Silicon Valley Billionaire's 30-Year Business Experience Review: All the Goals I Pursued in the Past Were Stupid

marsbit發佈於 2026-02-26更新於 2026-02-26

文章摘要

Silicon Valley billionaire Chamath Palihapitiya reflects on 30 years of business experience, concluding that the goals he once valued—promotions, titles, wealth, and status—were ultimately "stupid." He argues that goal-oriented living creates a trap: achieving targets leads to stagnation, while process-focused living fosters continuous growth. He advises setting boundary conditions instead of goals: avoid debt (it limits freedom), practice humility (to see reality clearly), and surround yourself with younger people (to stay updated). He emphasizes maintaining "optionality"—keeping choices open—and warns against optimizing for salary or social validation. True success comes from embracing learning, taking risks, and ignoring externally defined status. Palihapitiya shares personal lessons: complete honesty in relationships is crucial, and geographic mobility (e.g., moving to industry hubs) accelerates growth. He uses the metaphor of a rat surviving 60 hours in water (vs. 4 minutes) when saved once—highlighting how hope and resilience unlock potential. Ultimately, he urges focusing on meaningful processes over arbitrary milestones.

Author: Deep Thought Circle

Have you ever thought that the goals you strive so hard to pursue might be the very things holding you back from success? Promotions, salary increases, titles, social status—these seemingly natural life milestones might actually be trapping you in an elaborately designed pitfall. Recently, I watched a video where Chamath Palihapitiya, an early Facebook executive and well-known investor, summarized his 30 years of business experience in 13 minutes. One sentence he said completely shocked me: "It took me 30 years to realize that all the goals I desperately pursued were stupid." This isn't some clichéd motivational talk; it's the profound reflection of a billionaire after countless successes and failures.

Chamath's resume is legendary in itself. He was a core member of Facebook's growth team and later founded the venture capital firm Social Capital, investing in countless successful tech companies. When someone like this tells you that most of what he pursued over the past 30 years was wrong, what would you think? When I first heard this viewpoint, I was resistant. Because it completely颠覆了 the success principles we've been taught since childhood. We are educated to set goals, make plans, and achieve milestones step by step. But Chamath tells us that this way of thinking is itself problematic.

Why Goals Become Your Enemy

Chamath's first core point made me think for a long time: you can never stop. This sounds strange, but he explains that most people frame life as a series of goals. The problem with goals is that when you achieve enough of them, you think, "I've made it, I can stop now." This mindset causes people to lose motivation at some point, to lose the reason to keep moving forward.

I deeply understand this feeling. At a certain stage in my career, after achieving some self-set goals, I did feel a sense of emptiness. That "what next?" confusion made me unsure of what to do next. Chamath observed that many people he once greatly respected stopped in their 50s. They were no longer active in the industry, no longer challenged themselves, no longer learned new things. In his words, "they are no longer in the arena."

Conversely, he cited the example of Buffett. Buffett is still working at 95 and only recently began to step back. And Charlie Munger essentially passed away on the job. What do these people have in common? They are not committed to achieving a series of goals, but to continuous learning, constant risk-taking, and associating with interesting people. It is this mindset that keeps them sharp and vibrant.

This viewpoint made me re-examine my career planning. I did set many specific goals in the past: reach a certain position by a certain age, earn a certain income, achieve a certain level of financial freedom. But now I realize that these goals themselves might be harmful. Because once achieved, you lose the motivation to continue. But if you focus on the process—continuous learning, constant growth, challenging yourself—you will never stop.

Chamath said if someone had told him this earlier, he would have made very different decisions. He would have optimized less for money, taken more risks, even more than when he was young. This sentence is particularly interesting because it reveals a counterintuitive truth: true success is not achieved by optimizing short-term goals, but by long-term commitment to the process.

Three Boundary Conditions: How to Live in the Process

If you want to abandon a goal-oriented life and embrace a process-oriented life, Chamath believes you need to set some very good boundary conditions. These boundary conditions are not goals, but principles, bottom lines you cannot violate under any circumstances. He proposed three specific boundary conditions, each of which resonated deeply with me.

The first boundary condition is: No debt. This sounds simple, but Chamath explains that debt is something that will make you stop. It will make you stop learning, stop taking risks, make you start pursuing short-term goals, most obviously pursuing money. All these short-term optimizations will have a huge impact on your life in the next 20, 30, 40 years.

