Elonosopher

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Elonosopher

Elonosopher

@Elonospher

quoting Elon

Mars 参加日 Ocak 2026
118 フォロー中436 フォロワー
Elonosopher
Elonosopher@Elonospher·
My mind is a storm and people may think, they would want to be me but they don't know, they don't understand
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Katie Miller
Katie Miller@KatieMiller·
The new Grok Imagine Chibi template. Being a kid with my kid.
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Elonosopher
Elonosopher@Elonospher·
@elonmusk @xdNiBoR The biggest technology challenge remaining for Starship is a fully & immediately reusable heat shield. Being able to land the ship, refill propellant & launch right away with no refurbishment or laborious inspection. That is the acid test.
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ZUBY:
ZUBY:@ZubyMusic·
It feels like the overall experience of social media has dropped significantly in the last few months. It's not unique to this platform, but all of the ones I use. Am I alone in this sentiment?
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Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡
Helium is the only element that escapes Earth’s atmosphere permanently. Once released, it rises through the troposphere, passes the stratosphere, and leaves the planet. It cannot be manufactured. It cannot be synthesised at industrial scale. It accumulates over billions of years in the same geological reservoirs as natural gas. And one third of the world’s supply just went offline because Iran hit the facility that extracts it. Qatar produced roughly 63 million cubic metres of helium in 2025, accounting for 30 to 36 percent of global supply from a total of approximately 190 million cubic metres. QatarEnergy’s three large helium purification plants at Ras Laffan form the world’s biggest helium production base. When LNG production stopped after Iranian drone strikes on March 2 and the subsequent missile damage on March 19, helium extraction stopped automatically because helium is recovered during natural gas liquefaction. You cannot produce helium without producing LNG. The byproduct dies with the primary product. Spot helium prices have roughly doubled since the crisis began. Industry consultants warn that prolonged disruption could push contract prices toward $2,000 per thousand cubic feet. A major industrial gas supplier has already begun assessing customers a helium surcharge. Phil Kornbluth, the most cited helium market consultant, stated the assessment directly: the world cannot compensate for the loss of a third of its helium supply. South Korea imports 64.7 percent of its helium from Qatar. SK Hynix and Samsung operate high-volume fabs producing the DRAM and high-bandwidth memory that power every AI accelerator, every data centre GPU, and every cloud computing cluster on Earth. Helium cools silicon wafers during fabrication. It serves as a carrier gas in deposition and etching tools. It enables leak detection in vacuum systems. Modern extreme ultraviolet lithography requires helium-cooled environments for precise temperature control. Without helium, the fabrication process degrades or stops. SK Hynix and Samsung hold two to three months of helium inventory. Two to three months is not a buffer. It is a countdown. If Ras Laffan remains offline beyond that window, South Korean memory production faces rationing. TSMC in Taiwan is somewhat more diversified but still uses Qatar-linked supply chains. The entire AI hardware supply chain, from HBM3E memory stacks to advanced logic chips, sits inside helium-dependent ecosystems. Beyond semiconductors, helium cools the superconducting magnets in more than 14,000 MRI machines operating worldwide. It pressurises rocket fuel tanks and purges propulsion systems in aerospace. CERN’s Large Hadron Collider depends on helium cryogenic systems. There is no substitute for helium in any of these applications at industrial scale. The United States and Qatar together account for more than 70 percent of global production. The US federal helium reserve and private suppliers offer partial relief, but global prices and spot availability are still governed by Qatar’s market share. Japan’s Iwatani has drawn on US reserves. Canada and the Rockies are seeing renewed investor interest. None of this replaces 63 million cubic metres in weeks. The war hit uranium first. Then oil. Then nitrogen. Then water. Then plastic. Then medicine. Then sulfur. Now helium. Eight layers. Each one deeper. Each one closer to the infrastructure that sustains modern civilisation. The chip that processes your data, the magnet that scans your body, and the rocket that launches your satellite all depend on an atom that leaves the planet when you lose it. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡ tweet media
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Peter H. Diamandis, MD
Peter H. Diamandis, MD@PeterDiamandis·
You've got 8 billion potential customers on Earth, BUT... In 2026, only ~5.3 billion have internet access. That means 2.7 billion people still can't access the exponential tools we talk about daily—AI, telemedicine, online education, digital banking. The gap: The missing ~3 billion represent the largest untapped market in human history. Starlink alone now has 10,000+ satellites in orbit (just crossed that milestone yesterday). When connectivity becomes ubiquitous in the next 3-4 years, we're not just adding users—we're adding builders, creators, entrepreneurs. The implication: The next Einstein, the next Elon, the next medical breakthrough might be sitting in a village without Wi-Fi right now. Abundance doesn't just mean "more for current participants"—it means unlocking latent genius at global scale.
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
I don’t even smoke lol 💨
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doomer
doomer@uncledoomer·
are these instagram chicks finally starting to realize their "therapists" are just scamming them?
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Elonosopher
Elonosopher@Elonospher·
@elonmusk @ApoStructura Making a fully reusable orbital rocket of any design is one of the hardest engineering problems of all time. Much, much harder than going to the Moon, which is why it still hasn’t been solved. I am cautiously optimistic that Starship will achieve full reusability this year.
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ApoStructura
ApoStructura@ApoStructura·
Exactly. The shuttle was “reusable” but required so much refurbishment that it cost more than expandable rockets. F9’s reusability enabled much lower prices and higher cadences. That’s why F9 flew more in 2025 alone than the Space Shuttle flew in its entire 30y service history.
ApoStructura tweet media
Elon Musk@elonmusk

@ApoStructura Making reusability useful is what matters

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Libs of TikTok
Libs of TikTok@libsoftiktok·
BREAKING: Karen Lewis ARRESTED in North Carolina after she was allegedly caught on video using a wooden board covered in nails to vandalize a cyber truck. FAFO
Libs of TikTok tweet media
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
@mark_k @cursor_ai Coding will be generically available from many companies in a few months
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Ana Mostarac
Ana Mostarac@anammostarac·
Eventually, content from humans will be considered the slop.
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Milan Mádle
Milan Mádle@mad_milan12·
@Elonospher @XFreeze @elonmusk That's why the white man enslaves even if you don't have to be a slave and cultivates the soul of a slave in you. It makes sense Elon. I see no other slavers than white, maybe I should go back to Africa.
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X Freeze
X Freeze@XFreeze·
There is absolutely no reason to blame white people for slavery, and it makes no sense. Africans sold their own into slavery, yet white people are blamed for eternity White people ended slavery. The entire modern world was built on Western civilization, and the whole world is thriving because of it Stop doing this white guilt thing
X Freeze tweet media
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Eltigre9
Eltigre9@matt42069i·
@elonmusk The “Roman Empire” template is 🔥 🔥 ⚔️
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