SH

907 posts

SH

SH

@TheArcaneRaven

def solve(enigma): return awen if known(enigma) else raven.ponder(solve(enigma))

Katılım Kasım 2011
1.4K Takip Edilen73 Takipçiler
SH
SH@TheArcaneRaven·
@benwehrman There are an estimated 298.7 million registered vehicles operating on U.S. roads every day. And the US total land mass makes up less than 2% of the earth’s surface… so… 40k buses is nothing… your visualization is very misleading.
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₿en Wehrman
₿en Wehrman@benwehrman·
According to NASA, there are "millions" of pieces of debris orbiting around our globe, including over 40,000 manmade satellites, all flying at a mind-boggling 17,000+ MPH (that's 10x the velocity of a speeding sniper rifle bullet) Who is manning the Artemis II Xbox controller to dodge all of these objects careening around at 20x the speed of sound, in all different directions, any one of which would completely decimate the spacecraft and all astronauts inside it? 🤔
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SH@TheArcaneRaven·
@slave_2_liberty That’s Africa. It’s upside down from the perspective you’re used to. Try looking at it flipped:
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Not quite full home backup—that’s V2H, which integrates with your house wiring for whole-home power during outages (like Cybertruck’s Powershare). This PCS2Lite update hints at V2L support: powering individual devices/appliances/tools directly from the car’s battery, like a portable generator (e.g., fridge, lights, laptop). Tesla often enables features via software later. No official confirmation yet for Model 3.
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The Tesla Newswire
The Tesla Newswire@TeslaNewswire·
🔥 Tesla may roll out Vehicle-to-Load (V2L) support to newly built Model 3 vehicles! ✅ A simplified version of the Power Conversion System used in the Cybertruck, called “PCS2Lite”, has been spotted in the Service Manual ✅ This may suggest it is already installed on newly built Model 3 vehicles, as the first version of the procedure was published on March 2 ✅ This specific hardware update hints that the Model 3 may soon officially support V2L capabilities
The Tesla Newswire tweet mediaThe Tesla Newswire tweet mediaThe Tesla Newswire tweet media
Drive Tesla 🇨🇦@DriveTeslaca

Tesla quietly updates Model 3 with PCS2Lite hardware, hinting at possible V2L support driveteslacanada.ca/news/tesla-qui….

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Teslaconomics
Teslaconomics@Teslaconomics·
A man can dream of a 3 rowed Tesla CyberSUV
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Tsla Archive
Tsla Archive@tesla_archive·
🚨BREAKING: ELON MUSK RESPONDS TO IDEA OF 3-ROW $TSLA WITH INDIVIDUAL DOORS Elon Musk replied "Noted" to the suggestion of Tesla making a car with 3 rows of seats, each with its own pair of doors so nobody has to climb over anybody else to get to their seat. Do you think Tesla will launch the Cybervan?
Elon Musk@elonmusk

@typesfast Noted

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Dalton Brewer
Dalton Brewer@daltonbrewer·
NEWS: Elon Musk says “Noted” to a post saying Tesla should make a vehicle with 3 rows and a door for each row Cyber SUV? 👀 $TSLA
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Ryan Petersen
Ryan Petersen@typesfast·
If Tesla makes a car with 3 rows of seats, each with its own pair of doors so nobody has to climb over anybody else to get to their seat, they will create a baby boom the likes of which we haven’t seen in 80 years
Elon Musk@elonmusk

@LeahLibresco Something way cooler than a minivan is coming

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SH@TheArcaneRaven·
@LamarMK If this drops I’ll 💯% reserve on day one!
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Lamar MK
Lamar MK@LamarMK·
A 7 seater Cyber SUV would break the internet. Three full rows. Real legroom. Real headroom. No compromises. Every family SUV on the market makes you choose. Space or safety. Tech or comfort. Tesla wouldn't make you pick. Built on the Cybertruck platform, this would be the safest family vehicle on the road. Tesla would have to build an entire new factory just to keep up with demand. Would you trade in your car for this?
Lamar MK tweet mediaLamar MK tweet mediaLamar MK tweet media
Lamar MK@LamarMK

People have been asking Tesla for years to build the perfect family SUV. Now Elon hints something cooler than a minivan is coming. Many are hoping it's a Cyber SUV built on the Cybertruck platform. Same durability. Same safety. Same futuristic design. If this is what we think it is, it's going to bring a whole new wave of customers to Tesla. Families want safety and reliability above everything else. This could be the one. Who else is ready to order theirs?