I completely agree with this view. Debt is not just a financial burden, but also a psychological shackle. When you are in debt, your decisions become distorted. You might放弃 an interesting but lower-paying opportunity for a boring but high-paying job, just because you need to pay off debt. You might stay longer at a company you don't like because you need a stable cash flow. Debt robs you of the freedom of choice, and the freedom of choice is the most important prerequisite for living in the process.

Chamath specifically mentioned a phenomenon that is especially dangerous for the younger generation: people spend a lot of time on social media, watching people who are essentially lying to you展示 their fake lives. Too many people are deceived by this fake life, thinking it is real life, and then start pursuing the same lifestyle. All of this revolves around money. No one is praised by society for being终身 committed to the process. Perhaps Kobe Bryant was an exception, but unfortunately he is no longer with us.

This passage reminded me of the wealth-flaunting content on social media. Designer bags, luxury cars, extravagant travel—this content constantly刺激 young people's consumption desires. To live this kind of life, many people go into debt to consume,透支 the future. But in fact, many of those展示ing luxurious lives on social media are themselves burdened with huge debts, or their lives are far less glamorous than they appear. Pursuing this fake lifestyle will eventually trap you in a debt trap, preventing you from focusing on what truly matters.

The second boundary condition is: Manage your life with humility. Chamath said this was a lesson it took him a long time to learn. What does humility mean? It means you must be extremely honest about today's reality. Because only then can you truly see the essence of things, can you share the truth with others, and create genuine resonance with them.

This viewpoint touched me. Humility is not self-deprecation, but an honest assessment of your own capabilities and limitations. In entrepreneurship and work, I have seen too many cases of failure due to lack of humility. Some people are overconfident, unwilling to admit their mistakes, and end up going down a dead end. Some are afraid to expose their weaknesses, always trying to project a perfect image, and end up losing the opportunity to connect sincerely with others. True humility is admitting "I don't know," being willing to learn, daring to say "I was wrong."

The third boundary condition is: Surround yourself with people younger than you. Chamath said young people see the world completely differently. Their biases are different, their mental frameworks are different. Although often he feels he has learned enough and doesn't need to be told he's wrong, the opposite is true. The more time he spends with young people, the more he realizes that everything he knows is trapped at a certain point in time.

This is a very profound insight. Our knowledge and experience always have a shelf life. What is correct today may be obsolete tomorrow. Methods that work today may fail tomorrow. And young people are like an early warning system for the future; they can help you see how the world is changing. Chamath said that at some point, the way he thinks things should work will be completely opposite to how they actually work. This realization requires courage because it means admitting that your knowledge is becoming outdated.

I have had similar experiences. When I communicate with people ten years younger than me, I am often shocked by their views. Their understanding of technology, their use of social media, their acceptance of new business models far exceed my imagination. If I cling to my own认知 and refuse to listen to young people's opinions, I will quickly become rigid and outdated.

Those Stupid Goals

Chamath frankly listed the "stupid goals" he pursued in the past. When he was a director, he wanted to be a VP. When he was a VP, he wanted to be a SVP. When he was a SVP, he wanted to become a principal at a venture capital firm, then a general partner. At Facebook, he was part of the management team, he wanted more equity. These were all stupid goals.

This confession震撼 me. Because these goals don't seem stupid at all. They are things most professionals dream of. From director to VP, from employee to partner, from management to more equity—isn't this exactly the career path we are taught to pursue? But Chamath says these stupid goals took him away from being 100% his true self. They turned him into a caricature of himself,放大 certain small aspects of himself, making them represent a larger version of himself. Not only to himself, but to those around him as well.

I understand what he means. When you pursue these external goals, you subconsciously adjust your behavior to meet the expectations of that role. You might suppress some of your traits, amplify others, because you think it will help you achieve the goal. But in this process, you gradually lose yourself. You become a distorted version of yourself striving to achieve goals, not the most authentic, complete you.

Chamath admitted that these things can only be learned through time. Everyone in their 40s and 50s will nod in agreement when they hear what he says. But everyone in their 20s and 30s will think "this isn't for me." So you have two choices: the easy way or the hard way. The easy way is to do these few simple things. The hard way is to spend 30 years learning this lesson yourself.

This reminds me of a classic paradox: when we are young, we have time and energy but lack wisdom and experience; when we are old, we have wisdom and experience but have lost time and energy. If we could understand these principles when young, how much time and energy could we save? But the problem is, these principles often must be truly understood through personal experience. Just hearing others say it is not enough.

