
Daemon-Core
8.2K posts

Daemon-Core
@nullctl
⎈ Automating the world...🤖🦾 ---- * When I want to tweet, I tweet. * If I see an eyesore, I attack it. * And if a tweet entertains me, I throw it a bone.



Naaah, I’m pro expansion. I even want Nigeria to take Bakasi back, and dare Cameroon to challenge our navy. We’ve seen how useless smaller countries are, and I prefer the larger countries. ☺️


Kill vehicle of a US THAAD Talon interceptor missile reportedly found in Syria.


NEW: Hundreds of American service members were involved in the rescue of a downed U.S. weapons systems officer in Iran. The operation did not involve a firefight between U.S. and Iranian forces, according to a senior official, but U.S. forces did fire weapons to keep Iranian personnel away from the rescue site.





Lose all this to rescue 1 pilot and call it your greatest military success of all time.



Tonight’s operation in Southern Iran which resulted in the successful rescue of a Weapons System Officer (WSO) onboard an American F-15E Strike Eagle downed Friday over Iran, involved hundreds of special forces troops and other military personnel, including members of the U.S. Navy’s SEAL Team Six, dozens of fighter and strike aircraft, helicopters, and cyber, space and other intelligence capabilities, officials tell The New York Times. Senior military officials described the mission to rescue the airman as “one of the most challenging and complex in the history of U.S. Special Operations” given the mountainous terrain, the airman’s injuries and Iranian forces rushing to the location in the mountains of Southern Iran. The WSO evaded Iranian forces for more than 24 hours, at one point hiking up a 7,000ft ridgeline, a senior U.S. military official said. U.S. attack aircraft dropped bombs and opened fire on Iranian convoys to keep them away from the area where the airman was hiding. As U.S. Special Forces converged on the downed airman, they fired their weapons to keep Iranian forces away from the rescue site, but did not engage in a firefight with the Iranians. In a final twist after the officer was rescued, two transport planes that would carry the commandos and the airmen to safety got stuck at a remote base in Iran. Commanders decided to fly in three new planes to extract all the U.S. military personnel and the airman, and they blew up the two disabled planes rather than have them fall into the hands of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).



If Huawei hadn't been banned from TSMC in 2019, @dylan522p thinks it would have already eclipsed Apple as TSMC's biggest customer. And that it would have better AI chips than Nvidia. Before it was banned, Huawei was actually the first to ship a 7nm AI chip — two months before Google's TPU and four months before Nvidia's A100.
















