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#losses — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #losses, aggregated by home.social.

  1. #Meta’s #RealityLabs, responsible for #virtualreality and #augmentedreality technology, reported a $4.03 billion operating #loss in Q1, bringing total #losses to over $80 billion since 2020. Despite the losses, Meta is investing heavily in #AIinfrastructure and models to compete with OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google. cnbc.com/2026/04/29/metas-real #tech #media #news

  2. #Meta’s #RealityLabs, responsible for #virtualreality and #augmentedreality technology, reported a $4.03 billion operating #loss in Q1, bringing total #losses to over $80 billion since 2020. Despite the losses, Meta is investing heavily in #AIinfrastructure and models to compete with OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google. cnbc.com/2026/04/29/metas-real #tech #media #news

  3. #Meta’s #RealityLabs, responsible for #virtualreality and #augmentedreality technology, reported a $4.03 billion operating #loss in Q1, bringing total #losses to over $80 billion since 2020. Despite the losses, Meta is investing heavily in #AIinfrastructure and models to compete with OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google. cnbc.com/2026/04/29/metas-real #tech #media #news

  4. #Meta’s #RealityLabs, responsible for #virtualreality and #augmentedreality technology, reported a $4.03 billion operating #loss in Q1, bringing total #losses to over $80 billion since 2020. Despite the losses, Meta is investing heavily in #AIinfrastructure and models to compete with OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google. cnbc.com/2026/04/29/metas-real #tech #media #news

  5. #Meta’s #RealityLabs, responsible for #virtualreality and #augmentedreality technology, reported a $4.03 billion operating #loss in Q1, bringing total #losses to over $80 billion since 2020. Despite the losses, Meta is investing heavily in #AIinfrastructure and models to compete with OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google. cnbc.com/2026/04/29/metas-real #tech #media #news

  6. "Never let a win get to your head, or a loss to go to your heart." - Futurist Jim Carroll

    --
    Futurist Jim Carroll is writing a series, The Art of the Infinite Pivot, based on 36 lessons from his 36 years as a solo entrepreneur, working as a nomadic worker in the global freelance economy. The series is unfolding here, and at pivot.jimcarroll.com.
    --

    When you decide to pivot your career or your business, you are making an implicit agreement with your emotions that you will ride an emotional roller coaster.

    That being the case, I've learned, often the hard way, that it's critical not to become overconfident with every win. But it seems even more important that we shouldn't internalize every loss.

    In a 36-year voyage, I've learned this truth through experience: the world will try to convince you that you are a genius when you win and a failure when you lose. You need to know that both are lies and are just a part of the ongoing process of building your future. To survive, you must develop a profound sense of emotional detachment from both. You cannot afford to become overconfident with every victory, nor can you allow yourself to internalize every defeat.

    Why is that? If you internalize the win, you become arrogant and stop "putting in the work" (Lesson **#16**). You start believing your own press releases. If you internalize the loss, you become paralyzed by fear and stop "wasting time on frivolous things" (Lesson **#15**).

    Both extremes are wrong. A "win" is just a signal to you that your current strategy worked for this specific moment. It is not a guarantee of future success, because it's not always the case that what worked in the past is what will work in the future. A loss? Often it's just a signal that your strategy was a bit off, your delivery a little out of alignment, or your actions a bit stifled.

    It is not a reflection of your worth.

    The highs and lows can be exhilarating or crushing. Throughout my career, I’ve had standing ovations in front of thousands, and I've had audiences that have stared at me with misunderstanding. The secret to longevity is treating both with the same degree of curiosity. When you win, ask: "What went right?" When you lose, ask: "What was the lesson?"

    When you stop letting the scoreboard of wins and losses define your identity, you gain the ultimate freedom: the freedom to pivot without stress. You aren't your last keynote, and you aren't your last failed experiment.

    You are the architect of your future.

    Keep your head level.

    The future is too volatile for anything else.

    ---

    Futurist Jim Carroll used to obsess over audience reviews until he realized he was focusing too much on the extremes of the bell curve and not enough on the middle.

    **#Balance** **#Wins** **#Losses** **#Emotions** **#Perspective** **#Resilience** **#Detachment** **#Pivot** **#Lessons** **#Freelance** **#Humility**

    Original post: jimcarroll.com/2026/04/decodin

  7. "Never let a win get to your head, or a loss to go to your heart." - Futurist Jim Carroll

    --
    Futurist Jim Carroll is writing a series, The Art of the Infinite Pivot, based on 36 lessons from his 36 years as a solo entrepreneur, working as a nomadic worker in the global freelance economy. The series is unfolding here, and at pivot.jimcarroll.com.
    --

    When you decide to pivot your career or your business, you are making an implicit agreement with your emotions that you will ride an emotional roller coaster.