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SH@TheArcaneRaven·
The entire sequence was a strategic, phone-native preview of an imminent major upgrade or expansion to the 45470 text alert system — not the original 2025 launch, but the next phase. “Launching soon” wasn’t vague filler; it was the core message. By having the Press Secretary deliver it in a casual, almost conversational tone (as if the viewer is eavesdropping on internal readiness), the team signaled: We are in control, we are prepared, and this direct channel to the American people is about to get significantly more powerful. The glitch effect was not a compression artifact or mistake — it was an intentional stylistic and symbolic choice. Glitch art has long been used in digital-first campaigns to visually represent: • A system activating / breaking through interference. The static, pixel tearing, and color shifts create the impression of a signal forcing its way through noise — exactly the kind of “uncensored, direct-to-citizen” communication the administration has emphasized since day one. It visually says: The old filters (mainstream media, gatekeepers) are glitching out; the new, raw channel is coming online. • Digital disruption and urgency. The distortion makes the video feel urgent, slightly unstable, and “live” — like an emergency broadcast test or a secure transmission. Paired with the American flag flash, it evokes patriotic system activation rather than polished PR. • Modern, algorithm-native aesthetics. Vertical 9:16 + glitch + sound-forward design is engineered for maximum engagement on phones, where people actually live. It mimics the exact look of viral Reels/TikToks that break through feeds, ensuring the clip would be screenshotted, shared, and speculated about immediately (which it was). The dark-screen notification ping was the payoff: a literal demonstration of what a 45470 alert will feel and sound like on your phone. They didn’t just announce an upgrade — they let millions hear and see it in advance, making the experience tangible and memorable. Posting the exact same assets simultaneously on multiple platforms was the coordination play: it guaranteed cross-pollination, maximized algorithmic reach, and created the illusion (and reality) of something big happening in real time. Timing matters too. Dropping this amid heightened global tensions (Iran-related coverage was peaking) wasn’t accidental. It primed the public: When something critical happens, you’ll hear it here first, directly, unfiltered, on your phone. In short, this was sophisticated 2026-era political communications: cryptic enough to spark organic virality and curiosity-driven sign-ups (“What’s launching?”), while being crystal clear to anyone paying attention that the administration is building a stronger, more immediate line straight to the American people. The glitch wasn’t a flaw — it was the feature. It signaled disruption of the old media paradigm and activation of the new one. That’s the message they crafted and executed with precision.
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SH@TheArcaneRaven·
The entire sequence was a strategic, phone-native preview of an imminent major upgrade or expansion to the 45470 text alert system — not the original 2025 launch, but the next phase. “Launching soon” wasn’t vague filler; it was the core message. By having the Press Secretary deliver it in a casual, almost conversational tone (as if the viewer is eavesdropping on internal readiness), the team signaled: We are in control, we are prepared, and this direct channel to the American people is about to get significantly more powerful. The glitch effect was not a compression artifact or mistake — it was an intentional stylistic and symbolic choice. Glitch art has long been used in digital-first campaigns to visually represent: • A system activating / breaking through interference. The static, pixel tearing, and color shifts create the impression of a signal forcing its way through noise — exactly the kind of “uncensored, direct-to-citizen” communication the administration has emphasized since day one. It visually says: The old filters (mainstream media, gatekeepers) are glitching out; the new, raw channel is coming online. • Digital disruption and urgency. The distortion makes the video feel urgent, slightly unstable, and “live” — like an emergency broadcast test or a secure transmission. Paired with the American flag flash, it evokes patriotic system activation rather than polished PR. • Modern, algorithm-native aesthetics. Vertical 9:16 + glitch + sound-forward design is engineered for maximum engagement on phones, where people actually live. It mimics the exact look of viral Reels/TikToks that break through feeds, ensuring the clip would be screenshotted, shared, and speculated about immediately (which it was). The dark-screen notification ping was the payoff: a literal