
Project Friday
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Project Friday
@ProjectFridayFM
Tweets range from music, to Dayton Flyers Basketball, to politics. Retweets don't necessarily indicate agreement nor endorsement.








Optimus will be the biggest product ever made. A general-purpose humanoid robot that can do useful work at scale will change the economics of labor & manufacturing. Goal is to get Optimus to high-volume production as fast as possible. If you’re great at AI, engineering, or manufacturing & want to build this, join us! → tesla.com/careers/search…



Joe Kent says he is skeptical that Tyler Robinson, who confessed to killing Charlie Kirk, was the lone shooter. That accusation could undermine the prosecutors’ case against Robinson. Kent says he knew of the risk before he decided to speak out.


EXCLUSIVE: “Star Trek: Starfleet Academy” will end with its upcoming second season. The show failed to find a significant audience, not ranking on Nielsen’s Top 10 streaming viewership charts at any point during its 10-episode first season. wp.me/pc8uak-1lH3kQ




🚨🇺🇸🇮🇶 BREAKING: U.S. and NATO forces have withdrawn from Victoria Base and most of Iraq. The exit was negotiated with the militant groups that spent the last three weeks firing rockets at that base. America went into Iraq in 2003 to reshape the Middle East. It left in 2026 under a ceasefire brokered by the people shooting at it. @officialrnintel, @dropsitenews







The F-35 was supposed to be unkillable. That was the whole point. Lockheed Martin spent thirty years and four hundred billion dollars, the most expensive weapons programme in human history, building an aircraft that the enemy simply could not see. Not on radar. Not on infrared. Not on anything. The F-35 was not just a fighter jet. It was a theological statement. America’s way of saying: we have moved beyond the reach of your missiles, your sensors, and your prayers. Iran apparently didn’t get the memo. Somewhere over Iranian airspace on March 19, 2026, an IRST system, infrared search and track, the kind of sensor your grandmother could probably explain, looked up, found the F-35, and locked on. Not because Iranian engineers are geniuses. Because the F-35, it turns out, is extremely hot. All that engine. All that thrust. All that carefully sculpted stealth geometry, and the bloody thing glows like a kettle. The heat signature data Iran now holds is not just embarrassing. It is a gift that keeps giving. To Moscow. To Beijing. To every procurement ministry on the planet that has been quietly wondering whether to spend the money on systems designed to kill this aircraft. The answer, as of this week, is yes. And here is the bit that should really worry the Pentagon. You can patch software. You can redesign coatings. You cannot reprogramme a pilot’s brain. Every F-35 driver who takes off from here on knows, actually knows, that someone down there might be able to see them. That changes everything about how they fly. Caution replaces aggression. Hesitation replaces instinct. Four hundred billion dollars. And in the end, it was done in by a heat sensor. Tremendous. Gandalv / @Microinteracti1


🇺🇸🇮🇷 The Tophatters and Vigilantes rolling off the Lincoln's deck Two of the Navy's most storied fighter squadrons launch back-to-back from the USS Abraham Lincoln for strikes on Iran. VFA-14 has been flying combat since World War II.





We’re honored to announce MLB has named Polymarket as their Exclusive Prediction Market Exchange Partner. Polymarket 🤝 MLB




🚨🇮🇷🇺🇸 As the U.S. is investigating how an F-35 was hit over Iran, their first questions will center around its stealth tech. This jet is built with layered countermeasures: jamming, lock-breaking, and a last-ditch decoy designed to literally pull missiles away. So if it still got hit… did the system fail, or did something finally punch through it? Source: Real Engineering YT