    That being the case, I've learned, often the hard way, that it's critical not to become overconfident with every win. But it seems even more important that we shouldn't internalize every loss.

    In a 36-year voyage, I've learned this truth through experience: the world will try to convince you that you are a genius when you win and a failure when you lose. You need to know that both are lies and are just a part of the ongoing process of building your future. To survive, you must develop a profound sense of emotional detachment from both. You cannot afford to become overconfident with every victory, nor can you allow yourself to internalize every defeat.

    Why is that? If you internalize the win, you become arrogant and stop "putting in the work" (Lesson **#16**). You start believing your own press releases. If you internalize the loss, you become paralyzed by fear and stop "wasting time on frivolous things" (Lesson **#15**).

    Both extremes are wrong. A "win" is just a signal to you that your current strategy worked for this specific moment. It is not a guarantee of future success, because it's not always the case that what worked in the past is what will work in the future. A loss? Often it's just a signal that your strategy was a bit off, your delivery a little out of alignment, or your actions a bit stifled.

    It is not a reflection of your worth.

    The highs and lows can be exhilarating or crushing. Throughout my career, I’ve had standing ovations in front of thousands, and I've had audiences that have stared at me with misunderstanding. The secret to longevity is treating both with the same degree of curiosity. When you win, ask: "What went right?" When you lose, ask: "What was the lesson?"

    When you stop letting the scoreboard of wins and losses define your identity, you gain the ultimate freedom: the freedom to pivot without stress. You aren't your last keynote, and you aren't your last failed experiment.

    You are the architect of your future.

    Keep your head level.

    The future is too volatile for anything else.

    ---

    Futurist Jim Carroll used to obsess over audience reviews until he realized he was focusing too much on the extremes of the bell curve and not enough on the middle.

    **#Balance** **#Wins** **#Losses** **#Emotions** **#Perspective** **#Resilience** **#Detachment** **#Pivot** **#Lessons** **#Freelance** **#Humility**

    Original post: jimcarroll.com/2026/04/decodin

  8. "Never let a win get to your head, or a loss to go to your heart." - Futurist Jim Carroll

    --
    Futurist Jim Carroll is writing a series, The Art of the Infinite Pivot, based on 36 lessons from his 36 years as a solo entrepreneur, working as a nomadic worker in the global freelance economy. The series is unfolding here, and at pivot.jimcarroll.com.
    --

    When you decide to pivot your career or your business, you are making an implicit agreement with your emotions that you will ride an emotional roller coaster.

    That being the case, I've learned, often the hard way, that it's critical not to become overconfident with every win. But it seems even more important that we shouldn't internalize every loss.

    In a 36-year voyage, I've learned this truth through experience: the world will try to convince you that you are a genius when you win and a failure when you lose. You need to know that both are lies and are just a part of the ongoing process of building your future. To survive, you must develop a profound sense of emotional detachment from both. You cannot afford to become overconfident with every victory, nor can you allow yourself to internalize every defeat.

    Why is that? If you internalize the win, you become arrogant and stop "putting in the work" (Lesson **#16**). You start believing your own press releases. If you internalize the loss, you become paralyzed by fear and stop "wasting time on frivolous things" (Lesson **#15**).

    Both extremes are wrong. A "win" is just a signal to you that your current strategy worked for this specific moment. It is not a guarantee of future success, because it's not always the case that what worked in the past is what will work in the future. A loss? Often it's just a signal that your strategy was a bit off, your delivery a little out of alignment, or your actions a bit stifled.

    It is not a reflection of your worth.

    The highs and lows can be exhilarating or crushing. Throughout my career, I’ve had standing ovations in front of thousands, and I've had audiences that have stared at me with misunderstanding. The secret to longevity is treating both with the same degree of curiosity. When you win, ask: "What went right?" When you lose, ask: "What was the lesson?"

    When you stop letting the scoreboard of wins and losses define your identity, you gain the ultimate freedom: the freedom to pivot without stress. You aren't your last keynote, and you aren't your last failed experiment.

    You are the architect of your future.

    Keep your head level.

    The future is too volatile for anything else.

    ---

    Futurist Jim Carroll used to obsess over audience reviews until he realized he was focusing too much on the extremes of the bell curve and not enough on the middle.