Optionality: Maintaining Freedom of Choice

One of the most important principles Chamath proposed is: Maintain optionality at all costs. He said he strives to maintain optionality in business, in negotiations. Finding win-win spaces is a very powerful thing that has helped him greatly.

What does optionality mean? It means keeping your options open, not trapping yourself on a single path. When you have optionality, you can flexibly adjust according to changing circumstances. When an opportunity is not suitable, you can say no. When a better opportunity arises, you can seize it immediately. And when you lose optionality, you are trapped. You must accept the option in front of you, even if it is not the best.

Chamath explained that the benefit of maintaining optionality is that it protects relationships, protects others' self-esteem, protects others' emotions. It forces him to be more restrained, to listen more and speak less. It turns out that many people self-destruct by doing stupid things. And for him, this framework has helped him avoid that situation to the greatest extent.

I deeply agree with this view. In my career, the decisions that maintained optionality always led to better results. For example, I once refused a high-paying job that required a long-term contract, opting instead for a flexible but lower-paying opportunity. A few months later, a better opportunity appeared, and because I wasn't bound by a contract, I was able to seize it immediately. Colleagues who accepted long-term contracts could only watch the opportunity slip away.

Debt is the biggest enemy that destroys optionality. When you are in debt, you must make monthly payments, which means you must have a stable income. This need limits your choices. You may have to accept a job you don't like, simply because it provides a stable income. If you have no debt, you have the freedom to explore, to take risks, to pursue opportunities that may not bring immediate income but are more valuable in the long run.

Chamath also shared a more philosophical thought. He said, if we truly live in a simulated world, one level of the game is actually to show you the existence of these secrets and give you a chance. He is almost 50 now and finds these secrets being revealed to him. He said "Wow, this is incredible. I didn't know this when I was young, even if someone tried to tell me, I ignored it." So he is just offering this advice, knowing most people will also ignore it, but eventually everyone will go through this process.

This metaphor is interesting. Life is indeed like a game, some secrets are only unlocked after you reach a certain level. But the irony is, when you truly understand these secrets, you may have missed the best time to use them. That's why listening to the advice of elders is so important, even if you can't fully understand it at the time.

Complete Honesty in Relationships

When talking about interpersonal relationships, Chamath shared the most important lesson he learned: It is crucial to marry someone who 100% supports you. And the only way to get that support is to be completely honest.

He admitted that honesty is very difficult for many people. He himself didn't know how to be completely honest. He would share most things, but not everything. This was part of the lifestyle he learned in his family. But if you don't learn this lesson, it will come back to bite you.

Chamath said that in relationships, having your co-founder, your wife by your side is really important. He went through a divorce, saying it was almost like a family member dying. What was missing in the first marriage? It was the lack of completely raw, unfiltered, pure honesty. When things were good, they could celebrate together. But when things were bad, you could point it out, name it. And they didn't do that. The second marriage is completely different; he said finding this kind of relationship is a blessing.

This passage reminded me of many problems in marital or partner relationships. Many people think that保留 some secrets, glossing over some truths is necessary in a relationship, to protect the other person or maintain peace. But Chamath's experience tells us the opposite. Lack of complete honesty plants time bombs in relationships. Small problems accumulate into big ones because they are not pointed out in time. Misunderstandings ferment into resentment because they are not clarified.

What does complete honesty mean? It means when you feel dissatisfied, you speak up. When you make a mistake, you admit it. When you are afraid, you confess. This requires great courage because honesty makes you vulnerable. But only through this vulnerability can you build truly deep connections. Only when your partner knows the real you, including your weaknesses and fears, can they truly support you.

The same is true in business relationships. The most successful partnerships are often built on complete honesty. When you can坦率地 discuss disagreements with your partners, admit mistakes, share concerns, then you can face challenges together and make the best decisions.

Career Advice for Young People

Chamath offered very specific advice for young and ambitious people. The first and most important one: You must go to Broadway (here meaning the main stage).

He explained, depending on what you want to do, if you want to go into politics, you need to go to Washington D.C. It might take one or two turns to get there, maybe you need to go to the state capital first, but start there, then go to Washington. If you want to do finance, you need to go to New York or London. If you want to do cryptocurrency, you might need to go to Abu Dhabi. If you want to do tech, simply put, you need to go to Silicon Valley. There are no shortcuts to these decisions.

