Nathan Bean
492 posts

Nathan Bean
@NathanTyBean
Just here watching @ElonMusk change the world for the better!









I just (finally) submitted a service request for Hœnir for some delivery stuff. First is the tonneau leak we discovered on our Epic Road Trip #1 last Sept. I think it needs an extra slat added at the top as you can see holes. Second, I noticed on delivery day there are two warps or bends in the rear quarter panel where it meets the rear door. Can be hard to see but in the right light it's really obvious. Do you think these will both be addressed?

Dr. Jack Kruse just revealed how blue light hijacks the dopamine reward pathways in your brain. Your phone, laptop, and TV are all running on a light that keeps your dopamine low by design. He says this was engineered on purpose. Kruse is a neurosurgeon who traced where this blue light display technology came from: 1) In the 1950s, DARPA funded IBM to develop liquid crystal displays using blue light. Side note: DARPA is the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. They build military technology. The internet started there. 2) In 1995, DARPA gave the search algorithm to two Stanford students who founded Google along with this technology 3) Today, Meta and Google own the patents on how this light is delivered through every screen you use. Kruse asked one question no one in tech has answered. Why does every screen on Earth default to blue light? You need third-party software just to get red light on your own device. Kruse says the reason is simple. Blue light at specific frequencies makes screens addictive. It lowers dopamine over time. It makes users more compliant and easier to influence. DARPA wants it sticky so people can be programmed through the content they consume. He says 55% of the American population has already been affected by screen technology in exactly this way. The blue glow on your face right now isn't accidental. According to Kruse, it never was. — Jack Kruse (@drplebjack) on the Danny Jones (@JonesDanny) Podcast



Once again I am asking to not be limited at a 325kW charging station. This time in Mountain Home, ID. This has never been an issue until this road trip, and now it’s 3 times in a row at different stations. @MdeZegher















