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JD

@grok_j

Interested in soft and hard wares

Katılım Aralık 2008
579 Takip Edilen24 Takipçiler
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Crémieux
Crémieux@cremieuxrecueil·
I think it bears repeating that BART installed tall gates to enter the subway and they're gaining $10m in revenue a year plus the need for maintenance is down by *95.7%* Passengers who were unwilling to pay a few bucks were causing 96% of the public cleanliness problems!
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BART@SFBART

@maxdubler And there are other real benefits such as fewer corrective maintenance requests and time spent cleaning and fixing things.

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Melissa Chen
Melissa Chen@MsMelChen·
If you're wondering why Alysa Liu and her father Arthur faced targeted espionage and recruitment drives by the CCP on American soil, I can explain: It stems from the CCP's ethno-nationalist philosophy that views all people of Chinese descent - regardless of citizenship or generations removed - as part of the "Chinese nation" (中华民族 - zhonghua minzu), bound by blood and heritage. This "once Chinese, always Chinese" mindset equates ethnic identity with loyalty to the party-state. It's why special vitriol is reserved for those with Chinese heritage who are critical about the CCP (like me and many others). Under Xi Jinping, this has only intensified: overseas Chinese are seen as key to the "great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation" tasked with "telling China's story well," integrating into host societies to advance Beijing's geopolitical goals, and serving as "grassroots ambassadors." The Chinese authorities hoped Alysa Liu would follow the path of Eileen Gu, who was successfully recruited to compete for China and has since fulfilled her role in "telling China's story well" - amplifying Beijing's preferred narrative on the global stage through her athletic achievements, high profile presence and dutiful avoidance of saying anything negative about China. The tactics used to co-opt the diaspora include: > incentives / networks (offered to both Eileen & Alysa) > monitoring and control (used on Alysa & her dad) > coercion (used on Alysa's dad) In Alysa's case, she was subjected to surveillance and espionage not only because she refused to join Team China, but also because her father, Arthur Liu, was a Tiananmen-era dissident who fled to the United States. The CCP goes to great lengths to surveil and intimidate Chinese dissidents living abroad. Alysa Liu's qualification for the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics heightened the sensitivity of the situation as the Party sought to ensure that her and her father remain silent on political matters and human rights abuses while in China. Ultimately, the regime sees them, despite being Americans, as assets and extensions of the Chinese nation who must align with its interests. This is strikingly analogous to the Islamic concept of the ummah - a transnational community united by a profound shared identity that transcends national borders. In Islam, the ummah represents the global fellowship of believers, bound by faith, mutual solidarity, and a sense of collective brotherhood. It often fosters a loyalty to the broader Muslim community that can supersede - or at least rival - allegiance to any single state. While both concepts inspire deep transnational cohesion, the ummah arises organically from religious teachings and remains largely decentralized (though often weaponized by imams or government leaders for political goals) whereas the CCP's framework is state-directed, instrumental, and backed by organized mechanisms of influence and control. Liberal societies need to understand this is how the CCP operates.
Drew Pavlou 🇦🇺🇺🇸🇺🇦🇹🇼@DrewPavlou

The Chinese Communist Party spied on and targeted Alysa Liu and her family. Please share this information. Everybody needs to know that this is how the mafia regime in Beijing operates.