This advice seems simple, but executing it requires courage. It means you might need to leave your hometown, leave your comfort zone, and start over in an unfamiliar city. But Chamath's point is, you must go where the fish are. If you want to catch big fish, you can't stay in a small pond.

I strongly agree with this view. The impact of geographical location on career development is far greater than most people imagine. In the right place, you will meet the right people,接触 the right opportunities, learn the right things. In Silicon Valley, you are surrounded by entrepreneurs and investors, and you will naturally absorb that startup culture. In New York, you will接触 elites in finance and media. And if you stay in a place unrelated to your career goals, you will miss too many opportunities.

Chamath's second piece of advice is: Don't optimize for compensation. This is why you need to live humbly. You should optimize for opportunity. When an opportunity to work with people smarter than you arises, and it feels like it might be a rocket ship, you jump on and hold tight. When you don't do this, but put all other nonsense first, you will fail, and eventually you will look back, and you will be miserable. But that's because you let all these stupid indirect factors get in the way.

This advice is completely opposite to what we are taught from childhood. We are taught to fight for the best salary, to bargain for our worth. But what Chamath is saying is that in the early stages of a career, opportunities for learning and growth are far more important than salary. A low-paying job that allows you to grow quickly is more valuable in the long run than a high-paying job that keeps you stagnant.

Chamath specifically mentioned young people talking about work-life balance. He said he doesn't even understand what that means. When you are in a vibe state and a flow state, it means you are working in a way that gives you a sense of purpose, you are living in a way that gives you a sense of purpose, you are blending them together. This is what you want. You are in a continuous process, constantly adding things that make your life better.

This view might be controversial, but I understand what he means. True work-life balance is not strictly separating work and life, working 8 hours a day and then completely disconnecting. It is finding a way of working where work itself becomes a meaningful part of your life. When you love your work, when it aligns with your values, when it gives you a sense of accomplishment, the boundary between work and life becomes blurred, but this is not a bad thing.

The Rat and Water Experiment

Chamath shared a震撼ing experiment. Scientists put rats into large jars filled with water and measured how long it took for them to drown. On average, it was about four and a half minutes. Then they repeated the experiment. They put the rat in, and about 30 seconds before the rat was about to drown, they pulled it out. They dried it off, comforted it, and then put the rat back in the water. This time the same rat could survive in the water for an average of 60 hours.

What is the difference between a rat that drowns in 4 minutes and a rat that survives 60 hours? No one knows for sure, except what we can speculate, and that is the brain. It is the brain that unlocked the resilience and survival ability within the rat. This is what everyone should find: a place that allows you to go deep into your brain and unlock levels you thought were impossible for you.

This experiment deeply moved me. What did the rat know the second time it was put in the water? It knew someone would come to save it. It had hope. And hope increased its survival ability by nearly 800 times. What does this tell us? It tells us that human potential far exceeds our imagination. When we believe it is possible, when we have hope, we can do things we thought were impossible.

Chamath said Navy Seals talk about this, athletes talk about this. But in business, the great thing is that we have no expiration date. Unlike a Navy Seal or an athlete who has a physical expiration date of 10 to 15 years, we can play this game forever. So you must find a place that allows you to be that rat struggling in the water for 60 hours, because it will profoundly change you in a way you can only understand by experiencing it. Then you will look at other people, and you just don't understand why no one gets this.

This passage reminded me of the common characteristics of truly successful people. They have all experienced some kind of test, some experience that made them break through their perceived limits. It might be an extremely challenging project, a resurgence after a failure, completing a seemingly impossible task under extreme pressure. These experiences changed them, made them realize their potential far exceeded their imagination.

And the beauty of business is that, unlike sports which have age limits, you can pursue this breakthrough indefinitely. A 60-year-old can still start a business, a 70-year-old can still learn new skills, an 80-year-old can still contribute. Buffett and Munger are the best examples. This quality of having no expiration date makes business the perfect stage for lifelong learning and growth.

Status is a Trap

Chamath's view on status is perhaps the most颠覆性 in the entire video. He said, the most important thing about status is: it is completely man-made, completely irrelevant. It is something people use to deceive others into wasting precious time. If you know this, one of the most powerful things you can do is to ignore all the ways society tries to give you status.

Why? Because what society is actually doing is putting a small hook in you to pull you back. If you start to believe in these things, these are things that are externally validated by others. Then someone is able to exercise some degree of judgment over you. Maybe small, maybe large. When you chase enough of these things, chase enough status, you become completely subject to people who don't care about your best interests.

