Recon
15.3K posts

Sabitlenmiş Tweet

just finished my first testing on the @moleswapcom platform , i can say for a begineer it's kind of very stressful on the dApp part , but after i got a hang of it , my test swaps were going very smooth and i loved it so much .
the hardest part is getting push coin for me i

Farihan@Farihan01
Beta test is LIVE and quests just started 🚀 I'm earning XP on MoleSwap while testing cross-chain swaps. Join, complete quests & climb the leaderboard with me 👇 moleswap.com/beta
English
Recon retweetledi
Recon retweetledi

“The only real test of intelligence is if you get what you want out of life.”
yuzu@yuzu_4ever
i am always suspicious of people who claim to be smart but are miserable. if they really were that smart, they would have figured out how to live a joyous life.
English
Recon retweetledi
Recon retweetledi
Recon retweetledi

That tiny red nub sitting between the G, H, and B keys on keyboards has been quietly dividing the tech world for over 30 years. Half the people who encounter it have no idea what it does. The other half refuse to use anything else.
It’s called the TrackPoint. And it was born out of a single frustrating observation.
In 1984, a researcher named Ted Selker conducted a study showing that it takes a typist 0.75 seconds to shift their hand from the keyboard to the mouse and a comparable amount of time to shift back.  That 1.5 seconds of lost time, multiplied across an entire workday, felt like a solvable problem. So he built something that would eliminate it entirely; a pressure-sensitive nub planted right in the middle of the keyboard, so your hands never had to leave the keys at all. IBM introduced it commercially in 1992 on the ThinkPad 700 series. 
The way it works is not what most people expect. It doesn’t move like a joystick. It responds to pressure. Beneath the rubber cap sit strain gauges that measure the force applied in different directions and translate it into cursor movement. The harder you press, the faster the cursor moves.  There is no repositioning, no lifting your finger, no running out of space. Infinite cursor movement from a single fingertip that never moves more than a millimeter.
The red color almost didn’t happen. IBM’s product safety division had reserved red exclusively for emergency power-off switches on mainframe computers.
ThinkPad designer Richard Sapper got around this by calling the color IBM Magenta and when the first batch shipped, the engineers made it decidedly more crimson. A loophole dressed in plain sight. 
Power users programmers, analysts, executives who live on their keyboards swear by it. The reason, according to Lenovo’s chief design officer, is that your hands never leave the home row. You type and navigate simultaneously, without the constant interruption of reaching for a trackpad.  Once mastered, people say it feels less like using a tool and more like an extension of thought.
Most laptops abandoned it. Lenovo never did. And the people who know, know.
Mololuwa | Cybersecurity - (The God Complex)@cyber_rekk
What exactly is the use of this stuff on a keyboard?
English
Recon retweetledi

📂 Airdrops to Farm
┃
┣ 📂 Perp/Trading
┃ ┣ 📂 @HyperliquidX
┃ ┣ 📂 @etherealdex
┃ ┣ 📂 @variational_io
┃ ┣ 📂 @extendedapp
┃ ┣ 📂 @OstiumLabs
┃ ┣ 📂 @nadoHQ
┃ ┣ 📂 @pacifica_fi
┃ ┣ 📂 @edgeX_exchange
┃ ┣ 📂 @OfficialApeXdex
┃ ┣ 📂 @BullpenFi
┃ ┣ 📂 @Bullshot911
┃ ┣ 📂 @grvt_io
┃ ┣ 📂 @Dreamcash
┃ ┣ 📂 @hibachi_xyz
┃ ┣ 📂 @PhoenixTrade
┃ ┗ 📂 @42space
┃
┣ 📂 Prediction markets
┃ ┣ 📂 @Polymarket
┃ ┣ 📂 @Kalshi
┃ ┗ 📂 @predictdotfun
┃
┣ 📂 L1/L2
┃ ┣ 📂 @base
┃ ┣ 📂 @AbstractChain
┃ ┗📂 @tempo
┃
┣ 📂 AI & Agents
┃ ┣ 📂 @dawninternet
┃ ┣ 📂 @konnex_world
┃ ┗ 📂 @FractionAI_xyz
┃
┗ 📂 Other
┣ 📂 @opensea
┣ 📂 @ethos_network
┗ 📂 @Arcium
English
Recon retweetledi

Daily interaction on @signalswtf
Silver tier soon.

SHELBY@shelbyofweb_3
Exploring @signalswtf I think it's time to go in big 👀
English
Recon retweetledi
Recon retweetledi

Back in 2011, I went into computer hardware repairs. I started with laptop chargers. I remember peeling back the rubber, soldering wires, and always staring at that weird plastic bulge on the cable. It didn't look like it did anything, but it was on every single high-end charger I fixed. I used to wonder if it was a hidden battery or just a weight to keep the cord from tangling.
It turns out, that little lump is the unsung hero of your workspace.
It's called a Ferrite Bead, and its only job is to act as a silencer for your electricity.
See, every electronic device is naturally noisy. They send out invisible electromagnetic signals. Without that cylinder, your charger cable would turn into a giant antenna, broadcasting interference that would make your Wi-Fi slow, your TV flicker, or your speakers buzz.
Inside that plastic shell is just a chunk of magnetic iron. It catches all that electrical noise and kills it before it can escape the wire.
It’s basically a muzzle for your cable so your gadgets can live in peace.
INALEGWU.
Peter Agboola@baba_Omoloro
Doesn't seem like anyone knows what this is for, right?
English














