GodsonRaizen

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GodsonRaizen

GodsonRaizen

@GodsonRaizen

Tech and Gaming

Ontario, CA Katılım Kasım 2020
1.6K Takip Edilen908 Takipçiler
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GodsonRaizen
GodsonRaizen@GodsonRaizen·
So I’ll be sharing my progress with re-learning React Native here. I’ve already started so I’ll just put that under day 1. Would have daily reports on what I’ve done. Hoping that by day 31 (the end of the month), I’ve re-learnt it to intermediate level and built a few things
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Mokey
Mokey@mokeysniper·
Has anyone pointed out yet that Axle is a german movement Legend ? Axel is a german and scandinavian name. I'm german so i can smell a german accent from a mile away. She has a german accent. She's named Isa Wegner. That's a german ass name. She's german.
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Bev 🇨🇦
Bev 🇨🇦@Garnet_2203·
Watch closely, this isn’t happening by accident. Doug Ford is following the same playbook we’re seeing elsewhere. Step by step, it mirrors what Danielle Smith is doing in Alberta and what the U.S. system has normalized for years. This is how it starts:
Underfund public healthcare → create frustration → introduce “alternatives” → normalize private, for-profit care → bring in insurance-driven models. And let’s be clear the capitalist private insurance companies have been eyeing Canada for decades. There’s been pressure going back to the Harper era to open that door. Because once it opens, it doesn’t close. Universal healthcare isn’t just a system it’s a safeguard. And if people don’t pay attention now, we risk waking up to something very different. This isn’t fear-mongering. It’s a pattern. And patterns matter.
CP24@CP24

Ontario hospitals announce job cuts, nearly three-quarters of hospitals in deficit cp24.com/politics/queen…

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Artur Nadolny
Artur Nadolny@ArturNadol7566·
BBC BROKE EQUALITY LAW AND GOT CAUGHT Carrie Gracie spent 30 years at the @BBC. She spoke fluent Mandarin. She ran the Beijing bureau. She was one of four international editors, two men and two women. Then in 2017 the BBC was forced to publish salary data. Gracie looked at what her male equivalent, the North America editor, was earning. He was on nearly double her salary. She had explicitly said equal pay was a condition of taking the China role. The BBC agreed. Then quietly paid her far less anyway. She asked for equal pay. The BBC offered her a raise that still left her below the men. She turned it down. She resigned from the China post in January 2018 and published an open letter telling the licence fee public exactly what their broadcaster was doing. The BBC then put her through nearly a year of an internal grievance process that went nowhere. It took three meetings with the Director-General and the threat of an employment tribunal before she got a public apology and the backdated pay owed to her. The total came to £361,000. She donated every penny to the Fawcett Society (@fawcettsociety), the gender equality charity. She said the fight was about principle, not the payout. A publicly funded institution, legally obligated to follow equality law, paid women less than men in identical roles, got caught, dragged it out for a year, and only coughed up under threat of a tribunal. That is not a pay oversight. That is a policy. Gracie did not ask for a favour. She asked for what she was owed. The BBC made her fight for it like it was a privilege. Sources: @BBCNews, @guardian, @thetimes, @Independent.
Artur Nadolny tweet media
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Last B 🌼🌸
Last B 🌼🌸@Ony1nyechi·
While going to Kogi last week, our driver stopped along with other cars because no car was coming from the opposite direction. Apparently it’s a sign of danger. We waited for over 10 minutes before we saw a truck and two cars, that’s how we started moving again. I wish deth on anyone who supports this government, Nigeria has been totally ruined.
Nedu_🔥@Hhonor_

Abandoned cars line our highways, people left home only for them to end up in bushes. That was never their destination, some are never coming back. Nigeria how long? How long will we endure this? How long till we vote right? How long must we suffer?

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Adedayo Agarau
Adedayo Agarau@adedayoagarau·
I created a new page where you can find videos of 2023 APC election violence. It’s important you listen, download and share the audio at the top of the page. Share it everywhere on WhatsApp. A govt that kills its people does not deserve to rule us: 1000reasons.vote/2023
Adedayo Agarau tweet media
Adedayo Agarau@adedayoagarau

I put together 1000 Reasons Why You should not Vote for Tinubu in the next election. 1000-reasons.vercel.app Good morning Nigerians.

