
Trinitas
14 posts


@elonmusk Urgently need a Safe Mode switch for children easy to see, protected by parental passwords. Need to apply laws without judgment, avoiding the complexities of child, deepfakes, crimes, etc., and eliminate censorship. Peace of mind for work and free creatively is paramount.
English

@elonmusk Urgently need a Safe Mode switch for children easy to see, protected by parental passwords. Need to apply laws without judgment, avoiding the complexities of child, deepfakes, crimes, etc., and eliminate censorship. Peace of mind for work and free creatively is paramount.
English

no girl texts this to a guy she just met.
unless you do these things:
(i almost didn't share this one)
-i didn't text her the same day. i waited 24 hours
-my first text wasn't "hey how are you." boring.
-i referenced something specific from our conversation
-i kept my texts shorter than hers
-i didn't double text when she didn't reply
-i didn't send good morning texts before the first bang
-i went for the date request within 5 messages
-i picked the place, the time and told her where to meet
-i didn't ask "where would you like to go?"
-she felt led, not chased
these 10 things took me 201 girls to figure out.
save this.

English

@NoahKingJr Veo, Kling, Gemini, RunwayGen,... many things to do.
English

@CultureCrave 500m is good deal. The world know Pokemon, Anime, Pornhub more than Disney.
English

@DoctorLemma If you're familiar with the game Hanoi Tower (an ancient East Asian game), you'll understand the addictive nature of products from Asia.
English

In 2014, a programmer in Vietnam deleted the most downloaded game on earth because he said it was ruining his life. He was making $50,000 a day when he did it.
Dong Nguyen grew up in a village near Hanoi. He discovered video games through Super Mario Bros as a kid and started coding his own at 16. He built Flappy Bird in two to three days using a bird character from a game he’d already cancelled. The gameplay was inspired by bouncing a ping pong ball on a paddle for as long as you can. He thought existing mobile games were too complicated and wanted something anyone could play on the move. He released it quietly in May 2013. Nobody noticed.
For five months, nothing happened. Then a well-known YouTuber reviewed it. Downloads surged. By the end of January 2014, Flappy Bird was the most downloaded free app on the planet with over 50 million downloads. Nguyen, who had been working alone from Hanoi, was suddenly earning $50,000 a day from in-app adverts.
Then it turned. Parents complained the game was ruining their children’s lives. Players sent him messages blaming him for their broken phones and lost jobs. Paparazzi camped outside his house. He stopped sleeping. On 8 February 2014, he tweeted: “I can call Flappy Bird a success of mine. But it also ruins my simple life. So now I hate it.” Twenty-two hours later, he deleted it from every app store.
Phones with the game still installed were listed online for thousands of dollars. The internet assumed it was a publicity stunt. It wasn’t. In an interview shortly after, he sat chain-smoking and said the game was designed to be played for a few relaxed minutes. “But it happened to become an addictive product. I think it has become a problem. To solve that problem, it’s best to take down Flappy Bird. It’s gone forever.”
He still lives in Hanoi. He still makes games through his small studio, dotGears, which has six employees. He stays out of public life. In 2024, a company acquired the Flappy Bird trademark and announced a reboot. Nguyen said he has no connection to it.
English















