James 💯

375 posts

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James 💯

James 💯

@cutajar86

Creating products - first versions will be free

Bangkok - Soon Katılım Mayıs 2016
19 Takip Edilen22 Takipçiler
James 💯
James 💯@cutajar86·
@PicturesFoIder So these vegans expect perfectly good meat to go to waste. Dumbest thing I've seen
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James 💯
James 💯@cutajar86·
Search for Barbie movie. You'll get fireworks and a pink dashboard. Not sure if this is just a marketing stunt but Google has always been white or black.
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Kiraa Wells
Kiraa Wells@KiraaWells·
If you could eliminate one thing from the world, what would it be?
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MrBeast
MrBeast@MrBeast·
Whoever has the most liked reply to this in 48 hours gets all my Twitter revenue for the next month!
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James 💯
James 💯@cutajar86·
@MrBeast I'll give all the money back to you and choose 10 random people to give the craziest storyline you've ever made. We'll spend part of the money to fly to the same location. We must be in the video.
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James 💯
James 💯@cutajar86·
@MrBeast Whoever has gets the most likes under this tweet gets half of it
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James 💯
James 💯@cutajar86·
@levelsio Isn't almost everything a tweaked version of something else. Elon musk copied Jeff Bezos and decided he want to conquer mars
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@levelsio
@levelsio@levelsio·
Noob mistake #1 when your site gets cloned: - get triggered - tweet about it - mention their website - mention the founder You just gave them free exposure, clicks and paid customers Now they won, you lost Instead: ignore
Erwin@Erwin_AI

POV: you work on your product (tailscan.com) for a year and landing page design for many months, then someone steals your entire website for a similar tool ("DivMagic") This ruined my Monday, thanks @RealBrianHi.

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James 💯
James 💯@cutajar86·
@CrashBandycoots Litecoin is trending. People are already searching litecoin so it's easier to exposure. This also respond your previous tweet as to why you are getting so many likes + flowers when you tweet about LTC you're gaining exposure. Jump on trend to get exposure
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Crash
Crash@CrashBandycoots·
Have you noticed the massive increase of bearish posts/analysis coming out about $LTC from people who *never* talk about it? Or posts from those who *only* say it’s irrelevant…? Think about that. #LTC #Litecoin 🚀🔥🚀🔥🚀
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James 💯
James 💯@cutajar86·
@AlVukad @PicturesFoIder Come on, I’ve been in total shit for over a year. I could easily say life sucks because that what it seems like right now. But I wouldn’t say life sucks. I guess it’s about 50/50
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non aesthetic things
non aesthetic things@PicturesFoIder·
What was awesome as a kid, but sucks as an adult?
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non aesthetic things
non aesthetic things@PicturesFoIder·
What is a movie that everyone likes, but you hate?
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Jackline
Jackline@jacklinemt·
I rarely act upon my ideas. I start to overthink, doubts creep in, and then I get paralyzed by laziness. The solution - make the public your accountability partner and share what you want to do in public. Every day for the next 30 days I’ll tweet a personal story.
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Historic Vids
Historic Vids@historyinmemes·
In 1900, a woman captured a selfie using a Kodak Box Brown camera, which was available for $1. The camera itself marked the beginning of modern photography and was introduced around the turn of the century. However, the roots of the camera can be traced back to 1790 when the UK's Thomas Wedgwood created a basic model. By 1826, French inventor Joseph Nicéphore Niépce had developed a camera resembling modern ones. The first appearance of humans on film occurred in 1838, followed shortly by the first selfie taken in 1839 by American photographer Robert Cornelius. However, it wasn't until 1900 that the era of the selfie truly began with the introduction of Kodak's revolutionary Box Brownie Camera. The Box Brownie Camera was a game-changer, retailing at just $1. It was constructed from cardboard and utilized 117mm roll film to capture two-inch photos. The camera gained immense popularity and sold in the millions. Its affordability, user-friendly nature, and introduction of the snapshot concept made it a significant milestone in photography history.
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Product Hunt 😸
Product Hunt 😸@ProductHunt·
Chrome hack: this extension lets you manage your tabs vertically
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Wars
Wars@wars·
Captain Nieves Fernandez, the only known Filipino female guerrilla leader and formerly a school teacher, shows US Army Pvt. Andrew Lupiba how she used her long knife to silently kill Japanese soldiers during the Japanese occupation of Leyte Island in 1944. Working with guerrillas south of Tacloban, Miss Fernandez rounded up native men to resist the Japanese. She commanded 110 natives who killed more than 200 Japanese with knives and shotguns made from sections of gas pipe.
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Historic Vids
Historic Vids@historyinmemes·
Blue Babe is a Steppe Bison found completely by chance in Alaska in 1979. The animal died some 50,000 years ago and was so well preserved that researchers were able to cook and eat a part of its neck muscle. The meat was described as "tough," and the taste was said to be "earthy and delicious." In 1979, a gold miner named Ronald Soelberg stumbled upon a set of large bones protruding from the permafrost near Fairbanks, Alaska. He contacted local paleontologist Dale Guthrie, who conducted the excavation of Blue Babe. The unearthed remains revealed an amazingly well-preserved ancient Steppe Bison, and it was given the nickname "Blue Babe" due to the bluish tinge of its bones. The find was a fascinating specimen from the Ice Age. Blue Babe represented an ancient species of bison that inhabited the grasslands of Eurasia and North America during the Pleistocene epoch, which lasted from about 2.6 million to 11,700 years ago. Estimated to be around 50,000 years old, Blue Babe would have stood over six feet tall at the shoulder and weighed around 2,000 pounds. Its skeleton was remarkably complete, and even fragments of its skin, hair, and organs were preserved, offering valuable insights into its appearance and physiology. Blue Babe most likely met its end in the jaws of an ancient lion. So why was it eaten? An unusual dinner party would play out at the Alaska home of the paleontologist Guthrie. Blue Babe froze quickly, which meant that its muscle tissue was preserved similarly to beef jerky, along with fat and bone marrow. The research team got curious and decided to follow in the footsteps of Russian scientists who had done the same before them, introducing part of the animal into an evening meal. Guthrie wrote about the event: "To climax and celebrate Erik Granqvist's [the taxidermist] work with Blue Babe, we had a bison stew dinner. A small part of the Babe's neck was diced and simmered in a pot of stock and vegetables. The meat was well-aged but still a little tough, and it gave the stew a strong Pleistocene aroma, but nobody there would have dared to miss it."
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James 💯
James 💯@cutajar86·
This is normal when learning a new skill. At first nothing really makes sense until something hits you and all those scattered pieces all of a sudden form into an idea. From that point on the creative mind takes control.
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James 💯
James 💯@cutajar86·
Looking back after 1 week of learning no code tools I don't feel I know much more than before I started. I still need to gain a whole load more knowledge in order to start connecting the dots. Everything is still scattered around my head right now.
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