Chamath said he learned this the hard way, because there were many things he always wanted because he thought they were important. Getting on this list, entering that club, being invited to this event. But all these things are unimportant because they are completely artificial. You扭曲 yourself, sometimes you even bend your expectations and behavior to be part of it or be recognized, and then you become less complete.

This view made me reflect a lot. Our society is filled with various status symbols. Prestigious degrees, titles at big companies,豪华 offices, expensive cars, membership in exclusive clubs. We are taught to pursue these things because they represent success. But Chamath tells us these are all traps.

Why are they traps? Because once you start caring about these status symbols, you adjust your behavior based on them. You will do things that enhance your status, even if that's not what you really want to do. You will avoid doing things that might damage your status, even if it might be the right choice. You will care about how others see you, care about your position in various rankings. This caring will bind you, make you lose freedom.

Chamath said status is a completely man-made, corrosive thing that society uses to stop you. The more you can摆脱 it, it becomes a superpower. This view might sound radical, but think about those who truly change the world, many don't care about traditional status symbols. They follow their curiosity, do what they think is important, not what society thinks is important.

I am also trying to摆脱 the attachment to status. I find that when I stop caring about how others view my choices, I feel freer. I can pursue projects that truly interest me, even if they don't bring me traditional signs of success. I can associate with anyone I find interesting, regardless of their social status. This freedom is priceless.

My Thoughts

After watching Chamath's分享, I spent a long time digesting these viewpoints. They challenged many assumptions I had taken for granted for years. I always thought setting clear goals was the key to success, but now I realize that过度 focusing on goals might make me miss what's truly important—the process of continuous growth.

I also started to re-examine my definition of success. In the past I might have measured success by position, income, social status. But now I ask myself: Am I continuously learning? Am I challenging myself? Am I doing things I find meaningful? If the answer is yes, then I am successful, no matter what my title is, no matter how much money is in my bank account.

Chamath's experience also made me think about the value of time. He said it took him 30 years to learn these lessons. I am in my 30s now; if I can understand and apply these principles now, how much time and energy could I save? But I also realize that some lessons may indeed require time and experience to truly internalize. The important thing is to keep an open mind, be willing to learn from the experience of predecessors, even if I can't fully understand it yet.

Finally, I want to say that the advice Chamath shared is not about要求 everyone to become a billionaire or build great companies. It's about how to live a more fulfilling, authentic, and meaningful life. No matter what your career goals are, these principles apply: focus on the process rather than goals, maintain a humble and learning attitude, protect your freedom of choice, be honest in relationships, ignore status symbols imposed by society.

I believe if more people could understand and practice these principles, we would see a different world. A world where people work not for external recognition but for internal growth. A world where people are not climbing someone else's defined ladder of success but walking their own unique path. This might be a harder choice, but it is definitely a more meaningful choice.

相關問答

QAccording to Chamath Palihapitiya, why are traditional goals considered 'stupid' and potentially harmful?

ATraditional goals are considered 'stupid' because they create a mindset where people stop once they achieve them, leading to a loss of motivation and drive. They cause individuals to optimize for short-term achievements like promotions or money, which can trap them and prevent long-term growth and learning. Chamath states that focusing on a process of continuous learning and challenge is far more valuable.

QWhat are the three boundary conditions Chamath suggests for living a process-oriented life instead of a goal-oriented one?

AThe three boundary conditions are: 1) Have no debt, as it forces short-term optimization and kills optionality. 2) Manage your life with humility, which means being brutally honest about your current situation to see reality clearly. 3) Surround yourself with people younger than you, as they have different perspectives and biases that can help you see how the world is changing and prevent your knowledge from becoming outdated.

QHow does Chamath define 'optionality' and why does he consider it so crucial for success?

AChamath defines 'optionality' as maintaining the freedom to choose and not getting locked into a single path. It is crucial because it allows for flexibility to adapt to changing circumstances, say no to bad opportunities, and jump on good ones. Debt is the biggest enemy of optionality, as it forces you to make decisions based on the need for stable income rather than what is best for long-term growth.

QWhat is the significance of the 'rat in the water' experiment that Chamath references?

AThe experiment demonstrates the power of hope and mindset. A rat that was rescued once just before drowning survived for 60 hours the second time it was placed in water, compared to 4.5 minutes for a rat with no prior rescue. The difference was the knowledge that rescue was possible, which unlocked immense resilience. Chamath uses this as a metaphor for finding an environment that pushes you to unlock levels of potential you didn't know you had, profoundly changing your capabilities.

