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jaive

@jaive

Katılım Kasım 2008
316 Takip Edilen252 Takipçiler
jaive
jaive@jaive·
@Cuuuuuurse @sneako Strickland tried so hard to knock a non fighter out but couldnt...mans made of that hard stuff
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Groyper Curse 2
Groyper Curse 2@Cuuuuuurse·
Throw back to when Sneako got his shit rocked. @sneako I want you to know I touch myself to this video every night. Each time more satisfying than the last.
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jaive
jaive@jaive·
@ausiehoneybunny That body looks like its been through a few origin deciders
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0xMorty
0xMorty@0xMortyx·
25-YEAR-OLD BUILT AN AI "SECOND BRAIN" for his YouTube channel He ported Karpathy's LLM Knowledge Base framework into Obsidian + Claude Code - every chat now writes back into a vault that compounds his context over time 22 min. free. Bookmark & watch
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Andrey Azimov
Andrey Azimov@AndreyAzimov·
@levelsio keeping my expenses low really helped. in 2018 i was living in Bali for $500 a month
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Viktor
Viktor@ViktorKlopp·
This kick into the bucket challenge is fun
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jaive
jaive@jaive·
The God of 7 years, 7 Billion Moons and 7 Days of Thrive and Gloom, Walk here to learn today, walk without Fear. Dance the way the sea listens when you have noone left to hold you near. All the while, the river rivers.
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RC deWinter
RC deWinter@RCdeWinter·
#poetry a piece of you when i walk the damp sand where the sea kisses the shore
trying not to add my own salt to the cold green water
i see you in every wavelet washing over
my feet

when i get home and throw myself into a lawn chair 
light up inhale exhale and stare up at the dappled sky 
your smile floats in the smoke soaring on
the breeze

when i stand in the kitchen throwing dinner together
instead of letting things pile up to be washed later
i clean up as i go and there you are in the corner by the  fridge nodding

when i’m in the shower trying not to add my tears to 
the gush of hot water washing the dust of the day
down the drain i close my eyes and hear you  singing handel

when at last i bury myself in that narrow lonely bed
trying to approximate the warmth of your arms encircling me i drift off to that empty place called  sleep and

there you are whispering oh you’re going to like me 
as i dissolve into a cloud of memories sweeter than any dream how is it everywhere i go i pick up a piece  of you   © 2021 RC deWinter Published in Poetic Sun Issue 7 October 2021
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Wise
Wise@trikcode·
AI is not killing engineers it is turning them into project managers
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ALUTHEDON
ALUTHEDON@Mbakaza4L·
The first 18 pages the age is listed as 0 The first 18 pages the age is listed as 0 The first 18 pages the age is listed as 0 The first 18 pages the age is listed as 0 The first 18 pages the age is listed as 0 The first 18 pages the age is listed as 0
Sharif Kouddous شريف عبد القدوس@sharifkouddous

The health ministry has released a new 1,000-page document with the names, ages and other info, of 52,959 Palestinians killed in Gaza. For the first 100 pages (over 5,000 names), the age is listed at 5 years or younger. The first 18 pages the age is listed as 0 (under 1 year)

