Rider Harrison

587 posts

Rider Harrison

Rider Harrison

@RiderHarrison1

Katılım Haziran 2020
272 Takip Edilen30 Takipçiler
Rider Harrison
Rider Harrison@RiderHarrison1·
Obligatory photo of my truck with some take out sushi in honor of all the Japanese posts flooding my feed
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どんぐり陸士長
どんぐり陸士長@Dongurihou·
親愛なるアメリカのフォロワー様たちへ このポストが見えているのなら、 好きな日本のテレビゲームを教えてほしいです! ちょっと知ってみたい……
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PNWGUERRILLA
PNWGUERRILLA@pnwguerrilla·
Someone in Florida started a PNWGUERRILLA account. Lol
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Rider Harrison
Rider Harrison@RiderHarrison1·
@DanielleFong I sunk years of my life into this game, nothing but the fondest memories on all the UMS maps. Absolutely love that EUD was found close to a decade after it came out and people used it more for creativity than maliciousness
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Rider Harrison
Rider Harrison@RiderHarrison1·
Fuck you @Xfinity. Submitting a complaint to the AG and going to be going door to door to convince my neighbors to switch to AT&T. Loyal customer for years, owned my own equipment and suggested my tenants use you after I moved and this is the goodbye I get from you.
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Danielle Fong 🔆
Danielle Fong 🔆@DanielleFong·
*does this to you*
Mechanical Knowledge@mechanical_4u

This is cavitation inside a piston diaphragm pump. Most engineers spend their entire careers hearing this destructive phenomenon. Almost none ever get to see it with their own eyes. When pressure drops below a critical threshold, liquid instantly flashes into vapor, creating thousands of microscopic bubbles throughout the system. It happens in milliseconds, invisible to the naked eye in standard metal pumps. But when pressure rises again, those bubbles don't just disappear quietly. They collapse violently, sending shockwaves rippling through the metal components. The result is catastrophic. Valves get destroyed. Seals get shredded. Pump chambers get hollowed out from the inside, one microscopic implosion at a time. Cavitation is one of the most destructive forces in industrial fluid systems, responsible for equipment failures that cost thousands of dollars per incident. Engineers have studied it for decades through sensors, pressure readings, and the telltale sounds it makes. But they've never been able to watch it happen in real time. Until now. The clear plexiglass head on this LEWA pump changes everything. For the first time, pump engineers can observe cavitation as it occurs, watching the bubble formation and violent collapse that destroys their equipment. It's like finally seeing the invisible enemy that's been wreaking havoc on industrial systems. This is what happens when engineering innovation meets visualization technology. Sometimes the most powerful breakthroughs come from simply making the invisible visible.

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Retard Finder
Retard Finder@IfindRetards·
Only retards can reply to this post. 🫂
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Danielle Fong 🔆
Danielle Fong 🔆@DanielleFong·
every day trying to keep up with what is happening and integrate the latest in AI is more than a full time job. at least i have AI help. otherwise it would be impossible i feel
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Rider Harrison
Rider Harrison@RiderHarrison1·
I'm doing my part 🫡
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Rider Harrison
Rider Harrison@RiderHarrison1·
@agave_redux “My son, your whole life you treated your fellow man with kindness, respect and love and followed my teachings to a tee. Unfortunately you didn’t make it into heaven because you didn’t learn that from the bible or have a priest preach it to you” - God to someone, probably
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AGAVE
AGAVE@agave_redux·
I am not a Christian. Reason: Christians.
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Terrible Maps
Terrible Maps@TerribleMaps·
Places you’re most likely to get a speeding ticket in
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Danielle Fong 🔆
Danielle Fong 🔆@DanielleFong·
so helpful! thanks
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Rimsha Bhardwaj@heyrimsha

🚨BREAKING: A developer on GitHub just turned your WiFi router into a full-body surveillance system. It's called RuView. It uses the WiFi signals already in your room to detect human poses, track breathing, measure heart rate, and see through walls. Not a concept. Not a research paper. Working code you can run right now. Here's what this thing actually does: → Tracks full 17-point body pose using only WiFi signals → Detects breathing rate (6-30 BPM) without touching anyone → Measures heart rate (40-120 BPM) from across the room → Sees through walls, furniture, and debris up to 5 meters deep → Tracks multiple people simultaneously with zero identity swaps → Self-learns from raw WiFi data. No labeled datasets needed Here's how it works: WiFi signals pass through your room and hit the human body. The body scatters those signals differently based on position, breathing, even heartbeat. RuView reads that scattering pattern and reconstructs everything. A mesh of 4 ESP32 nodes ($48 total) gives you 360-degree coverage with 12 measurement links, 20 Hz updates, and sub-30mm precision. Here's the wildest part: It has a disaster response mode called WiFi-Mat. It detects survivors trapped under rubble through concrete walls, classifies injury severity using START triage protocol, and estimates 3D position. The kind of tool that saves lives after earthquakes. The Rust implementation processes 54,000 frames per second. That's 810x faster than the Python version. The entire Docker image is 132 MB. The AI model fits in 55 KB of memory. Runs on an $8 ESP32 chip. Train once, deploy in any room. No retraining. No recalibration. 1,100+ tests. 15 Rust crates on crates. io. SHA-256 verified capability audit. 100% Open Source.

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Danielle Fong 🔆
Danielle Fong 🔆@DanielleFong·
"randy walters is a son of a bitch" stuck in my head
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Doc Strangelove
Doc Strangelove@DocStrangelove2·
Morning Everyone
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Rider Harrison
Rider Harrison@RiderHarrison1·
@DanielleFong @ashebytes Absolutely fascinating concept. So much room for disruption in so many spaces with your this technology. Hope yall make some serious strides and progress in the near future!!!
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Danielle Fong 🔆
Danielle Fong 🔆@DanielleFong·
thank you so much @Ashebytes for an amazing conversation!
ashe@ashebytes

On frontier science: stepping into the golden age of energy tech In conversation with Danielle Fong @daniellefong 00:45 Danielle’s background, starting with college at 12 04:16 The global energy crisis 11:15 Productizing: from drones to data centers 14:00 Powering your future openclaw with propane 14:34 US gov vs consumer applications 19:30 AI, data centers, and new energy sources 23:25 Agentic tools at Lightcell 27:54 Leveraging models across providers 29:54 Iterating on frontier science 43:22 Hyperscalers and the golden age of energy tech

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