QWhy does Chamath believe that pursuing 'status' is a trap?

AChamath believes status is a trap because it is entirely man-made and irrelevant. It is a tool society uses to get people to waste their precious time and become externally validated. Chasing status symbols (like titles, club memberships, or rankings) causes you to扭曲 (distort) your behavior and expectations to fit in, making you less whole and giving others power over you. Ignoring these artificial markers of status is a superpower that grants true freedom.

你可能也喜歡

交易

現貨
合約

熱門文章

什麼是 $S$

理解 SPERO:全面概述 SPERO 簡介 隨著創新領域的不斷演變,web3 技術和加密貨幣項目的出現在塑造數字未來中扮演著關鍵角色。在這個動態領域中,SPERO(標記為 SPERO,$$s$)是一個引起關注的項目。本文旨在收集並呈現有關 SPERO 的詳細信息,以幫助愛好者和投資者理解其基礎、目標和在 web3 和加密領域內的創新。 SPERO,$$s$ 是什麼? SPERO,$$s$ 是加密空間中的一個獨特項目,旨在利用去中心化和區塊鏈技術的原則,創建一個促進參與、實用性和金融包容性的生態系統。該項目旨在以新的方式促進點對點互動,為用戶提供創新的金融解決方案和服務。 SPERO,$$s$ 的核心目標是通過提供增強用戶體驗的工具和平台來賦能個人。這包括使交易方式更加靈活、促進社區驅動的倡議,以及通過去中心化應用程序(dApps)創造金融機會的途徑。SPERO,$$s$ 的基本願景圍繞包容性展開,旨在彌合傳統金融中的差距,同時利用區塊鏈技術的優勢。 誰是 SPERO,$$s$ 的創建者? SPERO,$$s$ 的創建者身份仍然有些模糊,因為公開可用的資源對其創始人提供的詳細背景信息有限。這種缺乏透明度可能源於該項目對去中心化的承諾——這是一種許多 web3 項目所共享的精神,優先考慮集體貢獻而非個人認可。 通過將討論重心放在社區及其共同目標上,SPERO,$$s$ 體現了賦能的本質,而不特別突出某些個體。因此,理解 SPERO 的精神和使命比識別單一創建者更為重要。 誰是 SPERO,$$s$ 的投資者? SPERO,$$s$ 得到了來自風險投資家到天使投資者的多樣化投資者的支持,他們致力於促進加密領域的創新。這些投資者的關注點通常與 SPERO 的使命一致——優先考慮那些承諾社會技術進步、金融包容性和去中心化治理的項目。 這些投資者通常對不僅提供創新產品,還對區塊鏈社區及其生態系統做出積極貢獻的項目感興趣。這些投資者的支持強化了 SPERO,$$s$ 作為快速發展的加密項目領域中的一個重要競爭者。 SPERO,$$s$ 如何運作? SPERO,$$s$ 採用多面向的框架,使其與傳統的加密貨幣項目區別開來。以下是一些突顯其獨特性和創新的關鍵特徵: 去中心化治理:SPERO,$$s$ 整合了去中心化治理模型,賦予用戶積極參與決策過程的權力,關於項目的未來。這種方法促進了社區成員之間的擁有感和責任感。 代幣實用性:SPERO,$$s$ 使用其自己的加密貨幣代幣,旨在在生態系統內部提供多種功能。這些代幣使交易、獎勵和平台上提供的服務得以促進,增強了整體參與度和實用性。 分層架構:SPERO,$$s$ 的技術架構支持模塊化和可擴展性,允許在項目發展過程中無縫整合額外的功能和應用。這種適應性對於在不斷變化的加密環境中保持相關性至關重要。 社區參與:該項目強調社區驅動的倡議,採用激勵合作和反饋的機制。通過培養強大的社區,SPERO,$$s$ 能夠更好地滿足用戶需求並適應市場趨勢。 專注於包容性:通過提供低交易費用和用戶友好的界面,SPERO,$$s$ 旨在吸引多樣化的用戶群體,包括那些以前可能未曾參與加密領域的個體。這種對包容性的承諾與其通過可及性賦能的總體使命相一致。 SPERO,$$s$ 的時間線 理解一個項目的歷史提供了對其發展軌跡和里程碑的關鍵見解。以下是建議的時間線,映射 SPERO,$$s$ 演變中的重要事件: 概念化和構思階段:形成 SPERO,$$s$ 基礎的初步想法被提出,與區塊鏈行業內的去中心化和社區聚焦原則密切相關。 項目白皮書的發布:在概念階段之後,發布了一份全面的白皮書,詳細說明了 SPERO,$$s$ 的願景、目標和技術基礎設施,以吸引社區的興趣和反饋。 社區建設和早期參與:積極進行外展工作,建立早期採用者和潛在投資者的社區,促進圍繞項目目標的討論並獲得支持。 代幣生成事件:SPERO,$$s$ 進行了一次代幣生成事件(TGE),向早期支持者分發其原生代幣,並在生態系統內建立初步流動性。 首次 dApp 上線:與 SPERO,$$s$ 相關的第一個去中心化應用程序(dApp)上線,允許用戶參與平台的核心功能。 持續發展和夥伴關係:對項目產品的持續更新和增強,包括與區塊鏈領域其他參與者的戰略夥伴關係,使 SPERO,$$s$ 成為加密市場中一個具有競爭力和不斷演變的參與者。 結論 SPERO,$$s$ 是 web3 和加密貨幣潛力的見證,能夠徹底改變金融系統並賦能個人。憑藉對去中心化治理、社區參與和創新設計功能的承諾,它為更具包容性的金融環境鋪平了道路。 與任何在快速發展的加密領域中的投資一樣,潛在的投資者和用戶都被鼓勵進行徹底研究,並對 SPERO,$$s$ 的持續發展進行深思熟慮的參與。該項目展示了加密行業的創新精神,邀請人們進一步探索其無數可能性。儘管 SPERO,$$s$ 的旅程仍在展開,但其基礎原則確實可能影響我們在互聯網數字生態系統中如何與技術、金融和彼此互動的未來。

