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Meta Platforms CEO Mark Zuckerberg is known for his passion, including for ancient Rome, and on Wednesday he wore a shirt that played on his own ambitions as his company launched what he described as the best glasses in the world. What does the phrase mean? At Meta's annual Connect event in Menlo Park, California , Zuckerberg wore a custom T-shirt with the Latin phrase "aut Zuck aut nihil," or "all Zuck or all nothing," as he revealed the first working prototype of Meta's augmented-reality glasses. The phrase was a play on "aut Caesar aut nihil," which means "either a Caesar or nothing," or more simply "all or nothing.

" Also Read: Mark Zuckerberg reveals email ID he used to create his first account on Facebook The saying, indicative of grand ambition, was a personal motto of Italian Renaissance Prince Cesare Borgia and was possibly coined by Julius Caesar himself, according to some scholars. Mark Zuckerberg's interest in Roman history Zuckerberg has long been interested in the Roman Empire. He spent his honeymoon in Rome and two of his children, August and Aurelia, are named after emperors Augustus and Marcus Aurelius.



Earlier this year on his 40th birthday, Zuckerberg posted photos on social media in which he wore a T-shirt with the words "Carthago delenda est," meaning "Carthage must be destroyed," referring to Rome's great rival. Also Read: Scrawny hacker to strapped CEO: Mark Zuckerberg’s ‘most brilliant PR transformation’ Zuckerberg's latest fashion statement comes.

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