
MÁXIMO
51 posts

MÁXIMO
@NNRXMM
Graduated Highschool at 14 y/o. Turned down Huawei SZ. Dropped out Elite MX university. — Now Securing North America's Industrial Future.


Mexican cartels are setting Vietnam-era booby traps inside US national parks. The tips are coated in a nerve agent so deadly the cartels themselves call it "El Diablo." Retired game warden John Nores explains what his team found:

@XFreeze Tunnels are underestimated


I’m still confused as to why we’re making robots that look like people rather than making them far far far far better at doing the things we need them to do. It’s like we’re making animatronic horses not cars with wheels

2 people can’t physically hold back the Agibot A3 when it malfunctioned. Looks like a policy degradation under instability.

3 commencement speakers were booed at the mention of Artificial Intelligence (Video) 1. Eric Schmidt, Google CEO 2. Scott Borchetta, Big Machine Records CEO 3. Gloria Caulfield, Tavistock Development VP






I remember watching a Fr. Mike homily and he pointed out boomers were obsessed with material wealth, while millennials are obsessed with experiences, and about how in the end, neither are worth anything tangibly when it comes to your soul getting to heaven.


Japan has built a $2,500 cardboard drone. It actually flies fast while avoiding radar! At first, the military thought it was a joke. A plane made of… cardboard? Yet, this drone can travel nearly 80 km at over 100 km/h. And the craziest thing is that its material becomes an advantage. Cardboard reflects radar waves less than some conventional materials. As a result, it's harder to detect in the sky. Japan can even transport hundreds of them in a single container and assemble them in minutes. While some countries are building drones costing millions, they're focusing on machines that are practically disposable. Perhaps this is the new technological warfare: Simple, ultra-fast weapons… produced like Amazon packages. Subscribe to discover incredible human advancements in five minutes a day.


I think for a very large percentage of people in their youth, this level of access to water will be a memory in old age.


The long journey of rock in Nashville