85 人學過發佈於 2024.12.17更新於 2024.12.17

什麼是 $S$

什麼是 AGENT S

Agent S:Web3中自主互動的未來 介紹 在不斷演變的Web3和加密貨幣領域,創新不斷重新定義個人如何與數字平台互動。Agent S是一個開創性的項目,承諾通過其開放的代理框架徹底改變人機互動。Agent S旨在簡化複雜任務,為人工智能(AI)提供變革性的應用,鋪平自主互動的道路。本詳細探索將深入研究該項目的複雜性、其獨特特徵以及對加密貨幣領域的影響。 什麼是Agent S? Agent S是一個突破性的開放代理框架,專門設計用來解決計算機任務自動化中的三個基本挑戰: 獲取特定領域知識:該框架智能地從各種外部知識來源和內部經驗中學習。這種雙重方法使其能夠建立豐富的特定領域知識庫,提升其在任務執行中的表現。 長期任務規劃:Agent S採用經驗增強的分層規劃,這是一種戰略方法,可以有效地分解和執行複雜任務。此特徵顯著提升了其高效和有效地管理多個子任務的能力。 處理動態、不均勻的界面:該項目引入了代理-計算機界面(ACI),這是一種創新的解決方案,增強了代理和用戶之間的互動。利用多模態大型語言模型(MLLMs),Agent S能夠無縫導航和操作各種圖形用戶界面。 通過這些開創性特徵,Agent S提供了一個強大的框架,解決了自動化人機互動中涉及的複雜性,為AI及其他領域的無數應用奠定了基礎。 誰是Agent S的創建者? 儘管Agent S的概念根本上是創新的,但有關其創建者的具體信息仍然難以捉摸。創建者目前尚不清楚,這突顯了該項目的初期階段或戰略選擇將創始成員保密。無論是否匿名,重點仍然在於框架的能力和潛力。 誰是Agent S的投資者? 由於Agent S在加密生態系統中相對較新,關於其投資者和財務支持者的詳細信息並未明確記錄。缺乏對支持該項目的投資基礎或組織的公開見解,引發了對其資金結構和發展路線圖的質疑。了解其支持背景對於評估該項目的可持續性和潛在市場影響至關重要。 Agent S如何運作? Agent S的核心是尖端技術,使其能夠在多種環境中有效運作。其運營模型圍繞幾個關鍵特徵構建: 類人計算機互動:該框架提供先進的AI規劃,力求使與計算機的互動更加直觀。通過模仿人類在任務執行中的行為,承諾提升用戶體驗。 敘事記憶:用於利用高級經驗,Agent S利用敘事記憶來跟蹤任務歷史,從而增強其決策過程。 情節記憶:此特徵為用戶提供逐步指導,使框架能夠在任務展開時提供上下文支持。 支持OpenACI:Agent S能夠在本地運行,使用戶能夠控制其互動和工作流程,與Web3的去中心化理念相一致。 與外部API的輕鬆集成:其多功能性和與各種AI平台的兼容性確保了Agent S能夠無縫融入現有技術生態系統,成為開發者和組織的理想選擇。 這些功能共同促成了Agent S在加密領域的獨特地位,因為它以最小的人類干預自動化複雜的多步任務。隨著項目的發展,其在Web3中的潛在應用可能重新定義數字互動的展開方式。 Agent S的時間線 Agent S的發展和里程碑可以用一個時間線來概括,突顯其重要事件: 2024年9月27日:Agent S的概念在一篇名為《一個像人類一樣使用計算機的開放代理框架》的綜合研究論文中推出,展示了該項目的基礎工作。 