    **#Balance** **#Wins** **#Losses** **#Emotions** **#Perspective** **#Resilience** **#Detachment** **#Pivot** **#Lessons** **#Freelance** **#Humility**

    Original post: jimcarroll.com/2026/04/decodin

  9. "Never let a win get to your head, or a loss to go to your heart." - Futurist Jim Carroll

    --
    Futurist Jim Carroll is writing a series, The Art of the Infinite Pivot, based on 36 lessons from his 36 years as a solo entrepreneur, working as a nomadic worker in the global freelance economy. The series is unfolding here, and at pivot.jimcarroll.com.
    --

    When you decide to pivot your career or your business, you are making an implicit agreement with your emotions that you will ride an emotional roller coaster.

    That being the case, I've learned, often the hard way, that it's critical not to become overconfident with every win. But it seems even more important that we shouldn't internalize every loss.

    In a 36-year voyage, I've learned this truth through experience: the world will try to convince you that you are a genius when you win and a failure when you lose. You need to know that both are lies and are just a part of the ongoing process of building your future. To survive, you must develop a profound sense of emotional detachment from both. You cannot afford to become overconfident with every victory, nor can you allow yourself to internalize every defeat.

    Why is that? If you internalize the win, you become arrogant and stop "putting in the work" (Lesson **#16**). You start believing your own press releases. If you internalize the loss, you become paralyzed by fear and stop "wasting time on frivolous things" (Lesson **#15**).

    Both extremes are wrong. A "win" is just a signal to you that your current strategy worked for this specific moment. It is not a guarantee of future success, because it's not always the case that what worked in the past is what will work in the future. A loss? Often it's just a signal that your strategy was a bit off, your delivery a little out of alignment, or your actions a bit stifled.

    It is not a reflection of your worth.

    The highs and lows can be exhilarating or crushing. Throughout my career, I’ve had standing ovations in front of thousands, and I've had audiences that have stared at me with misunderstanding. The secret to longevity is treating both with the same degree of curiosity. When you win, ask: "What went right?" When you lose, ask: "What was the lesson?"

    When you stop letting the scoreboard of wins and losses define your identity, you gain the ultimate freedom: the freedom to pivot without stress. You aren't your last keynote, and you aren't your last failed experiment.

    You are the architect of your future.

    Keep your head level.

    The future is too volatile for anything else.

    ---

    Futurist Jim Carroll used to obsess over audience reviews until he realized he was focusing too much on the extremes of the bell curve and not enough on the middle.

    **#Balance** **#Wins** **#Losses** **#Emotions** **#Perspective** **#Resilience** **#Detachment** **#Pivot** **#Lessons** **#Freelance** **#Humility**

    Original post: jimcarroll.com/2026/04/decodin

  10. "Never let a win get to your head, or a loss to go to your heart." - Futurist Jim Carroll

    --
    Futurist Jim Carroll is writing a series, The Art of the Infinite Pivot, based on 36 lessons from his 36 years as a solo entrepreneur, working as a nomadic worker in the global freelance economy. The series is unfolding here, and at pivot.jimcarroll.com.
    --

    When you decide to pivot your career or your business, you are making an implicit agreement with your emotions that you will ride an emotional roller coaster.

    That being the case, I've learned, often the hard way, that it's critical not to become overconfident with every win. But it seems even more important that we shouldn't internalize every loss.

    In a 36-year voyage, I've learned this truth through experience: the world will try to convince you that you are a genius when you win and a failure when you lose. You need to know that both are lies and are just a part of the ongoing process of building your future. To survive, you must develop a profound sense of emotional detachment from both. You cannot afford to become overconfident with every victory, nor can you allow yourself to internalize every defeat.

    Why is that? If you internalize the win, you become arrogant and stop "putting in the work" (Lesson **#16**). You start believing your own press releases. If you internalize the loss, you become paralyzed by fear and stop "wasting time on frivolous things" (Lesson **#15**).

    Both extremes are wrong. A "win" is just a signal to you that your current strategy worked for this specific moment. It is not a guarantee of future success, because it's not always the case that what worked in the past is what will work in the future. A loss? Often it's just a signal that your strategy was a bit off, your delivery a little out of alignment, or your actions a bit stifled.

    It is not a reflection of your worth.

    The highs and lows can be exhilarating or crushing. Throughout my career, I’ve had standing ovations in front of thousands, and I've had audiences that have stared at me with misunderstanding. The secret to longevity is treating both with the same degree of curiosity. When you win, ask: "What went right?" When you lose, ask: "What was the lesson?"

    When you stop letting the scoreboard of wins and losses define your identity, you gain the ultimate freedom: the freedom to pivot without stress. You aren't your last keynote, and you aren't your last failed experiment.