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jaive
jaive@jaive·
STRESS CARD: Robert Sapolsky’s Warning Stanford Neuroscientist on the silent killer doctors ignoreOn Chris Williamson’s podcast, Sapolsky revealed 5 everyday “normal” habits that quietly destroy your sleep, mood, and nervous system through chronic cortisol.1. Rumination (Replay conversations in your head)Your brain doesn’t know the awkward thing you said 15 years ago isn’t happening right now. It triggers the same cortisol flood as the original threat. Fix: Notice it. Name it. Redirect.2. Worrying about scenarios that haven’t happenedA zebra runs from a lion for 30 seconds, then grazes. Humans worry about an imaginary lion for 30 years. Fix: Ask yourself: “Is this actually happening right now?”3. Doomscrolling the newsReading about distant crises activates the same ancient stress circuitry evolved for outrunning predators. Fix: One news window per day. Same rule for social media.4. Binging tragic or violent contentYour nervous system can’t distinguish fiction from reality — a movie, book, or video still spikes cortisol. Fix: Audit what you consume after 7 PM.5. Trying to control what you can’tLack of control and obsessively trying to control the uncontrollable both keep you in survival mode. Fix: Surrender one thing per day. Practice the difference.Takeaway from Sapolsky: Chronic stress isn’t just “in your head.” It’s a biological cascade most doctors overlook. Break these loops and your body finally gets the signal: you’re safe.Save this card. Share it. Protect your nervous system.
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jaive
jaive@jaive·
Walid Daqqa's exact sperm-smuggling method remains a closely guarded secret among Palestinian prisoners and families to protect ongoing resistance tactics. It was done secretly and used in a fertility clinic to conceive his daughter Milad with his wife Sana Salameh in 2019 (born 2020). His philosophy emphasized intellectual defiance in captivity. He wrote of "parallel time"—creating a rich inner life of education, writing, and creation inside prison despite isolation. Key works include analyses of psychological torture ("melting consciousness"), resistance to "politicide," and children's books promoting life-affirming hope. He framed fatherhood and smuggled sperm as acts of steadfastness and love against oppression.
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jaive
jaive@jaive·
How to Remove the Scent of Death from your life: - Cold baths - Intermittent fasting - Low-carb diet - 8 hours of sleep - Saunas - Red meat - Cutting out seed oils
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Khusboo Tayal
Khusboo Tayal@KhusbooT14835·
A man spends 50 years teaching at MIT. He knows his time is running out. So he records one last lecture — everything he knows, distilled into a single hour. He died 5 months later. This is that lecture. The most important hour you'll watch this week. 👇Bookmark it for later
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Jack Prandelli
Jack Prandelli@jackprandelli·
🚨 BREAKING: CNN reports explosions in Iran’s Bandar Abbas, with air defenses activated and US strikes confirmed on Iranian military facilities. 🔥 The attack comes as the 2026 Iran war escalates again, amid nuclear tensions, Strait of Hormuz threats, and volatile oil markets. 🛢️
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jaive
jaive@jaive·
“Be the man in the arena.” And not a bystander. Live your life. Burn your candle out.
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Business Nerd
Business Nerd@Business_Nerd_·
Larry Ellison on why Facebook paid $19 billion for WhatsApp: When WhatsApp sold to Facebook for $19 billion, much of Silicon Valley was stunned by the price tag. Larry Ellison was initially among them until he thought it through. "I'll speak for myself inside the valley when WhatsApp sold for 19 billion US dollars, not Hong Kong dollars, US dollars. I think a lot of us were shocked until we thought about it and understood the value of that many consumers having access to that many consumers." Ellison's framing shifts the conversation from "what is a messaging app worth?" to something much bigger: what is direct access to a massive consumer base worth? He draws the comparison explicitly: "What companies typically pay on a per consumer basis, whether you're a cable TV company..." Industries like cable TV have long paid significant sums per subscriber, and WhatsApp's user base, viewed through that same lens, suddenly looks like a bargain rather than an extravagance. Ellison is realistic about the monetisation challenge, though: "This is probably not the place to debate how much you can get through WhatsApp. A dollar a year per customer is not going to do it. But there will be opportunity, I believe, to sell these same customers other things as they join your ecosystem." The acquisition wasn't about WhatsApp's standalone revenue potential. It was about pulling hundreds of millions of users into Facebook's broader orbit, where they could be monetised across an entire suite of products and services over time. And Ellison reminds us this wasn't a one-sided deal. It was a contested auction: "There was quite a battle between Facebook and Google over that property. So it wasn't one guy did something really silly with a lot of money. Mark Zuckerberg won an auction over Google and paid a high price but got a very, very valuable asset in the 21st century."
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