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Python Maps
Python Maps@PythonMaps·
Fun concept, the distribution of elevation levels on the earths surface
Python Maps tweet media
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Jerseyan
Jerseyan@JerseyanUSA·
@PythonMaps That the highest point is at sea level...looks suspicious. But the tides and waves at the ocean's edge are great levelers 🌊🏔
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Samuel Smith
Samuel Smith@SamuelS24384701·
@PythonMaps Interesting just a small change in the current sea level would result in the largest changes. Reminds me of the pareto principle.
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Star Wars
Star Wars@starwars·
an icon. For more Padmé watch The Phantom Menace streaming on Disney+.
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Taylor🪴
Taylor🪴@TKPullinger·
@PythonMaps Cool map, but this chart should be in units of ft not m :)
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H@GeogyDog·
@PythonMaps So I really find interesti g thst there are two groups that dominate on is the ocean floor and the other one are continental crust. Notice, the last one is around zero, so just a bit of more water and most of continents would be under water. Funny coincidence
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Joel Gombiner
Joel Gombiner@joelgombiner·
@PythonMaps Interesting. The bimodal distribution can be explained by there being two types of crust (oceanic and continental) with different densities that thus float at different heights on the denser mantle assthenosphere.
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Dante
Dante@Danteawaw·
@PythonMaps Very cool! Crazy that it’s a bimodal or even a trimodal distribution!
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Nition
Nition@Nition·
@PythonMaps This is a really interesting chart, but it looks like you've graphed the highest elevations as white on white. As a result the Himalayas etc are invisible on the elevation chart. Try a black background?
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Nick Longrich
Nick Longrich@NickLongrich·
@PythonMaps That big highland in the southern part of Africa is likely where modern Homo sapiens originated. Curious.
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Kian
Kian@KianErfaan·
@PythonMaps Definitely underwater aliens looking at this bimodal distribution
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Suresh
Suresh@_Suresh2·
@PythonMaps huh. always forget how much of it is deep ocean floor.
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Brett
Brett@_Brett__·
@PythonMaps It’s always wild to see how rugged western North America is.
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Space Initiatives
Space Initiatives@AsteroidEnergy·
@PythonMaps Yes, we have two types of terrain - continental granite floating (literally) on top of denser basalt.
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Rafael Yamano
Rafael Yamano@ryamano1·
@PythonMaps Not so round anymore. Would it stay that way if all water evaporated?
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Nicholas Losciuto - Dog Guy
Nicholas Losciuto - Dog Guy@thedogfather·
Jensen (Nvidia) is pointing at a leadership STACK that is now mandatory in an AI-driven world: IQ → understand the data EQ → read the room AQ → adjust before it’s obvious ALONE: IQ > traps you in narrow expertise. You survive on precision, but only the top 1-2% break out. EQ > builds consensus without grounding. Guesswork dressed as leadership. AQ > Evasive maneuvering to steer the ship, but without being able to see through the fog. The edge comes from integration. See clearly. Sense early. Move decisively. Have strong data and people around you. Stay close to the market so you feel shifts before they show up in reports. Act before it’s comfortable. That’s what Jensen is pointing at. Not intelligence. Character. Character is built under pressure. Being wrong publicly. Taking hits continuously. Adjusting but never breaking. IQ, EQ, AQ are tools. Character decides when to use them. Score yourself. Close your gaps.
Naruto@NarutoNolimits

“Greatness does not come out of intelligence, it comes from character. Character is not formed out of smart people: it is formed out of people who have suffered.” — Nvidia CEO, Jensen Huang

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Will
Will@JamesWilli19034·
@PythonMaps Im pretty sure this is wrong
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Helen Levich
Helen Levich@simply15420·
A couple of years ago, I wrote a fictional allegory about a peaceful society that slowly turned against some of its own people. It did not happen all at once. It happened through rumor, false moral authority, isolation, and fear. A few people were marked as suspect. Others stayed quiet. Institutions failed to ask hard questions. And before long, the community was helping enforce an injustice it did not fully understand. The story was fictional. The pattern was not. What interested me then — and still does now — is how easily a community can confuse conformity with virtue, accusation with truth, and silence with safety. Recovery in the story begins when one person chooses not to repeat the noise, but to investigate it. That may be the most important lesson of all: truth usually returns quietly, through courage, patience, and a refusal to let fear do all the thinking. youtu.be/8yyypM6xYm8?si…
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