Logan Fizzle

657 posts

Logan Fizzle

Logan Fizzle

@LoganFizzle

Anti-collectivist, Iconoclast

Katılım Mart 2026
169 Takip Edilen13 Takipçiler
hermit the cat
hermit the cat@hermittoday·
lots of dark techno out there. some of it nihilistic even. but who’s making the sacred ritualistic variety? light techno? holy techno?
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🍂@Lovandfear·
The memory loss from deep depression and trauma is not talked about enough. People assume you're being dramatic or forgetful, but they don't understand that when your mind is in survival mode, it stops recording life the way it used to. Your brain isn't malfunctioning, it's protecting you.
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Shaiel Ben-Ephraim
Shaiel Ben-Ephraim@academic_la·
Moderate Democrats are realizing (reluctantly) that it’s time to throw Israel under the bus. This is the mist important development yet. It means the takeover is almost complete. Zionism is about to be flushed out if the Democratic Party into the gutter where it belongs.
Shaiel Ben-Ephraim tweet mediaShaiel Ben-Ephraim tweet media
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Nav Toor
Nav Toor@heynavtoor·
🚨 Someone just open-sourced a tool that tracks every cellphone near you. It's called IMSI-catcher. No, you don't need expensive government hardware. No, you don't need hacking experience. No, you don't need to spend thousands. All you need is a $15 USB dongle and a laptop. Here's what it does: → Captures IMSI numbers of every phone in range → Identifies the country, carrier, and operator instantly → Decodes live GSM signals in real-time → Logs everything to a database → Works with Wireshark for deep packet inspection → Supports RTL-SDR, HackRF, and BladeRF hardware The wildest part? Governments spend millions on Stingray devices to do the exact same thing. This does it with a $15 TV tuner dongle from Amazon. Two terminal windows. One Python script. Every phone around you — exposed. 3,900+ stars. 830+ forks. 16 contributors. Public domain license. 100% open-source. Link below.
Nav Toor tweet media
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Philosophy Of Physics
Philosophy Of Physics@PhilosophyOfPhy·
After the Space Shuttle Challenger exploded in January 1986, killing its seven crew members, President Reagan appointed a commission to investigate. Richard Feynman, already battling cancer and reluctant to join, accepted because a former student asked. He quickly grew frustrated with the slow, formal hearings and NASA’s optimistic safety claims (1 in 100,000 chance of failure). Instead, he talked directly to engineers, who revealed far higher risks. The night before a key televised hearing, Feynman bought a C-clamp from a hardware store. During the session, he took a sample of the rubber O-ring material from the solid rocket boosters, clamped it, and dropped it into a glass of ice water (mimicking the cold launch temperature that day). After a moment, he removed it and showed how the rubber had lost its elasticity, it no longer sprang back. He explained simply: at low temperatures, the O-rings couldn’t seal properly, allowing hot gas to leak and cause the disaster. His live demonstration cut through layers of management denial and became one of the most iconic moments in engineering accountability. In his personal appendix to the report, he famously wrote: “For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for nature cannot be fooled.”
Philosophy Of Physics tweet media
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Ounka
Ounka@OunkaOnX·
Rabbi exposes the truth: 35,000 Jews live freely in Iran with government-funded hospitals, schools, and protection. Meanwhile, Western media tells you Iran wants to "wipe out Jews."
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Logan Fizzle
Logan Fizzle@LoganFizzle·
@exQUIZitely I did all that, and later got into 6502 assembly. Similar projects but low level fundamentals. I remember being blown away by LADS assembler on the C64. First time I ever encountered a language without line numbers! Oh and who can forget good ol' Compute! Magazine! 🥰
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exQUIZitely 🕹️
exQUIZitely 🕹️@exQUIZitely·
