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Have asked LLMs for smallcap trading ideas on the ASX a few times.

Grok often suggested shares that jumped significantly within the next few weeks. Wondering if it's access to Twitter gave it an advantage in predicting major upswings based on general sentiment.


This was actually a plot point in Blade Runner 2049.


Bananas are good, berries and most leafy green vegetables. Avocados, sweet potatoes, nuts and legumes.

Switched to potassium-enriched salt for cooking so no-one else in the household has to suffer bland food.

Beetroot juice (+ apple & carrot to counter the acidity) is also something you could try. Actually good for your blood flow with potential flow on effect for your BP.

Personally taking Omega-3 and magnesium supplements.


Thanks for the info. Will look into the potassium enriched salt.


Did you try changing it to an eggplant? You may find that is also deemed inappropriate due to the similar connotations/appropriations associated with it.


Yes, it's one of the better cheeses if you're on a sodium-reduced diet. Fresh Mozzarella is another good one.

It's a fairly safe bet that the harder the cheese, the higher the sodium content.


Goatse?

Wouldn't recommend Googling it. You either know or just take a guess.


I googled a lot of shock sites after seeing them referenced and not knowing what they were. Luckily Google and Wikipedia tended to shield my innocent eyes while explaining what I should be seeing.

The first goatse I actually saw was in ASCII form, funnily enough.


I use the ASCII form to reply to spammers, since it will not trip up on an attachment filter or anything most usually. I get mixed results from them, but the results are usually funny.


I've never seen it in ASCII form, and I don't want to search for it as google will inevitably disregard my instructions and show me the 4K version in full color.


The Jason Scott method.


Exactly.

For example, pulling in to buy petrol because they're displayed price is good. You don't know how much you have available in the transaction account, but you have cash.


This hasn't been an issue in years.

I have a bank app. It's simple and works. Before that, they had a website. It's easy to check a balance in the morning and use that to guide you.

Before the internet was widespread, banks had a number you could call to get your balance. Heck, I think my current bank still has this, despite me being in a different country now.

Once you are in a situation where these aren't as helpful, you are probably in a bad life situation (speaking both from experience and observation of folks I know).


Kinda funny, I use my credit card for daily transactions because I know it's never declined. On the other hand, I might not have enough cash on me at all times.


Why not both? Why limit your financial vessels?


I do use both, but cash has a price to me (no free withdrawals in my country)


But that's not sustainable, pulling out random amounts out of your wallet without knowing your current balance will get you into cash flow problems.

If you are responsible and know your balance, then using a debit card, or equivalent app, is the same as using cash.


Thats insane. I always know what my balance is. Its right there on my phone.


Huh? I know my bank balance (it's right there on my phone) much more easily than counting up how much cash is in my wallet.


I don't do banking on my phone, and non-US currency where you can see what you have from the colour of the visible portion of the notes without opening the wallet.

Also unlike a phone I won't get fined for looking at my wallet while stopped at the lights.


So we should be talking about autonomous delivery of mealkits: HelloFresh, Marley Spoon, Dinnerly, Blue Apron, etc?


Aside from Blue Apron doing something of a reboot recently (and I wasn't wild about what they shipped me)--you don't hear much about the delivered meal kits for a variety of reasons. I know I don't care much for them--and it's not just cost.


It’s an incredibly narrow niche; those who want to cook at home but never progress past boxed ingredients.


At a fairly high price, with somewhat arbitrary company control over portion sizes, and locking you into typically two nights of next week’s menu. Many menu options I could replace with a lot of staple recipes from when I was going into office pretty much daily that would actually be faster from a combination of dry and frozen/preserved refrigerator ingredients.


A week before the election I bought shares in Lynas, (the major rare earth producer outside of China) when it seemed Trump could win.

Rare Earth exports was a known lever that the CCP uses in a trade war, and Trump was very likely to restart his previous one.

However, the Pentagon putting money into MP Materials was quite unexpected, and people are still throwing money at them.


The know-how has been lost so those currently looking to build plants have to relearn the processes. At the same time they need to examine new methods using different chemicals depending on the material they are extracting from and the particular impurities that need to be removed.

Ball park for a processing plant is 1.5b and 2-3 years from digging foundations to operations if the funds are there and it's fully approved. A lot of the metallurgical testing can be done in parallel with the build, but getting off-take partners requires being able to prove you can supply, and the off-take partners usually supply a lot of the funding.

Case in point, Lynas' Seadrift project in Texas is stalled and may not proceed due to an waste-water permitting issue and the USG not wanting to provide the additional funding required, or fully commit and guarantee off-take.


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