    You are the architect of your future.

    Keep your head level.

    The future is too volatile for anything else.

    ---

    Futurist Jim Carroll used to obsess over audience reviews until he realized he was focusing too much on the extremes of the bell curve and not enough on the middle.

    **#Balance** **#Wins** **#Losses** **#Emotions** **#Perspective** **#Resilience** **#Detachment** **#Pivot** **#Lessons** **#Freelance** **#Humility**

    Original post: jimcarroll.com/2026/04/decodin

  11. Stocks Trim Losses After Oil Price Spike

    misryoum.com/us/us/stocks-trim

    U.S. stocks pared back declines on Monday morning as oil prices retreated from multi-year highs hit over the weekend. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down around 1.8 percent in the first hour of trading, or around 800 points,...

    #Stocks #Trim #Losses #After #Oil #Price #Spike #US_News_Hub #misryoum_com

  12. Brewdog sells out for £33M, leaving hundreds jobless and beer enthusiasts drowning their sorrows 🍻💸. Meanwhile, the #BBC distracts us with an exhaustive list of locations and topics 📜, because why focus on the actual story when you can have a geography lesson instead? 🤷‍♂️🌍
    bbc.com/news/articles/c05v0p1d #Brewdog #Sellout #Job #Losses #BeerIndustry #Distraction #HackerNews #ngated

  13. Brewdog sells out for £33M, leaving hundreds jobless and beer enthusiasts drowning their sorrows 🍻💸. Meanwhile, the #BBC distracts us with an exhaustive list of locations and topics 📜, because why focus on the actual story when you can have a geography lesson instead? 🤷‍♂️🌍
    bbc.com/news/articles/c05v0p1d #Brewdog #Sellout #Job #Losses #BeerIndustry #Distraction #HackerNews #ngated

  14. Brewdog sells out for £33M, leaving hundreds jobless and beer enthusiasts drowning their sorrows 🍻💸. Meanwhile, the #BBC distracts us with an exhaustive list of locations and topics 📜, because why focus on the actual story when you can have a geography lesson instead? 🤷‍♂️🌍
    bbc.com/news/articles/c05v0p1d #Brewdog #Sellout #Job #Losses #BeerIndustry #Distraction #HackerNews #ngated

  15. Brewdog sells out for £33M, leaving hundreds jobless and beer enthusiasts drowning their sorrows 🍻💸. Meanwhile, the #BBC distracts us with an exhaustive list of locations and topics 📜, because why focus on the actual story when you can have a geography lesson instead? 🤷‍♂️🌍
    bbc.com/news/articles/c05v0p1d #Brewdog #Sellout #Job #Losses #BeerIndustry #Distraction #HackerNews #ngated

  16. What next as majors surge 10% to recover war-driven losses

    misryoum.com/us/markets/what-n

    Crypto markets snapped back hard on Sunday after spending Saturday pricing in what looked like the start of a prolonged regional war.Bitcoin climbed to $66,843, up 5.2% over the past 24 hours, recovering most of the losses from Saturday's slide...

    #What #next #majors #surge #recover #wardriven #losses #US_News_Hub #misryoum_com

  17. Despite WazirX, Q3 crypto hack and scam losses fell to $413m YOY - Losses from scams and hacks in Q3 declined by 40% compared to the previo... - cointelegraph.com/news/crypto- #scamshacks #immunefi #losses #wazirx #bingx

  18. Despite WazirX, Q3 crypto hack and scam losses fell to $413m YOY - Losses from scams and hacks in Q3 declined by 40% compared to the previo... - cointelegraph.com/news/crypto- #scamshacks #immunefi #losses #wazirx #bingx

  19. Despite WazirX, Q3 crypto hack and scam losses fell to $413m YOY - Losses from scams and hacks in Q3 declined by 40% compared to the previo... - cointelegraph.com/news/crypto- #scamshacks #immunefi #losses #wazirx #bingx

  20. Despite WazirX, Q3 crypto hack and scam losses fell to $413m YOY - Losses from scams and hacks in Q3 declined by 40% compared to the previo... - cointelegraph.com/news/crypto- #scamshacks #immunefi #losses #wazirx #bingx

  21. This Week’s Crypto Winners and Losers: Helium Surges 34%, ENA Plummets 25% - The crypto market holds steady at a valuation of $2.31 trillion, experiencing a 2.... - news.bitcoin.com/this-weeks-cr #cryptocurrency #marketupdates #cryptomarkets #marketaction #crypto #losses #gains #bonk #hbar #pyth #ena #hnt