Sai 🇺🇸

4.2K posts

Sai 🇺🇸

Sai 🇺🇸

@PatternRekogntn

🇺🇸

In my own mind Bergabung Ekim 2024
162 Mengikuti250 Pengikut
Sai 🇺🇸
Sai 🇺🇸@PatternRekogntn·
@kristenmag Fucking sickening. Glad he was vindicated and that all those children got some justice with the truth coming out.
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Kristen Mag
Kristen Mag@kristenmag·
Planned Parenthood admitted what David exposed. Baby parts were harvested. Baby parts were sold. All for personal profit. But under direction of California AG Kamala Harris, the state spent 9 years viciously prosecuting this man for revealing truth. Gross abuse. Glad he won.
LifeNews.com@LifeNewsHQ

BREAKING: Final Charge Dismissed Against David Daleiden for Exposing Planned Parenthood Aborted Baby Part Sales lifenews.com/2026/04/02/fin…

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Sai 🇺🇸@PatternRekogntn·
@DrPhiltill Sheesh, that’s frightening. If you miss the moon, there’s no coming back. Just an endless drift of despair. 😬
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Phil Metzger
Phil Metzger@DrPhiltill·
The level of trust in the technology by the NASA team is remarkable when you remember that the translunar injection burn must be just right to hit the exact spot where the Moon will be 4 days later, because if not, your spaceship cannot sustain you long enough to get home again.
NASA Artemis@NASAArtemis

Our Artemis II crew will be going around the Moon, but they'll always find their way back home 🌎 During this complex journey, the four astronauts will travel ~685,000 miles on a trajectory around the Moon and back to Earth. See their daily agenda: go.nasa.gov/4bw1ddt

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LifeNews.com
LifeNews.com@LifeNewsHQ·
BREAKING: Final Charge Dismissed Against David Daleiden for Exposing Planned Parenthood Aborted Baby Part Sales lifenews.com/2026/04/02/fin…
LifeNews.com tweet media
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Sai 🇺🇸
Sai 🇺🇸@PatternRekogntn·
@1ERTIL @mrexits I’m sure you got nothing to hide in your house either. So why not take the locks off your doors?
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Ertil
Ertil@1ERTIL·
@mrexits I don’t mind people going through my phone. I’ve got nothing to hide, as long as my data is not used to hurt me in any way.
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Russell Brand
Russell Brand@rustyrockets·
I didn’t know that aborted human body parts are sold by abortion clinics for profit. No wonder the journalist who exposed it was hounded by the state.
Aaron Michael@LWTAaron

@JamesOKeefeIII In case anyone is looking for it..

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Sai 🇺🇸
Sai 🇺🇸@PatternRekogntn·
@Bl00dOld @ComicDaveSmith If you’ve been in 40 bar fights, perhaps your prefrontal cortex isn’t properly developed. Not the own he thinks it is lol.
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Night Sky Today
Night Sky Today@NightSkyToday·
Thank you Jupiter!
Night Sky Today tweet media
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Sai 🇺🇸@PatternRekogntn·
@DBZimran Employees with heart and soul make companies successful. Executives who lack in heart and soul make companies fail.
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Sai 🇺🇸@PatternRekogntn·
@MKBHD Plus the stars in the background due to this being the dark side of the earth using longer exposure
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Everyday Astronaut
Everyday Astronaut@Erdayastronaut·
This photo of Earth is EXTRA spectacular for a good reason... let me explain. Most images you see of Earth from space are the daylight side of the Earth, and it's obviously very bright (see my last image), this means stars are too dim to be seen with that bright exposure setting (low ISO, high shutter and / or stopped down aperture). BUT this image taken by the Orion crew looks so incredible because you can see the sun is BEHIND the earth, meaning it's night time on the side of the earth facing the crew in this image. So how do you expose a night time earth from space? Same way you do on Earth! A mixture of opening up the aperture (F4 in this case), cranking the ISO (51,200 here), and using a relatively long exposure (1/4 of a second). We can see the settings used by looking at the exif data from the camera. What this means is our camera is also sensitive enough to see stars in the background of Earth, leading to an extraordinary image!!! GREAT WORK!!! These are the kind of images I've been so excited to see!
Everyday Astronaut tweet mediaEveryday Astronaut tweet mediaEveryday Astronaut tweet media
NASA@NASA

We see our home planet as a whole, lit up in spectacular blues and browns. A green aurora even lights up the atmosphere. That's us, together, watching as our astronauts make their journey to the Moon.

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cinesthetic.
cinesthetic.@TheCinesthetic·
At what point did Disney think it was a good idea to stop making animation this incredible?
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Old Media
Old Media@oldmedia·
This single scene is enough to win an Oscar
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Sai 🇺🇸@PatternRekogntn·
@aakashgupta $100 Million for something that could be done using free or open source software? Sounds like a waste of tax payer funds to me.
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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
NASA pays $100M for Microsoft 365 licensing across the agency. They standardized every system on Microsoft. They put Microsoft Surfaces on the Orion spacecraft as the crew's personal computing devices. And the first technical crisis of humanity's return to the Moon was Reid Wiseman radioing Houston to say he has two Microsoft Outlooks and neither one works. Mission Control's response? "With your go, we can remote in and take a look." The same exact workflow your company's IT helpdesk uses when you submit a ticket on a Monday morning. Except the user is traveling at 4,275 mph, 30,000 miles from Earth, and the Wi-Fi situation is considerably worse. This spacecraft survived hydrogen leaks, helium leaks, a faulty heat shield, and a broken toilet. Outlook broke anyway. The toilet actually got fixed faster. The real story here is that Microsoft has achieved something no other software company in history can claim: a support ticket from lunar transit. Their enterprise sales team should frame this. "Battle-tested in space" is a positioning statement most B2B companies would mass murder for, and Microsoft accidentally earned it because Outlook crashes everywhere, including orbit. Outlook remains the only software in human history that performs identically whether you're in a cubicle in Redmond or aboard a spacecraft bound for the Moon. Universally, reliably broken. And we keep buying it anyway.
Polymarket@Polymarket

JUST IN: Artemis II crew experiences issues with Microsoft Outlook on their way to the Moon, asks ground crew for assistance.

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NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman
Nominal translunar injection burn complete. The Artemis II crew is officially on the way to the Moon. America is back in the business of sending astronauts to the Moon. This time, farther than ever before.
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