an expiration date on the medical profession. And he gave it three years. The interviewer asked when Optimus would be a better surgeon than the best surgeons on Earth. Musk didn’t hesitate. Musk: “Three years. I’d say three years at scale.” Not a prototype. Not a lab experiment. At scale. To understand why that timeline is plausible, you have to understand the fundamental problem with human medicine. Musk: “Takes a super long time to learn to be a good doctor. And even then, the knowledge is constantly evolving. It’s hard to keep up with everything.” Musk: “Doctors have limited time. They make mistakes. How many great surgeons are there? Not that many.” That is the brutal reality of the greatest healthcare system humanity has ever built. It runs on exhausted humans with biological limits, trained over decades, who can only operate on one patient at a time. Optimus has none of those constraints. It doesn’t get tired. It doesn’t forget a study published last week. It doesn’t have an off day. It doesn’t have a caseload limit. And once you train one, you can manufacture ten thousand more with identical precision. Musk: “At that point, there will probably be more Optimus robots that are great surgeons than there are on Earth.” Think about what that actually means. The scarcity of elite surgical skill has been one of the defining limits of human healthcare since the beginning of medicine. Geography determined your odds of survival. Zip code determined your access to expertise. That bottleneck disappears overnight. Because you can’t train human surgeons fast enough to meet global demand. But you can manufacture infinite robots running identical perfect code. The most valuable skill in the world is about to become software. Infinitely replicable. Infinitely scalable. Available to every human being on Earth regardless of where they were born. Medical scarcity doesn’t fade gradually under that reality. It ends.
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    That's Fire
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  • Dating in 2025 is a joke. Everyone thinks they have infinite options. They don't care to try make things work, because it's easier to walk away and find another. One argument and they're off texting the next person. Everyone wants to be in a situation-ship. Commitment is "old school" Social media killed dating.
    Dating in 2025 is a joke. Everyone thinks they have infinite options. They don't care to try make things work, because it's easier to walk away and find another. One argument and they're off texting the next person. Everyone wants to be in a situation-ship. Commitment is "old school" Social media killed dating.
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