LogoThread Easy
  • Explorar
  • Criar thread
LogoThread Easy

Seu parceiro completo para threads do Twitter

© 2025 Thread Easy All Rights Reserved.

Explorar

Newest first — browse tweet threads

Keep on to blur preview images; turn off to show them clearly

我问 gpt-4.5:讲一个你认识到的——但是大多数人没有认识到的——深刻真相。

限定范围为我关注的主题:阅读、学习、信息、社会、家庭、技术、工具、英语、育儿、写作、方法论、系统;

然后一直追问:“更深刻的!”,连续问 7 次,从第 1 层深刻一直问到第 7 层深刻🤣

第1层:大部分人看似在“学习”,实际上只是在“消费信息”。

我问 gpt-4.5:讲一个你认识到的——但是大多数人没有认识到的——深刻真相。 限定范围为我关注的主题:阅读、学习、信息、社会、家庭、技术、工具、英语、育儿、写作、方法论、系统; 然后一直追问:“更深刻的!”,连续问 7 次,从第 1 层深刻一直问到第 7 层深刻🤣 第1层:大部分人看似在“学习”,实际上只是在“消费信息”。

第 2 层:学习和成长最关键的能力,不是获取信息,而是屏蔽信息。

avatar for howie.serious
howie.serious
Sat Mar 01 02:03:50
看我作为一个 AI 博主是如何用飞书 + 【可联网的】DeepSeek R1 搭建简单自动化工作流提升工作效率的

作为一个 AI 博主,日常一大部分工作是阅读和分享各种海外的AI资讯,这就少不了要翻译各种英文文章。之前我很多操作是手动的,比如复制粘贴文章到 Markdown 编辑器,然后从编辑器复制到 DeepSeek R1 或者 ChatGPT 去翻译,再改写后发布。

之前看 orange ai 分享的飞书多维表格接入 DeepSeek R1 的教程,【加上这周飞书的AI直播】,按照我自己的场景定制了几个工作流,最开始只是简单的文本翻译,后来发现也能用支持从图片提取文字,那意味着我可以直接先把图片转成文字,再基于翻译好的文本用 DeepSeek R1 翻译。简单设置后就成功了。

再后来我甚至更进一步,直接从 URL 抓取内容,然后借助 DeepSeek R1 翻译,最后甚至还可以把翻译后的文章用各种不同的文章风格改写,使用的时候只要输入 URL 就可以自动生成一篇高质量的文章,是真的很方便。

具体来说,就是飞书在添加字段的时候,可以选 ShortCuts(中文可能对应的是“快捷方式”),然后从快捷方式中选择各种不同的工具,比如说 AI 抓取、DeepSeek R1、图片 OCR、图片生成、抠图等等,并且你可以设置某个字段的内容为输入,以及自定义提示词。

就像我前面自动从 URL 生成文章的流程,主要有这样几个字段:

- URL:输入 URL
- 原始网页内容(AI Web Link Reader):从输入的 URL 中提取标题、内容为 Markdown 文本
- 翻译为中文(DeepSeek R1):将抓取后的 Markdown 文本翻译为中文
- 翻译为中文 - 输出结果:DeepSeek R1 的输出结果
- 风格改写(DeepSeek R1):将翻译后的内容用指定的风格改写,阅读起来更自然
- 风格改写 - 输出结果:DeepSeek R1 的输出结果

