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We've been thinking about alternative sources of data because of the shutdown and just this general defunding and antagonism towards businesses like the BLS.
Zach Dell argues that the current AI revolution is driving a generational increase in electricity demand, leading to a massive buildout of data centers. He believes this is the largest industrial buildout in U.S. history, which presents both challenges and opportunities for energy innovation.
Arena Magazine's upcoming issue 'Mission Critical' will focus on overlooked industries like electricity, nuclear power, and infrastructure, highlighting their importance to American security and prosperity.
James Nestor uses a CO2 monitor to track air quality in various environments, finding that many hotels and airplanes have high CO2 levels due to recirculated air, impacting health and comfort.
Even the ADP report had lots of notes about how the BLS data benchmark revision affected their model because their model is in part trained on and meant to mimic what they think is happening in the BLS.
The current AI investment is staggering, with projections indicating spending equivalent to an Apollo program every 10 months. This includes $400 billion by major tech companies this year alone.
The question I've gotten most over the past two months is, is there a good private sector replacement for the Bureau of Labor Statistics data? And the answer is unequivocally not.
There is a conspiracy theory that America does not have the 8,000 tons of gold it claims, as there's been no public audit. Elon Musk once proposed a live stream of a gold audit.
Elon Musk could leverage Apple's vast private data stores to create digital twins for users, enhancing AI capabilities while maintaining privacy.
The entertainment industry has become more analytical and data-driven, relying heavily on algorithms.