Tony Seba just made this insane solar prediction that is blowing my mind.
Tesla’s potential market size for its humanoid robot, Optimus, presents a massive opportunity worth trillions of dollars, far surpassing the impact of their electric vehicles.
Questions to inspire discussion.
What is the potential market size for Tesla’s humanoid robot, Optimus?
—The potential market size for Optimus presents a massive opportunity worth trillions of dollars, far surpassing the impact of Tesla’s electric vehicles.
If you think Tesla’s next generation bot, TeslaBot, looks good for no reason, then think again! Dr. Scott Walter and I go into the reasons that the way the new Optimus robot looks matter so much to the way it functions—and it’s pretty cool! Plus, Scott rants about the fraudulent copyright claims Univision laid on all TeslaBot videos!
Tesla is working on a $25,000 car expected to be released in 2024, which could potentially drive stock valuation and face potential demand issues.
Questions to inspire discussion.
When is Tesla expected to release a $25,000 car?
—Tesla is expected to release the $25,000 car in 2024, with the possibility of manufacturing and delivery by the end of the year.
Anna Lembke is professor of psychiatry at Stanford University School of Medicine and chief of the Stanford Addiction Medicine Dual Diagnosis Clinic. A clinician scholar, she has published more than a hundred peer-reviewed papers, book chapters, and commentaries.
Psychiatrist and author Dr. Anna Lembke discusses dopamine, addictive behaviors, warning signs and treatment for addiction, and how our brains handle all that pleasure and pain in life. Dr. Lembke is a professor of psychiatry at Stanford University School of Medicine and chief of the Stanford Addiction Medicine Dual Diagnosis Clinic. She appeared in the 2020 Netflix documentary The Social Dilemma to discuss the addictive nature of social media, and she is the author of the 2021 New York Times bestseller Dopamine Nation: Finding Balance in the Age of Indulgence, which explores how to moderate compulsive overconsumption in a dopamine-overloaded world.
Personal growth and success require a focus on emotional intelligence, individualized practices, and a shift away from material desires and instant gratification.
Questions to inspire discussion.
What is the key to success?
—The key to success is not just high IQ, but also emotional intelligence, self-awareness, and understanding oneself as a human instrument, which can lead to improvement in all aspects of life.
Dr. Alok Kanojia (Dr. K) is a psychiatrist, Harvard Medical School instructor, co-founder of HealthyGamerGG, Twitch streamer and a YouTuber. Humans face a predicament that has never been seen in our history, a massive overload in daily stimulation and information. The effect of constant exposure to social media, video games, and porn is not good, but thankfully there are a number of powerful ways to take back control of your attention. Expect to learn the correlation between video game usage and mental health, why our brains are uniquely addicted to looking at screens, whether dopamine fasting is actually legit, the problem with watching porn at a young age, how to combat screen addiction, why some people always feel like they have brain fog, how to find meaning in your life and much more…
Summary: Experienced meditators can voluntarily induce unconscious states, known as cessations, without the use of drugs. This ability, observed in Tibetan Buddhist practice, allows meditators to experience a momentary void of consciousness, followed by enhanced mental clarity.
Conducted across multiple countries, the study utilized EEG spectral analysis to objectively measure brain activity during these cessation events. By correlating the meditator’s first-person experience with neuroimaging data, researchers have gained insights into the profound modulation of consciousness achievable through advanced meditation practices.
The digital twin system created by Zhang, Ji, and their colleagues creates a virtual replica of a scene in which a human and robot agent are collaborating.
Robotics systems have already been introduced in numerous real-world settings, including some industrial and manufacturing facilities. In these facilities, robots can assist human assembly line and warehouse workers, assembling some parts of products with high precision and then handing them to human agents tasked with performing additional actions.
In recent years, roboticists and computer scientists have been trying to develop increasingly advanced systems that could enhance these interactions between robots and humans in industrial settings. Some proposed solutions rely on so-called ‘digital twin’ systems, virtual models designed to accurately reproduce a physical object, such as specific products or components that are being manufactured.
Researchers at Nanjing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics in China recently introduced a new digital twin system that could improve the collaboration between human and robotic agents in manufacturing settings. This system, introduced in a paper published in Robotics and Computer-Integrated Manufacturing, can create a virtual map of real-world environments to plan and execute suitable robot behaviors as they cooperate with humans on a given task.