除了上面的 URL 生成文章外,里面还包含了几个不同的常用工作流:
- 将输入的文本内容翻译为中文
- 将输入的图片内容翻译为中文
- 生成多条爆款标题供选择

工作流的飞书模板链接🔗我放在了评论,建议你也可以试试,应该可以发掘出不少有意思的场景。⬇️

看我作为一个 AI 博主是如何用飞书 + 【可联网的】DeepSeek R1 搭建简单自动化工作流提升工作效率的 作为一个 AI 博主,日常一大部分工作是阅读和分享各种海外的AI资讯,这就少不了要翻译各种英文文章。之前我很多操作是手动的,比如复制粘贴文章到 Markdown 编辑器,然后从编辑器复制到 DeepSeek R1 或者 ChatGPT 去翻译,再改写后发布。 之前看 orange ai 分享的飞书多维表格接入 DeepSeek R1 的教程,【加上这周飞书的AI直播】,按照我自己的场景定制了几个工作流,最开始只是简单的文本翻译,后来发现也能用支持从图片提取文字,那意味着我可以直接先把图片转成文字,再基于翻译好的文本用 DeepSeek R1 翻译。简单设置后就成功了。 再后来我甚至更进一步,直接从 URL 抓取内容,然后借助 DeepSeek R1 翻译,最后甚至还可以把翻译后的文章用各种不同的文章风格改写,使用的时候只要输入 URL 就可以自动生成一篇高质量的文章,是真的很方便。 具体来说,就是飞书在添加字段的时候,可以选 ShortCuts(中文可能对应的是“快捷方式”),然后从快捷方式中选择各种不同的工具,比如说 AI 抓取、DeepSeek R1、图片 OCR、图片生成、抠图等等,并且你可以设置某个字段的内容为输入,以及自定义提示词。 就像我前面自动从 URL 生成文章的流程,主要有这样几个字段: - URL:输入 URL - 原始网页内容(AI Web Link Reader):从输入的 URL 中提取标题、内容为 Markdown 文本 - 翻译为中文(DeepSeek R1):将抓取后的 Markdown 文本翻译为中文 - 翻译为中文 - 输出结果:DeepSeek R1 的输出结果 - 风格改写(DeepSeek R1):将翻译后的内容用指定的风格改写,阅读起来更自然 - 风格改写 - 输出结果:DeepSeek R1 的输出结果 除了上面的 URL 生成文章外,里面还包含了几个不同的常用工作流: - 将输入的文本内容翻译为中文 - 将输入的图片内容翻译为中文 - 生成多条爆款标题供选择 工作流的飞书模板链接🔗我放在了评论,建议你也可以试试,应该可以发掘出不少有意思的场景。⬇️

下面就是我这套工作流的链接:

avatar for 宝玉
宝玉
Wed Feb 26 14:09:02
#分享 今天分享一个大家可能不常用,但非常有用的新功能 .cursor/rules,这个功能带来了对文件进行细粒度的控制。

简单来说,MDC Rules 告诉 Cursor 在面对大量的上下文时,如何筛选、排序和使用这些信息,从而让 LLM 的回答更精准切符合预期。

一些使用场景:

1. 对规则进行细化,比如对 ts(逻辑)、tsx(组件) 和 css(UI)应用不同的规则
2. Monorepo 下对不同的项目分配不同的规则

👇是一些具体的实操:

#分享 今天分享一个大家可能不常用,但非常有用的新功能 .cursor/rules,这个功能带来了对文件进行细粒度的控制。 简单来说,MDC Rules 告诉 Cursor 在面对大量的上下文时,如何筛选、排序和使用这些信息,从而让 LLM 的回答更精准切符合预期。 一些使用场景: 1. 对规则进行细化,比如对 ts(逻辑)、tsx(组件) 和 css(UI)应用不同的规则 2. Monorepo 下对不同的项目分配不同的规则 👇是一些具体的实操:

2. 在新版的配置中,.cursor/rules 在 Rules Tab 下 其中全局规则在所有对话中会被 cursor 作为上下文提交给 LLM。 而 .cursor/rules 则会根据文件匹配规则按需提交。 之前全局 .cursorrules 已经不建议使用 创建后的规则文件的后缀是 .mdc,项目根目录下可以找到。

avatar for nazha
nazha
Tue Feb 25 13:27:43
Ireland’s introduction to slavery began with Viking raids.

Starting in 795 AD, Norse invaders pillaged monastic towns like Armagh and Kildare, capturing Irish men and women as slaves.

Many were taken to Scotland, Norway, and Iceland, where they were ransomed, sold, or forced into labor.

Ireland’s introduction to slavery began with Viking raids. Starting in 795 AD, Norse invaders pillaged monastic towns like Armagh and Kildare, capturing Irish men and women as slaves. Many were taken to Scotland, Norway, and Iceland, where they were ransomed, sold, or forced into labor.

In 875, Irish slaves in Iceland staged a rebellion, one of the largest in Europe since the fall of Rome. By 1014, after the pivotal Battle of Clontarf, Viking dominance waned, and thousands of slaves were freed.

avatar for History Nerd
History Nerd
Sun Feb 23 23:43:33
分享一些AI课程资料,各位按需自取

【清华大学】DeepSeek从入门到精通(视频课程+PDF)
https://t.co/JBw3VuVPjm
【Sora资源最全合集】
https://t.co/r2DKXEXQwT
DeepSeek_V3 技术报告
https://t.co/9258eRVWLH
DeepSeek_R1论文

分享一些AI课程资料,各位按需自取 【清华大学】DeepSeek从入门到精通(视频课程+PDF) https://t.co/JBw3VuVPjm 【Sora资源最全合集】 https://t.co/r2DKXEXQwT DeepSeek_V3 技术报告 https://t.co/9258eRVWLH DeepSeek_R1论文

DeepSeek使用技巧大全 https://t.co/dN0d4FzyzA deepseek一键部署安装包 https://t.co/BAyeaOdnHL DeepSeek本地部署视频教程+全套安装包 https://t.co/ZXNJKG0NLR deepseek+飞书 批量处理表格+创建教程 https://t.co/cWD7eRJvu2 【AI大模型】-DeepSeek资料汇总

avatar for FREE 资源分享
FREE 资源分享
Fri Feb 21 01:44:08
1/3

Russia and the new US administration have the same goals, rip apart the EU by supporting extremist parties and destroying Ukraine as the last bastion and notion of the democratic world.