2024年10月10日:該研究論文在arXiv上公開,提供了對框架及其基於OSWorld基準的性能評估的深入探索。 2024年10月12日:發布了一個視頻演示,提供了對Agent S能力和特徵的視覺洞察,進一步吸引潛在用戶和投資者。 這些時間線上的標記不僅展示了Agent S的進展,還表明了其對透明度和社區參與的承諾。 有關Agent S的要點 隨著Agent S框架的持續演變,幾個關鍵特徵脫穎而出,強調其創新性和潛力: 創新框架:旨在提供類似人類互動的直觀計算機使用,Agent S為任務自動化帶來了新穎的方法。 自主互動:通過GUI自主與計算機互動的能力標誌著向更智能和高效的計算解決方案邁進了一步。 複雜任務自動化:憑藉其強大的方法論,能夠自動化複雜的多步任務,使過程更快且更少出錯。 持續改進:學習機制使Agent S能夠從過去的經驗中改進,不斷提升其性能和效率。 多功能性:其在OSWorld和WindowsAgentArena等不同操作環境中的適應性確保了它能夠服務於廣泛的應用。 隨著Agent S在Web3和加密領域中的定位,其增強互動能力和自動化過程的潛力標誌著AI技術的一次重大進步。通過其創新框架,Agent S展現了數字互動的未來,為各行各業的用戶承諾提供更無縫和高效的體驗。 結論 Agent S代表了AI與Web3結合的一次大膽飛躍,具有重新定義我們與技術互動方式的能力。儘管仍處於早期階段,但其應用的可能性廣泛且引人入勝。通過其全面的框架解決關鍵挑戰,Agent S旨在將自主互動帶到數字體驗的最前沿。隨著我們深入加密貨幣和去中心化的領域,像Agent S這樣的項目無疑將在塑造技術和人機協作的未來中發揮關鍵作用。

677 人學過發佈於 2025.01.14更新於 2025.01.14

什麼是 AGENT S

如何購買S

歡迎來到HTX.com!在這裡,購買Sonic (S)變得簡單而便捷。跟隨我們的逐步指南,放心開始您的加密貨幣之旅。第一步:創建您的HTX帳戶使用您的 Email、手機號碼在HTX註冊一個免費帳戶。體驗無憂的註冊過程並解鎖所有平台功能。立即註冊第二步:前往買幣頁面,選擇您的支付方式信用卡/金融卡購買:使用您的Visa或Mastercard即時購買Sonic (S)。餘額購買:使用您HTX帳戶餘額中的資金進行無縫交易。第三方購買:探索諸如Google Pay或Apple Pay等流行支付方式以增加便利性。C2C購買:在HTX平台上直接與其他用戶交易。HTX 場外交易 (OTC) 購買:為大量交易者提供個性化服務和競爭性匯率。第三步:存儲您的Sonic (S)購買Sonic (S)後,將其存儲在您的HTX帳戶中。您也可以透過區塊鏈轉帳將其發送到其他地址或者用於交易其他加密貨幣。第四步:交易Sonic (S)在HTX的現貨市場輕鬆交易Sonic (S)。前往您的帳戶,選擇交易對,執行交易,並即時監控。HTX為初學者和經驗豐富的交易者提供了友好的用戶體驗。

1.4k 人學過發佈於 2025.01.15更新於 2025.03.21

如何購買S

相關討論

歡迎來到 HTX 社群。在這裡,您可以了解最新的平台發展動態並獲得專業的市場意見。 以下是用戶對 S (S)幣價的意見。

活动图片