gerbs121

31.5K posts

gerbs121

gerbs121

@gerbs121

i dig gummi vitamins.

Katılım Ekim 2011
1.8K Takip Edilen143 Takipçiler
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Matt Glenesk
Matt Glenesk@MattGlenesk·
I'm no NBA scout, but what does Cam Boozer do that makes him a great pro prospect? Seems like a lot of bully ball, not sure that translates.
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Dan Go
Dan Go@CoachDanGo·
These 4 moves solved 95% of my lower back problems. 1) Bird dogs teach your spine to stay stable as your limbs move. 2) McGill crunches teach your abs to brace without spinal flexion. 3) Side planks strengthen the obliques needed for lateral stress. 4) Hip thrusts wake up and strengthen the glutes. Do 10-15 reps every day for 21 days and thank me later.
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Danny Goodwin
Danny Goodwin@dannywgoodwin·
If you’re a terrorist at what point do you call it a day in the 4-hour TSA line
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Rory Johnston
Rory Johnston@Rory_Johnston·
My latest contribution to @TheDispatch is a primer on why the Iran War and the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz is the potential to spiral further into by far the biggest energy shock in history. And markets are sleepwalking into it. thedispatch.com/newsletter/dis…
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Gandalv
Gandalv@Microinteracti1·
The head of Europe’s central bank just said financial markets don’t understand what they’re in for. This is Christine Lagarde saying the damage is already done. Most people have absolutely no idea. Here is what she actually said. Iran closed the Strait of Hormuz. That chokepoint carries 20% of the world’s oil and gas. Markets shrugged. Investors assumed it would blow over. Lagarde told The Economist that technical experts are not talking about months for recovery. They are talking about years. Helium travels through the Strait of Hormuz. Helium is not a balloon gas. It is the invisible ingredient inside every advanced microchip on earth. Qatar supplies 35% of the world’s commercial helium. Qatar’s facilities have gone dark. Spot prices have surged past $450 per thousand cubic feet. Most chip fabricators carry less than three months of inventory. The world is building AI data centers at record speed. The raw material that makes the chips possible is now scarce. Meanwhile Brent crude has hit $99. Earlier spikes passed $120. US gasoline is up 30%. Iraq cut 1.5 million barrels a day. Saudi Arabia paused its largest refinery. Europe is heading into this with gas storage at 30% capacity. And the ECB is not cutting rates to soften the blow. It is considering hiking them to fight inflation. Slow economy. Rising prices. Tighter money. All at once. Gandalv / @Microinteracti1
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Hater Report
Hater Report@HaterReport·
Bruh
Hater Report tweet media
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South Asia Index
South Asia Index@SouthAsiaIndex·
Big Breaking: "Israel wanted to assassinate Iran's Foreign Minister Aragchi and speaker Ghalibaf. It had coordinates of their movements. Pakistan intelligence got the information about Israeli plans. Pakistan informed US that if Israel kills Abbas Aragchi and Ghalibaf, there will be no one left in Iran to talk to. Iran will be taken over by the hardcore IRGC commanders. At this, US intervened and stopped Israel from carrying out strikes to eliminate Aragchi and Ghalibaf. " - Pakistani official to Reuters
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Ben Sun
Ben Sun@bksun·
$16.5B in combined valuations for a $2-4B market? @Harvey_AI and @WeAreLegora are valued for TAM expansion that neither has started. The bull case: "It's not legal tech, it's legal services." That's a $1T reframe — and a totally different business. 1/3
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Kevin Clark
Kevin Clark@bykevinclark·
What is the best golf advice tip you've ever received in your life? (I need some lol).
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Tom Newton Dunn
Tom Newton Dunn@tnewtondunn·
A fascinating answer from Gen Stan McChrystal to the NY Times on what he thinks about War Secretary Pete Hegseth's bravado culture. Worth remembering he commanded a green beret platoon, an airborne battalion and a Ranger regiment, before running Joint Special Operations Command.
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hagaetc
hagaetc@hagaetc·
Marathon finishing time distribution proves one of my biggest leadership lessons: Deadlines work! … even if they are somewhat arbitrary
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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
Microsoft has now renamed this product four times in four years and each name is worse than the last. Microsoft Office (1990-2022). Thirty-two years of brand equity. Everyone on Earth knew what it meant. Your grandmother knew what it meant. “I need to open Office” required zero explanation in any language. Then: Microsoft 365. Then: Microsoft 365 (Office), because even Microsoft couldn’t stop using the old name. Then: Microsoft 365 Copilot. The app icon is now identical to the Copilot chatbot icon with a tiny “M365” badge in the corner. Users are opening the AI chatbot when they want Excel. “Office 365” still has double the search traffic of “Microsoft 365.” “Microsoft 365 Copilot” has virtually none. The reason this keeps happening is the same reason it will keep getting worse. Microsoft sells Copilot to Wall Street, not to the person trying to open a spreadsheet. Satya Nadella told investors 70% of Fortune 500 companies “adopted” Copilot. The actual conversion rate, the share of employees with access who choose to use it, is 35.8%. ChatGPT’s is 83.1%. When workers have access to multiple AI tools and can pick freely, 8% choose Copilot. 70% choose ChatGPT. Copilot’s paid subscriber market share dropped from 18.8% to 11.5% in six months. Gemini passed it in November 2025. So Microsoft did the only thing left: rebrand the world’s most recognized productivity suite after the AI product nobody is voluntarily using, and raise the subscription price to pay for it. This is the same company that rebranded MSN to “Microsoft Start” in 2021 and quietly reverted to MSN three years later after everyone ignored the new name. The same company that renamed Microsoft Remote Desktop to “Windows App.” 400 million paid seats. The switching cost is so high that Microsoft could name it Microsoft Copilot Clippy 365 AI Turbo and most companies would renew anyway.
P.G. Chodehouse@mynnoj