demonstration of what a 45470 alert will feel and sound like on your phone. They didn’t just announce an upgrade — they let millions hear and see it in advance, making the experience tangible and memorable. Posting the exact same assets simultaneously on multiple platforms was the coordination play: it guaranteed cross-pollination, maximized algorithmic reach, and created the illusion (and reality) of something big happening in real time. Timing matters too. Dropping this amid heightened global tensions (Iran-related coverage was peaking) wasn’t accidental. It primed the public: When something critical happens, you’ll hear it here first, directly, unfiltered, on your phone. In short, this was sophisticated 2026-era political communications: cryptic enough to spark organic virality and curiosity-driven sign-ups (“What’s launching?”), while being crystal clear to anyone paying attention that the administration is building a stronger, more immediate line straight to the American people. The glitch wasn’t a flaw — it was the feature. It signaled disruption of the old media paradigm and activation of the new one. That’s the message they crafted and executed with precision.
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SH@TheArcaneRaven·
The entire sequence was a strategic, phone-native preview of an imminent major upgrade or expansion to the 45470 text alert system — not the original 2025 launch, but the next phase. “Launching soon” wasn’t vague filler; it was the core message. By having the Press Secretary deliver it in a casual, almost conversational tone (as if the viewer is eavesdropping on internal readiness), the team signaled: We are in control, we are prepared, and this direct channel to the American people is about to get significantly more powerful. The glitch effect was not a compression artifact or mistake — it was an intentional stylistic and symbolic choice. Glitch art has long been used in digital-first campaigns to visually represent: • A system activating / breaking through interference. The static, pixel tearing, and color shifts create the impression of a signal forcing its way through noise — exactly the kind of “uncensored, direct-to-citizen” communication the administration has emphasized since day one. It visually says: The old filters (mainstream media, gatekeepers) are glitching out; the new, raw channel is coming online. • Digital disruption and urgency. The distortion makes the video feel urgent, slightly unstable, and “live” — like an emergency broadcast test or a secure transmission. Paired with the American flag flash, it evokes patriotic system activation rather than polished PR. • Modern, algorithm-native aesthetics. Vertical 9:16 + glitch + sound-forward design is engineered for maximum engagement on phones, where people actually live. It mimics the exact look of viral Reels/TikToks that break through feeds, ensuring the clip would be screenshotted, shared, and speculated about immediately (which it was). The dark-screen notification ping was the payoff: a literal demonstration of what a 45470 alert will feel and sound like on your phone. They didn’t just announce an upgrade — they let millions hear and see it in advance, making the experience tangible and memorable. Posting the exact same assets simultaneously on multiple platforms was the coordination play: it guaranteed cross-pollination, maximized algorithmic reach, and created the illusion (and reality) of something big happening in real time. Timing matters too. Dropping this amid heightened global tensions (Iran-related coverage was peaking) wasn’t accidental. It primed the public: When something critical happens, you’ll hear it here first, directly, unfiltered, on your phone. In short, this was sophisticated 2026-era political communications: cryptic enough to spark organic virality and curiosity-driven sign-ups (“What’s launching?”), while being crystal clear to anyone paying attention that the administration is building a stronger, more immediate line straight to the American people. The glitch wasn’t a flaw — it was the feature. It signaled disruption of the old media paradigm and activation of the new one.
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OSINTdefender
OSINTdefender@sentdefender·
Another cryptic video just posted by the White House, featuring static obscuring a drooping American Flag.
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SH@TheArcaneRaven·
@rawsalerts It looks to me like it was to get people to go to the WH social profiles where the descriptions were updated with “Text USA to 45470 to receive alerts” as part of their new EBS (launched last night).
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R A W S A L E R T S
R A W S A L E R T S@rawsalerts·
My biggest question right now is what exactly did they mean by ‘launching soon’ in that unusual White House video
