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@hey_fly_guy

chillin with the voltron crew

Texas, USA Katılım Mart 2020
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Avgas@hey_fly_guy·
@SenTedCruz @axios The background behind you is making your hairdo very Kim Jong
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Avgas@hey_fly_guy·
My very own airport
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Avgas@hey_fly_guy·
@FracSlap I'm surprised how many recent college graduates cannot copy an xlsx to a thumb drive, or know excel formulas
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Collin McLelland 🏴‍☠️
I will tell you why I worry about young engineers coming into oil and gas and other industries. I'm going into classes of 30 engineers and only two of them have even heard of Claude. This is not an exaggeration. I am genuinely shocked at how behind the universities are and how these kids have not used widely distributed tools. If you have a kid in school or about to enter school, the #1 thing to tell them is to get on claude code and just start messing around and building, be curious. The future is bright for kids coming into the industry that are AI-native. They won't have to spend 80% of their time doing bullshit work like searching for data in well files and copy/pasting it into an excel file. They will get to do the real engineering work and they will be extremely valuable to their companies. But the people that don't learn how to use AI, it will be rough. Our company is making this a priority to train the younger generation. This week alone we have been at Texas A&M as they are using Collide in their Capstone project. We will be at Arizona State this week doing a hackathon with a couple hundred students. We have a great relationship with TCU and just had their class at our office a few weeks ago. But ultimately these kids need to learn agency and how to leverage AI.
𝐏𝐄𝐑𝐌𝐈@PermiOG

Imagine wrapping up your 4th year of BSPE or finishing off your masters in PE, making your monthly student loan payments, and opening up this app and reading this tweet ☠️☠️☠️

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Avgas@hey_fly_guy·
@RealPETE2020 Maybe I should go to church again tomorrow
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Avgas@hey_fly_guy·
@Austen @KellyClaudeAI Do you have for gauntlet like a “standard load” of Claude CLI skills?
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Austen Allred
Austen Allred@Austen·
Working through some marketing conversion rate optimization stuff with the Gauntlet team and decided instead of judging by myself every time an agent would probably do a better job. Fire up @KellyClaudeAI and we’ll have something by the evening.
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Paul Phillips
Paul Phillips@BlueFlameBlues·
FYI: Technically you aren't breaking the ceasefire if you attack your oil rich neighbors who you were never actually at war with in the first place.
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Nick Huber
Nick Huber@sweatystartup·
My kids aren’t allowed to have candy on Easter or Halloween. Horrific for them and a terrible habit. If they are good all day they get flavored yogurt (normally get regular) as a bedtime snack. I tell them it’s ice cream (they’ve never had it). Raise disciplined kids.
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Avgas@hey_fly_guy·
@rhensing Do Tesla batteries have to balance cells at the end?
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Ælectric Cybersolarfarmer
Weird. It just reached the 80% limit. Does it taper the amperage as it approaches the limit maybe?
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Avgas@hey_fly_guy·
@Austen All things being the same you can scale jobs using openrouter and direct workloads accordingly. Better since you have an adversarial review of almost everything
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Austen Allred
Austen Allred@Austen·
claude mcp add openclaw -- openclaw mcp serve Alright I’m running everything within Claude Code!
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Avgas@hey_fly_guy·
@mattvanswol Always be consistent in everything - good and bad. Do what you said you would. Enforcement of rules, going to an amusement park, talking to them when you said you would. Love them unconditionally.
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Matt Van Swol
Matt Van Swol@mattvanswol·
Working on a project. Parents, what is the best parenting advice you can give about raising kids?
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Avgas@hey_fly_guy·
@johnkonrad @Oilgeo1 Question to ask yourself: Could the US mainland defend against a stream of Shahed-136 originating from Cuba, Nicaragua, or Venezuela?
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John Ʌ Konrad V
John Ʌ Konrad V@johnkonrad·
Jim makes excellent points. But he’s missing the energy equation. MORGAN & MORGAN is the reason we can’t reopen the strait, not drones. Here’s the white elephant nobody in Washington will touch: Ukraine is losing. I don’t blame Jim for skating past this. It’s more politically dangerous for a journalist to say Ukraine’s strategy is broken than to misgender someone in SoHo. But the drone revolution everyone keeps celebrating? Look at what it’s actually accomplished. Iran spent years perfecting the Shahed. They tested it in Ukraine, with the Houthis in the Red Sea, against Gulf state targets. Thousands launched. Years of iteration. Then Iran got annihilated. The U.S. Army successfully copied the Shahed for its own use. It was effective in early strikes. Less so as the war progressed and defenses adapted. This is the pattern with every new weapon: diminishing returns against prepared adversaries. How many ships have been sunk by aerial drones? Zero. Ukraine’s had moderate success with explosive-laden jet skis, but only because Russian naval defenses were embarrassingly poor and commercial ships cannot shoot back. That’s a story about Russian incompetence, not drone supremacy. Here’s what Jim and most analysts get wrong: they measure drone effectiveness by kills. But kills are a terrible metric. Life in totalitarian states is cheap. Russia is feeding poorly trained convicts into the grinder. Killing them by the thousands hasn’t moved the strategic needle. If drones were assassinating Russia’s top weapons scientists or defense industry CEOs, that would matter. But attriting expendable infantry? That’s not winning. What could actually change the war is severing logistics. Destroying the Kerch Strait bridge. Ukraine has tried repeatedly and failed. Why? Because aerial munitions, unless they’re very large, simply don’t carry enough kinetic energy to drop a bridge. You can’t build that kind of weapon in a kitchen. When the tank appeared in 1917, people thought it would end warfare. It didn’t. Tanks turned out to be decisive only when advancing with infantry, artillery, and air cover. Drones are following the same arc: lethal in combination, insufficient alone. There are bright spots. A large drone swarm penetrated deep into Russia and damaged bombers at Engels, forcing dispersal of strategic aviation assets. Small drones recently hit highly flammable oil and gas storage in Russia. They can be smuggled, precisely guided by satellite, and aimed at petrochemical facilities or even LNG carriers at close range. But over distance? The Shahed has terrorized civilians and struck undefended targets. Against anything with real air defense, it fails. Look at Israel’s layered system. The drones aren’t getting through. Now here’s the deeper problem, and it’s one Americans don’t want to hear. Drive anywhere in this country. What’s the single most recurring image you see? MORGAN & MORGAN 1/2
Jim Bianco@biancoresearch

