Lawrence 4.68e+3 🔋

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Lawrence 4.68e+3 🔋

Lawrence 4.68e+3 🔋

@Avatrode

Tesla enthusiast...Neurophysiologist, Virtual reality simulation designer..

−11.26064° to J2000 ecliptic Se unió Ekim 2013
2.3K Siguiendo13.2K Seguidores
Sawyer Merritt
Sawyer Merritt@SawyerMerritt·
NEWS: Starting today, owners of Dodge, Jeep, Ram, FIAT and Maserati EVs in North America can now officially use @Tesla's Supercharger network with more than 27,500 charging stalls. Updated list of automakers that have access to Tesla's Supercharger network: • Acura • Audi • BMW • Ford • General Motors • Genesis • Honda • Hyundai • JLR • Kia • Lucid • Mercedes • Nissan • Polestar • Porsche • Rivian • Stellantis • Subaru • Toyota • Volkswagen • Volvo
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Werosolo
Werosolo@werosolo·
In 1 hour and 20 minutes, I’ll be the newest owner of a Cyberbeast. 📐
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Lawrence 4.68e+3 🔋
In my college days, I would have thought this was the world's largest frosted keg of beer. 😉🫠🍻
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Q@QXsToo·
As a user, it's simple. I open the @X app. Here's what I hope to see — and I suspect many of you do too: 1. Great, informative, useful, or entertaining content (by humans, machines, or companies) 2. Real, authentic — even “boring” — posts from the people and networks I actually care about 3. No spam, bad bots, or reply farming As an X employee who uses it every day, I believe we’re actively building toward exactly this. Does this match what you want when you open X?
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Lawrence 4.68e+3 🔋
First @Tesla Supercharging of the new Model Y Performance. These seats are even better than my former Model X...and this Y is quieter. 🔈
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Jaan of the EVwire.com ⚡
Jaan of the EVwire.com ⚡@TheEVuniverse·
I hired my first full-time employee today. I'm a solo founder, 5 years in, and this is a huge milestone for me. I never see this celebrated here on X - only the huge funding rounds or $ MRR growth posts. A human. Working with me, on the same mission now. Such a big deal.
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Mathematica
Mathematica@mathemetica·
Before we had silicon chips, we had needle and thread? In the 1960s, NASA didn’t ‘upload’ code; they sewed it. To get Apollo 11 to the moon, skilled weavers (often called ‘Little Old Ladies’) literally hand-stitched software into physical objects. By passing copper wire through tiny magnetic rings, they created Core Rope Memory. The logic was beautifully simple: wire through a ring was a ‘1’; wire around it was a ‘0’. Because the code was physically woven, it was virtually indestructible. It couldn’t be deleted, it couldn’t crash, and it survived the intense radiation of deep space with just 72 kilobytes of data: millions of times less than a single photo on your phone today. It proves sometimes the most advanced tech is actually handmade.
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VisionaryVoid
VisionaryVoid@VisionaryVoid·
The Pen That Saved Apollo 11 From Being A Permanent Moon Tomb. When Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin returned to the lunar module after their historic moonwalk, they realized they had a catastrophic problem. While maneuvering inside the cramped cabin in his bulky spacesuit, Aldrin's life-support backpack had accidentally smashed into the wall. The impact completely snapped off the vital circuit breaker switch needed to arm the ascent engine. Without that specific switch, the engine could not ignite, meaning the two astronauts would be permanently stranded on the lunar surface with no hope of a rescue mission. With only hours of oxygen remaining and Houston control scrambling for a workaround, the situation seemed entirely hopeless. The engineers on Earth frantically tried to find a way to bypass the electrical system, but time was rapidly running out. Exhausted and facing the very real possibility of dying 240,000 miles from home, Aldrin decided to take matters into his own hands. He began looking around the cabin for anything that could safely fit into the broken circuit breaker hole without conducting electricity and sparking a fatal fire in the oxygen-rich environment. Aldrin reached into his shoulder pocket and pulled out a standard-issue felt-tip marker. Because the pen's casing was made of plastic, it would not short out the electrical contacts. He carefully jammed the end of the marker into the broken switch hole and pushed. The circuit closed, the engine armed, and the lunar module successfully blasted off the moon's surface to reunite with Michael Collins in orbit. It turns out the greatest technological achievement in human history was ultimately saved by a piece of office stationery.
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Lawrence 4.68e+3 🔋
@whoisheartbreak @SpaceX You so such important work... just look around at the political situation of the world... multiplanetary existence just might save the human race.
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Jessie Anderson
Jessie Anderson@whoisheartbreak·
Today makes 11 years building rockets at @SpaceX 🥳🚀 i have learned so much from working alongside some of the most talented and resilient humans on Earth and in space. i am truly grateful for the experience and real life stories we get to create each and every day, and looking forward to the exciting challenges to come. Happy St. Patrick’s Day ☺️🍀
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Eva Fo𝕏 🦊 Claudius Nero's Legion
Wow, I'm so lucky! Elon Musk from Tesla is so kind to me. And I'll finally get the Tesla Phone I've been dreaming of for so long🤣
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