@sjk3424: 5Cọ đắp mặt nạ silicon – Lông mềm, dễ vệ sinh, không gây kích ứng, phù hợp mọi loại da

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Thursday 31 July 2025 06:44:19 GMT
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Thoughts? In a widely shared clip from his interview on The Peter McCormack Show, #MicroStrategy founder and #Bitcoin advocate #MichaelSaylor argues that traditional advice to “work hard and build skills” is increasingly poor guidance for building wealth.    “You don’t want to make money by being talented and working hard,” Saylor states. “The robots are going to work hard. The cars are going to drive themselves.” He points to #AI’s rapid ability to replicate high-level human output: once trained on Shakespeare, it can generate sonnets rivaling the Bard. Similarly, years of specialized study for drafting complex legal documents or other cognitive tasks are losing value as automation scales. “Human capital is getting demonetized,” he concludes—meaning labor and skills that once commanded premium pay are becoming far cheaper or replaceable.    Saylor’s core message: In a world of a “billion robots” and advancing AI, success will increasingly favor those who own productive assets and leverage technology rather than compete directly against it. He urges people to adapt within roughly the next decade by focusing on capital ownership, such as Bitcoin or other scalable investments, instead of solely trading time and expertise.    The clip, posted by analyst Vivek Sen, has sparked lively debate online. Supporters agree that ownership and leverage trump raw effort in an automated economy. Critics—especially from trades, creative fields, and hands-on professions—push back, arguing AI lacks soul, originality, judgment, and reliability for nuanced human work like plumbing repairs, genuine artistry, or building real relationships. Many emphasize that hard work paired with smart investing still builds lasting value. Saylor’s provocative take highlights a broader shift: as AI and robotics transform the economy, the winners may be those who own the machines rather than those who race against them.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ #technocracy
Thoughts? In a widely shared clip from his interview on The Peter McCormack Show, #MicroStrategy founder and #Bitcoin advocate #MichaelSaylor argues that traditional advice to “work hard and build skills” is increasingly poor guidance for building wealth. “You don’t want to make money by being talented and working hard,” Saylor states. “The robots are going to work hard. The cars are going to drive themselves.” He points to #AI’s rapid ability to replicate high-level human output: once trained on Shakespeare, it can generate sonnets rivaling the Bard. Similarly, years of specialized study for drafting complex legal documents or other cognitive tasks are losing value as automation scales. “Human capital is getting demonetized,” he concludes—meaning labor and skills that once commanded premium pay are becoming far cheaper or replaceable. Saylor’s core message: In a world of a “billion robots” and advancing AI, success will increasingly favor those who own productive assets and leverage technology rather than compete directly against it. He urges people to adapt within roughly the next decade by focusing on capital ownership, such as Bitcoin or other scalable investments, instead of solely trading time and expertise. The clip, posted by analyst Vivek Sen, has sparked lively debate online. Supporters agree that ownership and leverage trump raw effort in an automated economy. Critics—especially from trades, creative fields, and hands-on professions—push back, arguing AI lacks soul, originality, judgment, and reliability for nuanced human work like plumbing repairs, genuine artistry, or building real relationships. Many emphasize that hard work paired with smart investing still builds lasting value. Saylor’s provocative take highlights a broader shift: as AI and robotics transform the economy, the winners may be those who own the machines rather than those who race against them.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ #technocracy

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