This is the most gut-wrenching blog I've read, because it's so real and so close to heart. The author is no longer with us. I'm in tears. AI is not supposed to be 200B weights of stress and pain. It used to be a place of coffee-infused eureka moments, of exciting late-night arxiv https://t.co/ThwU3PrF1Y

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This is the most gut-wrenching blog I've read, because it's so real and so close to heart. The author is no longer with us. I'm in tears. AI is not supposed to be 200B weights of stress and pain. It used to be a place of coffee-infused eureka moments, of exciting late-night arxiv safaris, of wicked smart ideas that put smile on our faces. But all the incoming capital and attention seem to be forcing everyone to race to the bottom. Jensen always tells us not to use phrases like "beat this, crush that". I absolutely love this perspective. We are here to lift up an entire ecosystem, not to send anyone to oblivion. I like to think of my work as expanding the pie. We need to bake the pie first, together, the bigger the better, before dividing it. It gives me comfort knowing that our team's works moved the needle for robotics, even just by a tiny bit. AI is not a zero sum game. In fact, it is perhaps the most positive-sum game that humanity ever plays. And we as a community should act this way. Take care of each other. Send love to "competitors" - because in the grand schemes of things, we are all coauthors of an accelerated future. I never had the privilege to know Felix irl, but I loved his research taste and set up Google Scholar alert for every one of his new papers. His works in agents and VLMs had a big influence on mine. He would've been a great friend. I want to get to know him, but I couldn't any more. RIP Felix. May the next world have no wars to fight.