I am not a military analyst. I'm a financial analyst focused on macroeconomic risk. That different lens might explain why I see something most military strategists and investors are missing. --- The New Rules of Warfare—And Why We Can't Opt Out For nearly a century, warfare belonged to whoever controlled the biggest defense budget. Aircraft carriers. Stealth bombers. Multibillion-dollar weapons systems. That model is changing in ways many aren't appreciating. Ukraine and Iran are showing the West what 21st-century conflict actually looks like: decentralized, highly iterative, fast-changing, unmanned, and cheap. Neither the US nor Russia—beginning in 2022—appears prepared. We might now have no choice but to show we can fight and win such a war. The Ukraine Approach Faced with a small defense budget, a much smaller population, and a vastly outnumbered army, Ukraine had to get creative. They couldn't match Russia's industrial capacity or spending. So they abandoned that playbook entirely. They developed an entirely new way to fight, highly decentralized, iterative, and most importantly, cheap. They also created Brave1—a completely new way to conduct war. Frontline commanders log into an iPad and bypass central command entirely. They spend digital points to purchase equipment directly from hundreds of (Ukrainian) manufacturers. When they encounter a new threat, they message the manufacturer directly and work with the engineers to find a solution, even if that means they visit to the front. The result is hardware or software upgrades that once took months now take days. Here's the crucial part: hundreds of manufacturers compete fiercely for these dollars by offering the best possible product as fast as possible. This isn't centralized procurement. It's a market. Competition drives innovation at scale. Weapons evolve as the enemy evolves in real time. Units are also awarded points for confirmed kills, uploaded from drone video—a powerfully eloquent way to grade effectiveness. But the real innovation might be how they decentralized manufacturing itself. Instead of building weapons in massive, centralized factories that make perfect targets for Russian bombing, Ukraine distributed production across hundreds of small manufacturers—workshops, machine shops, garages, and yes, kitchens. Each produces components or complete systems. This approach serves two purposes: speed and survival. You can bomb a tank factory. You destroy production for months. You cannot bomb ten thousand kitchens. If one workshop gets hit, ninety-nine others keep producing. The network regenerates faster than Russia can destroy it. This is why the manufacturing process includes actual kitchens—it's not a metaphor. It's a strategy. The Metric That Defines a New Era The result is staggering: at least 70% of battlefield casualties now come from drones. This is the first time in over a century that the primary cause of combat death is neither a bullet nor an artillery shell. Since World War I, industrial warfare meant industrial killing. Ukraine has broken that equation entirely. As a result, Russia is now controlling less territory than at any point since 2022 and going backward. In March, Ukraine made gains while Russia recorded no gains for the first time in two and a half years, and Drone-led offensives recaptured 470 square kilometers while paralyzing 40% of Russian oil exports. Ukraine has lowered the "cost per kill" to less than $1,000 per casualty—a 99.98% reduction from the millions of dollars that were common in the post-9/11 wars. This isn't an incremental improvement. This is a complete inversion of modern military economics. Yet the Western defense establishment is not learning from this. Rheinmetall CEO Armin Papperger mocked Ukraine's entire approach. In The Atlantic, he called Ukrainian manufacturers "housewives with 3D printers," dismissing their work as "playing with Legos." They are not studying this revolution. They are mocking it. And the "housewives with 3D printers" are beating the Russian army! Ukraine Is Now in the Middle East The US Military and Gulf states face an eerily similar problem. Iran's Shahed drones threaten shipping in the Strait of Hormuz—a chokepoint that funnels 21% of global oil. They cannot fend off Iran by firing a $4 million Patriot missiles at $20,000 drones. They need what Ukraine has discovered: a decentralized, rapidly adaptive defense network that doesn't require centralized industrial capacity. That's why Ukraine just signed historic 10-year defense deals with Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE. Over 220 Ukrainian specialists are now on the front lines of the Persian Gulf—exporting not just weapons, but a completely new doctrine of how to fight. The precedent is set. The model works. Everyone is watching. Mosaic On April 1st, Trump threatened to bomb Iran "back to the stone ages" if they don't reopen the Strait within weeks. It's the classic 20th-century playbook: overwhelming offense force, massive bombardment, industrial-scale destruction. The problem? That playbook doesn't work against distributed, cheap, rapid-iteration systems—especially when your enemy is organized under a mosaic structure. Iran's "Mosaic Defense" doctrine is a decentralized command system where authority and capability are distributed across multiple geographic and organizational nodes. Each region operates semi-autonomously with overlapping chains of command and pre-planned contingencies. It's designed so that when you destroy the center, the edges keep fighting. You cannot decapitate a system with no head. You cannot out-bomb your way to victory when your enemy is not centralized; this was the solution for 20th-century industrial warfare. Defense Wins Championships 21st-century asymmetrical threats require defensive shields, not aggressive offenses. Ukraine has built exactly that: rapid-iteration defenses, decentralized manufacturing, commanders empowered to buy solutions in real time and rewarded for success. That same defensive model may hold the key to opening the Strait of Hormuz. Not through massive offense, but through the ability to adapt and defend quickly. Why We're Stuck Whether you viewed this as a war of choice or not, it has now become a war to keep global trade open. And that makes it inescapable. This is precisely why the US cannot declare victory and walk away from the Strait of Hormuz— or TACO. Every adversary on the planet will interpret American withdrawal as confirmation that cheap asymmetric systems work against powerful centralized platforms. And these adversaries might have sent us a message last month. In mid-March 2026, an unauthorized drone swarm penetrated Barksdale Air Force Base in Louisiana, home to the U.S. Air Force's Global Strike Command. The fact that this happened not overseas but in the United States, and that these tests occurred just weeks ago, underscores how close this threat is now. They didn't attack. They announced their presence. Every adversary watching learned that cheap drone networks can reach into the US. The Global Supply Chain Risk If the US abandons the Gulf while Iran holds the Strait contested, markets will price this as validation that cheap systems can hold global trade hostage. The current market disruptions will become permanent. Supply chains will have to pivot from "just-in-time" efficiency back to "just-in-case" redundancy. Inflation returns as safety costs money. Trade routes diversify away from vulnerable chokepoints. The global friction tax becomes permanent. The Unavoidable Truth Once you prove that cheap, asymmetric systems can hold global trade hostage, that knowledge spreads globally and irreversibly. Every adversary learns the same lesson: you don't need a $2 trillion Navy—you need $20 million in drones and the will to use them. Withdrawing while the Strait remains contested would permanently validate this model. Supply chains shift to "just-in-case" redundancy. Insurance costs rise. The friction tax becomes structural—baked into every global transaction for decades. The cost of staying is measured in months. The cost of leaving is measured in decades of economic drag. We cannot leave unfinished business.