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SH@TheArcaneRaven·
@ErrkWinwon @MJTruthUltra You know what hallucinations are in AI? An LLM is designed to give any response and they will legitimately make up responses that sound right just to avoid being wrong or giving no answer at all.
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ErrkWinwon
ErrkWinwon@ErrkWinwon·
@MJTruthUltra I ran it through a few different AI's for fun and one of them "deciphered" this in the image lol
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SH@TheArcaneRaven·
@mrsmelissadrew @MJTruthUltra Yes, which is why it looks to me like it was to get people to go to the WH social profiles where the descriptions were updated with “Text USA to 45470 to receive alerts” as part of their new EBS.
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Melissa Drew
Melissa Drew@mrsmelissadrew·
@MJTruthUltra Reminds me of the old school "end of broadcast" videos they would play with the national anthem at the end of the braodcast day before the signal was cut off for the night.
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stargirl
stargirl@starlitdissent·
@Cortex_Zero Does anyone else notice that the stripes appear to be vertical in a way that seems inconsistent with how a flag should be hung?
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Tom Thompson🛸 (CORTEX ZERO)
👀Do You See What I See? What in the...? The White House’s X account has sparked confusion after posting, deleting, and then reposting a pair of cryptic video clips with no public explanation. The first clip, posted around 1:17 a.m. UTC and later deleted, appeared to show a brief, glitched image of an American flag on a pole. Roughly 45 minutes later, the account posted a second distorted clip featuring a phone notification sound and the emojis 📱🔉. That post remained live and quickly drew widespread attention, fueling speculation across X. Online theories ranged from an accidental private upload to a teaser tied to policy, messaging, or something more serious amid heightened geopolitical tensions. As of now, there has been no official clarification from the @WhiteHouse, leaving the clips open to interpretation and intensifying scrutiny around the account’s activity. One frame from the first video has drawn my attention because it appears to contain letter- or number-like markings embedded within the distortion. After reviewing the uploaded clip frame by frame, the most notable features appear between frames 171 and 177. Two shapes recur across adjacent frames: a small hook-like mark near the center of an upper gray band, and a larger blocky symbol left of center in a lower band. Those shapes are real features of the clip in the sense that they persist across multiple frames, rather than appearing in only a single still. However, they do not resolve cleanly into readable text. The larger form loosely resembles combinations like “C3,” “E3,” or “53,” while the smaller mark looks more like a bent corner, a “7,” or a clipped bracket. At this stage, the evidence is not strong enough to conclude that the video contains an intentional hidden alphanumeric message. Which is why we need more eyes on it. Original Post: x.com/WhiteHouse/sta…
Tom Thompson🛸 (CORTEX ZERO) tweet mediaTom Thompson🛸 (CORTEX ZERO) tweet mediaTom Thompson🛸 (CORTEX ZERO) tweet media
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SH@TheArcaneRaven·
@Cortex_Zero It looks like it was to get people to go to their social profiles where the descriptions were updated with “Text USA to 45470 to receive alerts” as part of their new EBS.
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SH@TheArcaneRaven·
@nypost It looks like it was to get people to go to their social profiles where the descriptions were updated with “Text USA to 45470 to receive alerts” as part of their new EBS.
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SH@TheArcaneRaven·
@Mike0243 @nypost It looks like it was to get people to go to their social profiles where the descriptions were updated with “Text USA to 45470 to receive alerts” as part of their new EBS.
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Mike
Mike@Mike0243·
@nypost They were probably cryptic messages for the Seal Team about their impending invasion, meant to be posted on the Signal app, but Trump was probably on the toilet, got confused and posted it on the wrong platform.
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SH@TheArcaneRaven·
@GalacticHotTake @nypost It looks like it was to get people to go to their social profiles where the descriptions were updated with “Text USA to 45470 to receive alerts” as part of their new EBS.
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Galactic Hot Takes
Galactic Hot Takes@GalacticHotTake·
@nypost These cryptic vids from the White House are leaving everyone guessing what’s the real message here?
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