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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
A rare spinal cancer was removed through the eye in a world-first. At the University of Maryland Medical Center, surgeons successfully removed a rare spinal tumor from 19-year-old Karla Flores by accessing it through her eye socket. The aggressive chordoma, located near her upper spine and pressing on her spinal cord, posed risks of paralysis or severe nerve damage with conventional surgery. Led by neurosurgeon Dr. Mohamed A.M. Labib, the team used a groundbreaking transorbital approach, navigating behind the eye with a neuro-endoscope and fine instruments to remove the tumor without visible scars or large incisions. Dubbed the “third nostril” technique, it was refined through extensive cadaver practice and collaboration across neurosurgery, ENT, craniofacial, and oncology specialties. Flores, now 20, is cancer-free, regaining strength after radiation and spinal fusion, with no neurological damage. This innovative method signals a new era of minimally invasive neurosurgery, potentially transforming treatment for previously inoperable tumors by utilizing natural skull openings.
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DHH
DHH@dhh·
My wife just compared all this tech-adjacent extreme longevity focus in men to anorexia in women. A physical manifestation of anxiety and lack of control. And now I can't get the thought out of my head. Spot on.
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The White Rabbit Podcast
The White Rabbit Podcast@AllBiteNoBark88·
BREAKING: Are there any Firefighters on here that can explain to me how homes in Los Angeles were burnt to ash while the trees remain standing & have leaves???
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JD
JD@grok_j·
@levelsio What do you use to process orders?
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@levelsio
@levelsio@levelsio·
Explains the surge of sales suddenly
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Ed
Ed@BreathingByEd·
I regret to inform you that doing literally 5 mins of breathing at 6 breaths per minute every night before bed will massively activate your parasympathetic nervous system allowing you to fall asleep quicker, and sleep for longer and deeper. Don’t underestimate this.
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Trung Phan
Trung Phan@TrungTPhan·
The Drake and Kendrick beef has officially broken containment and reached my 79-year old Vietnamese father
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rosey🌹
rosey🌹@thechosenberg·
Can people in tech tell me if this is bs
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John Carmack
John Carmack@ID_AA_Carmack·
“Coding” was never the source of value, and people shouldn’t get overly attached to it. Problem solving is the core skill. The discipline and precision demanded by traditional programming will remain valuable transferable attributes, but they won’t be a barrier to entry. Many times over the years I have thought about a great programmer I knew that loved assembly language to the point of not wanting to move to C. I have to fight some similar feelings of my own around using existing massive codebases and inefficient languages, but I push through. I had somewhat resigned myself to the fact that I might be missing out on the “final abstraction”, where you realize that managing people is more powerful than any personal tool. I just don’t like it, and I can live with the limitations that puts on me. I suspect that I will enjoy managing AIs more, even if they wind up being better programmers than I am.
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Toan Truong
Toan Truong@ToanTruong_·
The 4 stages of mastery To gain mastery, first define mastery. The 4 stages of mastery are a good mental model that provides you the path to learn faster. Let me explain:
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JD
JD@grok_j·
@Molson_Hart It’s a shortlist of airlines that don’t use Boeing. It might be 0.
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molson 🧠⚙️
molson 🧠⚙️@Molson_Hart·
I’m done with Boeing. On my flight here the compartment behind me wouldn’t close. On the flight back my seat was broken. When I raised this the flight attendant was like “well if we bring this up we won’t be able to take off”. Then we had a maintenance issue. “There’s some rare red light on” I overheard most of the maintenance conversation. The plan was to solve it like an old person fixed a computer problem. Unplug it and plug it back in! They did this 3x and then “they got enough voltage into it for the light to turn off.” We’re very late at this point. The fucking front wheel on this plane does not sound right. Anyways, we take off. Flight does not feel right. We go up and then down. Nothing too drastic. Then the flight attendant gets on the phone for a long conversation. Hmm. Then eventually pilot comes on all serious “automation is broken, we can’t get altitude. We have to go back the airport we took off from. Don’t be alarmed by the emergency vehicles. This is normal for when the plane lands ‘heavy’” We circle for a while and possibly dump some fuel into the ocean. Thankfully we landed safely but what a shit show. The seat and the luggage compartment seem like small issues but if they’re not doing maintenance and quality control on this stuff they’re missing big important stuff too. This was a post merger Boeing. 737-800. Tired of this.
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Yishan
Yishan@yishan·
Google’s Gemini issue is not really about woke/DEI, and everyone who is obsessing over it has failed to notice the much, MUCH bigger problem that it represents. (1/n)
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JD
JD@grok_j·
Can’t wait to watch land of the kingdom of the planet of the apes
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JD@grok_j·
@rohindhar Similar homes in SF are definitely going for more
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Rohin Dhar
Rohin Dhar@rohindhar·
Have had friends move from San Francisco to Chapel Hill, North Carolina because it was more affordable And now Chapel Hill is more expensive than San Francisco 😂
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JD@grok_j·
@thdxr Interesting, how often are you needing to upgrade CPUs? Persistent sessions would be nice, although for my projects where I just need to start the dev server this seems like overkill
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dax
dax@thdxr·
i've switched to using a server for 100% of development 1. persistent tmux sessions for each project 2. in each session, one window for neovim, one window for various shells 3. renting 5 cores on a ryzen 7950x for $35 a month 4. tailscale so i can access dev servers running at http://server:whatever port 5. syncthing to keep files in sync with local just in case now i can easily upgrade to faster CPUs as they come out i reboot between linux/windows for gaming - when i come back to linux i can just ssh in and everything is in the same state the persistence also helps if i ssh in from a laptop, can just pickup and go
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unusual_whales
unusual_whales@unusual_whales·
Want to know something crazy? It has been over six months since Democratic Senator Menendez & his wife received GOLD BARS!!!!, a Mercedes-Benz, an apartment, money & jewelry, to help the Egyptian government. This is his second corruption scandal!!! YET he is still in office!
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JD
JD@grok_j·
Worth doing for everyone imo
Tim Ferriss@tferriss

I’m often asked about how I approach New Year’s resolutions. The truth is that I no longer approach them at all, even though I did for decades. Why the change? I have found “past year reviews” (PYR) more informed, valuable, and actionable than half-blindly looking forward with broad resolutions. I did my first PYR after a mentor’s young daughter died of cancer on December 31st, 10 years ago, and I’ve done it every year since. Her passing was a somber reminder that our days here are too precious not to fill them with the people and activities that nourish us most. The PYR takes just 30–60 minutes and looks like this: Grab a notepad and create two columns: POSITIVE and NEGATIVE. Go through your calendar from the last year, looking at every week. For each week, jot down on the pad any people or activities or commitments that triggered peak positive or negative emotions for that month. Put them in their respective columns. Once you’ve gone through the past year, look at your notepad list and ask, “What 20% of each column produced the most reliable or powerful peaks?” Based on the answers, take your “positive” leaders and schedule more of them in the new year. Get them on the calendar now! Book things with friends and prepay for activities/events/commitments that you know work. It’s not real until it’s in the calendar. That’s step one. Step two is to take your “negative” leaders, put “NOT-TO-DO LIST” at the top, and put them somewhere you can see them each morning for the first few weeks of 2024. These are the people and things you *know* make you miserable, so don’t put them on your calendar out of obligation, guilt, FOMO, or other nonsense. That’s it! If you try it, let me know how it goes. And just remember: it’s not enough to remove the negative. That simply creates a void. Get the positive things on the calendar ASAP, lest they get crowded out by the bullshit and noise that will otherwise fill your days. Good luck and godspeed, everyone!

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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
One interesting theory about why the Venus Palaeolithic statues have those shapes, with large breasts and lack of feet and faces, is that were made by women looking at their own bodies from their point of view. Such women would not have had access to mirrors to maintain accurate proportions. This theory also provides an explanation as to why many of the Venus figures do not have faces or heads.
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John LeFevre
John LeFevre@JohnLeFevre·
The 18-44 age bucket is shocking…. Within two decades.
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