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Dr. Lemma
Dr. Lemma@DoctorLemma·
In 1986, a five-year-old boy in India fell asleep on a bench at a train station while waiting for his older brother to come back. His brother never returned. The boy wandered onto an empty train carriage, thinking his brother might be inside. He fell asleep again. When he woke up, the doors were locked and the train was moving. It didn’t stop for nearly two days. When it finally did, he was in Kolkata, nearly 1,500 kilometres from home. He was too young to know his surname, couldn’t read, and had no idea what his hometown was called. He survived alone on the streets for weeks, sleeping under station benches and scavenging scraps of food, before eventually being taken to an orphanage and declared a lost child. No one could trace where he came from. He was adopted by a couple from Tasmania, Australia, who gave him a loving home and a new life. His name became Saroo Brierley. He grew up on the other side of the world. But he never forgot. He held onto fragments: the image of a bridge near a train station, a water tower, a neighbourhood layout, the faces of his family. In his mid-twenties, he discovered Google Earth. He calculated the rough distance the train could have covered based on how long he remembered being on it, drew a circle on a map around Kolkata, and began searching along every railway line within that radius. Some weeks he spent 30 hours scanning satellite images of towns across central India, looking for landmarks that matched his childhood memories. His family in Australia didn’t even know. They thought he was just browsing the internet. In 2011, after years of searching, he found it. A water tower. A bridge. A ravine past a station. It was a neighbourhood called Ganesh Talai in the city of Khandwa. He zoomed in and recognised the streets he had walked as a small boy. He flew to India and walked through the town until he found his family’s home. The door was chained shut and he feared the worst. Then people came out. One of them led him to a woman down the road. It was his mother. She had never stopped looking for him. After 25 years, they were standing in front of each other. What he didn’t know until that moment was that his brother Guddu, the one he’d been waiting for at the station that night, had been struck and killed by a train. His mother had spent 25 years searching for both sons. She learned what happened to one. She never stopped praying for the other. His story became the book “A Long Way Home” and was adapted into the film “Lion,” which received six Academy Award nominations.
Dr. Lemma tweet media
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IT Unprofessional
IT Unprofessional@it_unprofession·
My friend invited me to his "casual game night." I thought that meant snacks and maybe Uno. He dimmed the lights, pulled out a whiteboard, and said, "We'll start with Catan, obviously." Obviously. Within 20 minutes, three grown adults were accusing each other of "sheep hoarding" with the intensity of a custody battle. One guy slammed his hand on the table and yelled, "You broke our wheat alliance, Trevor." I don't even know Trevor. I'm just trying to figure out why there's a resource called "ore" and why I'm emotionally invested in it. At one point, someone looked me dead in the eye and asked if I wanted to trade wood. I haven't recovered. We finished at midnight and my friend said, "Next time we'll do something light, like Twilight Imperium." I Googled it. That's not a board game. That's a part-time job with lore.
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GodsonRaizen
GodsonRaizen@GodsonRaizen·
@One__Neo__Eon He doesn’t need help with not answering a question that makes absolutely no sense.
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Embarrassed_Bat_417 | #TENOÍ
Hating on something but having to defend it because the haters are hating on it WRONG
Embarrassed_Bat_417 | #TENOÍ tweet media
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Indie Game Joe
Indie Game Joe@IndieGameJoe·
This indie dev is making a third-person parkour runner game. If we can’t have Mirror’s Edge 2, then indies will. - Play as Kaia - Use parkour abilities to traverse the world - Move in any way you see fit It's called Tachyon Flow. Would you play this?
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BuBBliK
BuBBliK@k1rallik·
> walk around your city catching pokémon > game asks you to scan a fountain. sure why not > 30 billion scans later > niantic owns a more detailed map than any government > sells game for $3.5B > spins off a spatial AI company > your pokéwalk is now classified infrastructure > delivery robots now navigate using your walks > you were never the player. you were the product.
BuBBliK@k1rallik

x.com/i/article/2033…

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GodsonRaizen
GodsonRaizen@GodsonRaizen·
I just love that in the midst of so much slop, people are still building cool stuff. I don’t know if the game play or anything else about this game is great but the idea is pretty cool
Indie Game Joe@IndieGameJoe

This indie dev is making a game where you can literally play as Ancient Egyptian wall art. - Switch between a 3D archaeologist and living 2D art - Survive puzzles that fight back - Progress by mastering both worlds It’s called Fresco. This mechanic is genius.

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Indie Game Joe
Indie Game Joe@IndieGameJoe·
This indie dev is making a game where you can literally play as Ancient Egyptian wall art. - Switch between a 3D archaeologist and living 2D art - Survive puzzles that fight back - Progress by mastering both worlds It’s called Fresco. This mechanic is genius.
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Natasha Crain
Natasha Crain@Natasha_Crain·
Last month, I shared a bit here about how my 17-year-old son has a passion for video game development and has spent hundreds of hours over the last 9 months creating his first game for release. Well, I want to let you know that Nitro Turtles is now out! It's a party racing game (kind of like Mario Kart) and has 9 courses, a speedrun mode with online leaderboards, and split screen/online multiplayer. My husband and I played all 9 courses against each other last night and IT WAS SO FUN! I'm so proud of him for the accomplishment. He has a really demanding junior year schedule of AP/Dual Credit/Honors classes, has straight As, and somehow managed to develop this all on his own out of pure passion. He started teaching himself programming in 3rd grade and just developed his skills from there. Nitro Turtles in the culmination of all the subsequent years of self-driven learning. If you or your kids play computer games, I would love for you to check the game out on Steam! store.steampowered.com/app/3952070/Ni…
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MANNY MOON 🌙
MANNY MOON 🌙@Moonkiller17·
Apex requires one of the highest skill levels when it comes to movement, positioning, battle IQ, gunplay, and teamwork. It’s easily the most refined and authentic battle royale out there—and honestly, nothing else has really been able to compare to it.
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zander 🇨🇦
zander 🇨🇦@zandertoo·
You know, as funny as it sounds, I notice this when I go to America 🇨🇦🇺🇸 In Canada, I frequently have interactions where: 1. I make eye contact, smile, and say hello/good morning when interacting with a stranger 2. Others hold the door for me & thank me when I hold it for them 3. Have strangers say "sorry" at even the most minor inconvenience, which is always followed up with a "no it's ok!" I was in Florida just last week, and I was shocked at how noticeable the difference was. Hold the door for someone? They won't say thank you, or even look at you. It's kind of jarring Maybe these are just standard Canadian quirks. Or maybe Florida is just not the place to expect this lol Don't take living in a high trust society for granted. Aim to give others a reason to believe we have it everyday 🫂
@

We asked people around the world to rate the morality and ethics of others in their country. The U.S. is the only place we surveyed where more adults describe the morality and ethics of others living in the country as bad than good. See our full morality report here: pewresearch.org/religion/2026/…

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