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Avgas@hey_fly_guy·
@EricLDaugh Don’t we need the SAVE act passed for T to sign anything?
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Eric Daugherty
Eric Daugherty@EricLDaugh·
🚨 BREAKING: The Senate just gaveled in and Leader John Thune has SENT BACK the bill to fund all of DHS except ICE and CBP to the House Now the House must past the Senate bill — the same one passed initially — and send it to President Trump Reconciliation, which only needs 50+1 votes, will soon begin to fund the rest of ICE and CBP by June 1 HURRY UP!
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Avgas@hey_fly_guy·
I’ve been binge watching the Sopranos with my daughter since Halloween. Tonight is the finale and I can’t wait to see her face.
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MJTruthUltra
MJTruthUltra@MJTruthUltra·
John Solomon Name Drops Samantha Power, (Obama, Hillary, and Biden Ally) as a Person of Interest who was running USAID when they discussed funneling hundreds of millions back into Democrat coffers. Don Jr. Who on the American side was coordinating this scheme? Solomon: We don’t know that yet.. the NSA intercepted only high level Ukrainian Officials discussing it with USAID people working in Kyiv. rumble.com/v77uk1s-john-s…
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MJTruthUltra@MJTruthUltra

The story just keeps getting worse. 🚨 Ukrainian officials who discussed funneling hundreds of millions of U.S. taxpayer dollars into Biden’s presidential campaign KNEW the scheme was unjustifiable. Their bet was simple: by the time it was exposed, the money would be unrecoverable — and a newly elected Democrat president would simply bury it. The plan was to route the “aid” through NGOs, which would then hire subcontractors, who in turn would engage American companies — ultimately cycling the funds into Democratic campaign coffers. rumble.com/v77uj9u-ukrain…

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Avgas@hey_fly_guy·
@TheIntelFrog I agree with you but I think this is what he was sold from netanyahu, huckabee and reza
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Avgas@hey_fly_guy·
@rwe123 man he just doesn't have little fender benders, he just goes straight to rolling the car
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