Shreya Murthy
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Brian Johnson's chiming in.
You can't go to a rich person's yacht or fly a private plane.
I think that Russia has invested more in Putin's longevity than AI.
Or close to it.
I was trying to figure out how many GPUs they had inside of Russia.
Well, all the best AI people left via Yandex and are now running Neoclouds and also ClickHouse.
Anyway, from mini pigs to an organ printing to cryotherapy and genetics, Russia's president has turned anti-aging research into a Kremlin priority.
And remember, he was caught on that hot mic with Xi Jinping saying,
saying that humans could achieve immortality by replacing their organs.
Some dismissed the exchange as eccentric small talk between aging autocrats.
In fact, during the conversation at a Beijing military parade last September, Putin appeared to be describing a Kremlin-backed longevity initiative that has become one of Russia's flagship scientific projects.
Like other Silicon Valley billionaires, Putin has been long fascinated with anti-aging research.
But in Russia, Putin's quest to stave off declines now a state priority.
Last month, Russia's government announced that scientists are developing a gene therapy treatment aimed at slowing cellular aging as part of the $26 billion longevity initiative.
The drug represents one of the most promising avenues in the fight against aging.
Another auspicious avenue, creating human organs in a lab for transplantation.
Sounds normal, a very normal thing to do.
One of the lifespan-expending innovations.
Pretty sure, wasn't Tyler trying to do something like that?
He's been doing that.