- Long read by Valeriy Pekar -

New Reality: A Brief Overview  

It took a week to piece together the chaos surrounding us. Now, we finally have a clearer picture. While this text could be supplemented with crucial details that will emerge later, I’m publishing it now to introduce this new reality. But first—make yourself some tea. You’ll need it to get through to the end.  

1. The end of the old world order  

The world order based on rules, agreements, and values no longer exists. It was never perfect, but it functioned—until now. Explaining its collapse requires a separate analysis, but in short: developed countries benefited from it, while developing ones sought to dismantle it. At some point, these developing nations—led by China—began catching up. Seeing this, the strongest developed nation, the U.S., decided to shift from preserving the old order to actively dismantling it. That’s why the American people elected Trump—he is not an anomaly but the embodiment of this trend.  

Before, while some chipped away at the structure, others reinforced it. Now, destruction is happening from both sides, accelerating the collapse. In this “new world without order,” the U.S. will not protect its European or Asian allies. There are no alliances or mutual obligations anymore—only strong nations taking what they want and weak nations suffering the consequences. At least, this is how the new American administration sees it.  

They are not isolationists—they are expansionists. Their claims over Greenland, Canada, or Panama should not come as a surprise.  

Of course, this administration is not monolithic. It consists of various factions with different values and interests, but two key groups stand out:  
- America First wants to destroy the old world order but strengthen the American state to dominate globally.  
- The Tech Oligarchs (more accurately, techno-fascists) want to destroy not only the world order but also the American state itself, so their tech corporations can rule unchallenged.  

These factions differ on taxes, intelligence agencies, and migration (the Tech Oligarchs need global talent, while America First opposes immigration). They will eventually clash, but for now, they are united in tearing down the old system.  

The new America no longer wants to be the world's policeman. It will not defend democracy, spread education, or develop institutions—it only wants your resources. Previously, this was China’s strategy. Now, America adopts it too.  

The U.S. no longer believes in multilateralism or international institutions. NATO, the WTO, or even the UN could soon face American withdrawal. Musk will argue it’s about saving U.S. funds, Trump will call these institutions dysfunctional, and the Project 2025 faction will claim America can handle aid and security without bureaucrats.  

2. What this means for Europe  

The security pact with Europe—Pax Americana—is over. The U.S. no longer sees Europe as an ally but as a competing power center. America, Russia, and China all share a common interest: weakening, dividing, and dismantling the European Union. They want to break it into isolated, vulnerable markets that can be exploited.  

It remains unclear how the U.S. envisions European spheres of influence—whether they will plunder it together or if Western Europe will be America’s exclusive domain while Eastern Europe is handed to Russia (as during the Cold War). But what’s clear is that the EU must be broken apart.  

To achieve this, the U.S. openly backs far-right Euroskeptics (Russia supports both the far-right and far-left). If strong individual leaders emerge in post-EU Europe, America will cooperate with them. For now, however, Washington...

1/3

1/3 Russia and the new US administration have the same goals, rip apart the EU by supporting extremist parties and destroying Ukraine as the last bastion and notion of the democratic world. - Long read by Valeriy Pekar - New Reality: A Brief Overview It took a week to piece together the chaos surrounding us. Now, we finally have a clearer picture. While this text could be supplemented with crucial details that will emerge later, I’m publishing it now to introduce this new reality. But first—make yourself some tea. You’ll need it to get through to the end. 1. The end of the old world order The world order based on rules, agreements, and values no longer exists. It was never perfect, but it functioned—until now. Explaining its collapse requires a separate analysis, but in short: developed countries benefited from it, while developing ones sought to dismantle it. At some point, these developing nations—led by China—began catching up. Seeing this, the strongest developed nation, the U.S., decided to shift from preserving the old order to actively dismantling it. That’s why the American people elected Trump—he is not an anomaly but the embodiment of this trend. Before, while some chipped away at the structure, others reinforced it. Now, destruction is happening from both sides, accelerating the collapse. In this “new world without order,” the U.S. will not protect its European or Asian allies. There are no alliances or mutual obligations anymore—only strong nations taking what they want and weak nations suffering the consequences. At least, this is how the new American administration sees it. They are not isolationists—they are expansionists. Their claims over Greenland, Canada, or Panama should not come as a surprise. Of course, this administration is not monolithic. It consists of various factions with different values and interests, but two key groups stand out: - America First wants to destroy the old world order but strengthen the American state to dominate globally. - The Tech Oligarchs (more accurately, techno-fascists) want to destroy not only the world order but also the American state itself, so their tech corporations can rule unchallenged. These factions differ on taxes, intelligence agencies, and migration (the Tech Oligarchs need global talent, while America First opposes immigration). They will eventually clash, but for now, they are united in tearing down the old system. The new America no longer wants to be the world's policeman. It will not defend democracy, spread education, or develop institutions—it only wants your resources. Previously, this was China’s strategy. Now, America adopts it too. The U.S. no longer believes in multilateralism or international institutions. NATO, the WTO, or even the UN could soon face American withdrawal. Musk will argue it’s about saving U.S. funds, Trump will call these institutions dysfunctional, and the Project 2025 faction will claim America can handle aid and security without bureaucrats. 2. What this means for Europe The security pact with Europe—Pax Americana—is over. The U.S. no longer sees Europe as an ally but as a competing power center. America, Russia, and China all share a common interest: weakening, dividing, and dismantling the European Union. They want to break it into isolated, vulnerable markets that can be exploited. It remains unclear how the U.S. envisions European spheres of influence—whether they will plunder it together or if Western Europe will be America’s exclusive domain while Eastern Europe is handed to Russia (as during the Cold War). But what’s clear is that the EU must be broken apart. To achieve this, the U.S. openly backs far-right Euroskeptics (Russia supports both the far-right and far-left). If strong individual leaders emerge in post-EU Europe, America will cooperate with them. For now, however, Washington... 1/3