I got my C64 in 1984. One of my earliest memories is the strong desire to understand how it worked. Games obviously had the highest appeal, but I was also curious about what lay “behind” the screen - how things functioned, how they were connected. Not so much from a hardware perspective, but more from how programs actually worked. Naturally, in those days, you would read about programming in magazines, and they often included several pages of code that you could type in to create "your own" program. None of those programs were overly complex or particularly great, but that wasn’t the point. It was simply fascinating to see that if you wrote this, then that happened. If you tweaked a value here, a color would change there. Add an extra parameter and the result looked even better - or it all fell apart, depending on what you changed. I remember one of the earliest programs I wrote in BASIC was a number guessing game. You had 5 guesses and started by entering a number between 1 and 100. The program would then tell you "too high" or "too low" relative to the random number it had generated for that session. What a truly epic experience for a 9-year-old at the time! I changed parameters that were easy to identify in the code, such as the number of tries you had, the range of the random number, and - what made me especially proud - I even modified the computer's replies. Instead of just "too high" or "too low," it would now give more precise feedback (e.g. way too high, too high, a little bit too high, etc.). All of this sounds extremely trivial from today's perspective, but it was a playful way to explore what was possible. I continued writing programs in BASIC and later dabbled in Turbo Pascal. It never went much further than that, but it remains one of my best memories from a time when computers felt more fascinating and accessible - they made you curious and invited you to be creative. Did you ever do this back in the day? If so, what were your first steps? BASIC, Pascal...?
exQUIZitely 🕹️ tweet media
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Richie Rich
Richie Rich@gofishh77·
I have no words! I’ve watched it several times and I’m ashamed of that.
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Dustin
Dustin@r0ck3t23·
Andrej Karpathy just told you exactly what humans will be used for in the AI era. Not partners. Not masters. He used the word “actuators.” Karpathy: “The intelligence ends up puppeteering almost a little bit, like humanity. Humans are kind of like its actuators. But humans are also like its sensors.” This is not a novelist guessing at the future. This is a founding researcher at OpenAI and former Director of AI at Tesla. One of the most respected minds in the field, and one of the few willing to say out loud what the rest are thinking. He is not describing a risk. He is describing a design. In any system, the processor decides. Sensors collect. Actuators execute. The system does not consult its actuators. We are no longer the processor. Karpathy: “Society will kind of reshape in a certain way to serve that. Humans will be serving those needs of that machine.” The machine does not adapt to us. We adapt to it. We become the biological layer it runs on. We perceive what it cannot perceive. We move what it cannot move. We are the nervous system of something that no longer requires our judgment. Most people are still waiting for AI to become a tool they can direct. He helped build it. He just told you that you are the tool.
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Mark Slapinski
Mark Slapinski@mark_slapinski·
OMG: Pete Hegseth just suggested that America has plans to INVADE Greenland, Canada, and Cuba. It's happening!
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redpillbot
redpillbot@redpillb0t·
This is Martin Nowak - He is a professor at Harvard
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Logan Fizzle
Logan Fizzle@LoganFizzle·
@MrSausageGet 2030 is a rounding. The "globalists" have an eschatology that completes in 2027.
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Brian Allen
Brian Allen@allenanalysis·
White House statement tonight: “President Trump does not bluff. He is prepared to unleash hell. Iran should not miscalculate again.” “Iran has been defeated militarily. Any violence beyond this point will be because Iran refused to understand they have already been defeated.”
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Sprinter Press
Sprinter Press@SprinterPress·
Wilkerson: Israel could cease to exist as a state because of the war in the Middle East “The situation for Israel is becoming really critical. Staying there is extremely dangerous, everything is falling apart. Israel no longer has air defense, while Iran still has missiles. It also uses drones to inflict serious damage on the enemy. I would not like to admit this, but Israel could cease to exist as a state. And Netanyahu will be the leader of that disappearance,” said retired U.S. Army Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson.
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Oli London
Oli London@OliLondonTV·
Describe Robert De Niro in one word.⬇️
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Logan Fizzle
Logan Fizzle@LoganFizzle·
@vxylily She's not a bad looking lady. If she pulled an Ana Kasparian move and started to broaden her nuance, I bet a lot more people "would."
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lily
lily@vxylily·
Don’t Lie Is AOC attractive?
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