super funny that microsoft had a strong brand like 'office' and some mbas decided that 'microsoft 365' and 'copilot' should replace it

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Rob Silver
Rob Silver@RobSilver·
Imagine explaining to someone a decade ago that the President of the US and the Iranians put out contradictory statements on a Monday morning and everyone knows the US President is full out lying and the Iranians are telling the truth.
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Antonio García Martínez (agm.eth)
This is precisely the sort of complex human task that AI should replace. We have technology that can route and drive a car across an entire city safely. Why on Earth is a tired human mentally juggling flights full of human souls with some truck crossing a runway? Absurd.
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta

The air traffic controller cleared the fire truck onto the runway. Seconds later, the same controller screamed “stop, stop, stop.” The plane was doing 93 to 105 mph. Both pilots are dead. Everyone will frame this as controller error. One controller was simultaneously managing a United flight that aborted takeoff after an anti-ice warning, dispatching a fire truck across an active runway, and sequencing an inbound Air Canada landing at highway speed. At 11:40 PM. On a mandatory overtime shift at a facility that has been understaffed for years. A system that assigns one person that workload will produce exactly this outcome. The only variable is when. The FAA is short approximately 3,000 controllers. The headcount dropped 13% from 2010 to 2024 while flight volume rose 10%. Over 40% of the FAA’s 290 terminal facilities are understaffed. The New York TRACON, which manages the most congested airspace in America across LaGuardia, JFK, and Newark, has been chronically below target. Newark was operating at 59% of its staffing goal. LaGuardia handles 900 flights a day. The hiring pipeline is broken at every stage. Only 2% of applicants complete the full process. Training takes up to 6 years. The FAA Academy in Oklahoma City is a bottleneck, with roughly 35% of trainees washing out. Congress blocked legislation to build a second academy. In one recent hiring cycle, the FAA brought on 1,512 candidates and lost 1,300 in the same window. Net gain: around 160 controllers for an entire country. Three things need to happen and everyone who can make them happen has known for years. Congress needs to fund and authorize a second FAA training academy. One facility in Oklahoma City cannot produce enough controllers for 900 million annual passengers. Members of Congress from Oklahoma have actively blocked this. That needs to end yesterday. The FAA needs to cut certification time. Six years from application to fully certified controller is absurd. The agency’s own data shows tower simulators reduce certification time by 27%. They’ve installed them at 95 facilities. That should be every facility, and the simulated hours should count toward more of the certification requirement. The FAA needs to stop plugging staffing gaps with mandatory overtime. Controllers at understaffed facilities are working six-day weeks rotating between morning, mid, and night shifts. The NTSB has flagged fatigue repeatedly. The controller last night was managing overlapping emergencies during a nighttime operation. Overtime is not a staffing plan. It’s a countdown to the next runway collision. The controller said “I messed up” to a Frontier pilot who watched the whole thing. The pilot responded “No man, you did the best you could.” One of them is right. The answer determines whether this happens again.

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gerbs121
gerbs121@gerbs121·
@thenewarea51 @theATCapp I was on flight DAL520. So did I land basically two slots ahead of the plane involved in the crash?
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Thenewarea51
Thenewarea51@thenewarea51·
Pure chaos at LGA - LaGuardia, NY just now. The airport is closed. It sounds like a vehicle has collided with an airplane. Audio via @theATCapp
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