2/3 ...sees no promising candidates in France, Germany, or the UK. 3. What this means for Russia America views China as its greatest adversary. This has led to what I consider the biggest geopolitical mistake of the 21st century: the belief that Russia can be turned against China. Every U.S. administration has initially attempted a "reset" with Russia, mistakenly treating it as part of Western civilization. These efforts always failed—but only after much damage was done. The current American administration’s biggest fear is the collapse of the Russian regime. Preventing this is now a priority. Two years ago, I warned that America’s fear of Russia losing would soon outweigh its fear of Ukraine losing. That moment has arrived. In his first month in office, Trump ended Russia’s international isolation. Instead of treating it as an aggressor and terrorist state, he presented Russia as a powerful nation that deserves a seat at the table. Sanctions may soon be lifted. Imagine if, during World War II, the U.S. had sent envoys to meet with Hitler instead of supporting Britain, claiming Poland and France were to blame for their own invasion. That’s where we are now. 4. What this means for Ukraine First, U.S. support for Ukraine is over—regardless of who wins the next election. Some Ukrainians believe parts of the American administration “hate” Ukraine while others “love” it. That’s a childish view. The reality is that Ukraine is simply irrelevant to them. The U.S. now has two objectives: - Weaken Europe to make it defenseless. - Strengthen Russia to use it against China. Ukraine stands in the way of both goals—so it must be punished. A new metaphor gaining traction in Washington compares the war to the American Civil War. In this view, Ukraine is a rebellious southern province, and the victorious Union (Russia) will eventually impose order. Foreign powers (the U.S. and EU) should stay out of a “civil war.” 5. What should Ukraine do? - Stop hoping to "win over" the American administration. Ukraine is an obstacle to their plans, not a partner. There is nothing to offer them. - Accept that U.S. aid is ending. The full consequences will be painful, far beyond the loss of USAID. But there is no way to prevent this. - Turn to Europe. Europe cannot survive without Ukraine, and Ukraine cannot survive without Europe. They must stand together or fall together. - Seek allies beyond the U.S. and EU. Turkey is a key player. Other potential allies must be identified. Ukraine must prioritize survival over ideology. 6. Russia’s next move: political war Since Russia cannot defeat Ukraine militarily, it will try to do so politically. That’s why pushing Ukraine into elections before a secure peace deal is disastrous. The U.S. and Russia are now aligned in promoting the idea of "elections first, peace later"—because it's the cheapest way to destroy Ukraine. If Ukraine collapses, it will not just lose statehood—it will lose millions of lives. Russia will mobilize everyone and launch a new wave of imperial expansion—this time into an undefended Europe. Trump wants a Nobel Peace Prize. He believes a ceasefire is enough to win it. But even if a peace deal is signed, and then broken, he will only blame Ukraine for rejecting his "greatest peace plan." 7. What must be done? - Acknowledge the crisis—Ukraine faces an existential threat. Political infighting must end, and leadership must unite the nation in survival. - Hold a strong, independent stance. Ukraine will not accept any terms that jeopardize its survival. - Improve governance and efficiency in every sector—military, economy, defense industry, and energy. - Mobilize allies while there is still time, with Europe as the priority... 2/3

avatar for Jay in Kyiv
Jay in Kyiv
Thu Feb 20 10:39:28
  • Previous
  • 1
  • More pages
  • 2083
  • 2084
  • 2085
  • More pages
  • 2118
  • Next