Jonathan Arciszewski

450 posts

Jonathan Arciszewski banner
Jonathan Arciszewski

Jonathan Arciszewski

@jonnyarchie

Katılım Eylül 2012
405 Takip Edilen80 Takipçiler
Jonathan Arciszewski
Jonathan Arciszewski@jonnyarchie·
@Flex__J The interesting thing is he has 27k followers and lots who are also vocal advocates for $HG. Lots of cross over. My biggest dislike of X is lack of trust. Really makes you second guess everyone’s integrity. I don’t like that
English
0
0
0
10
Moose Pasture Minerals
Mr 📐is marketing + investor relations, for-pay. He is compensated by companies, especially high risk long-shots, on X. He has a history of promoting scam projects, like xU308. I avoid the companies and projects he promotes. #uranium
Moose Pasture Minerals@Flex__J

Review of xU3O8? Is this another Uranium Scam. In this review, a Uranium Investor Media who posts frequently on X announced that their channel is sponsored by xU303. The following post is intended to provide my review. Is this another #uranium SCAM?

English
1
0
1
211
Jonathan Arciszewski
Jonathan Arciszewski@jonnyarchie·
@ArneriDesign Is it just me or does the impact of $HG innovation seem revolutionary on all levels? This must be how IBM felt in the 60’s. Although I hope $HG stock reacts similarly to $NVDA as we approach this inflection point
English
1
1
4
64
Arneri Design
Arneri Design@ArneriDesign·
The graphene lubricant industry is being built right now. The companies making the products exist. The data is real. The market is $166B+. The missing link is verified, scalable, North American supply. 🇺🇸 $HGRAF is that link. Pre-Nasdaq. Not financial advice. DYOR 🚀
English
2
1
16
417
Arneri Design
Arneri Design@ArneriDesign·
The graphene lubricant market is real and growing fast. 10 companies are already selling graphene-enhanced oils and additives. All of them have the same upstream problem: consistent, high-purity, North American graphene supply. $HGRAF solved it. 🧵 #graphene #lubricants
GIF
English
8
2
34
1.2K
Jonathan Arciszewski retweetledi
Pierre Poilievre
Pierre Poilievre@PierrePoilievre·
12 years ago. The same $100 oil price. But gas was 45¢ cheaper. Why?
English
1.2K
3.2K
13.9K
440.5K
Gecko444
Gecko444@Gecko4441·
@jonnyarchie @Flex__J The Bellville build will need cash. I can see another Offering in the future to help finance the construction.
English
1
0
1
41
Jonathan Arciszewski
Jonathan Arciszewski@jonnyarchie·
@Gecko4441 @Flex__J And hope that $HG shares are not diluted to raise capital. My hope is new units will be built with profit from expected revenue.
English
1
0
2
40
Jonathan Arciszewski
Jonathan Arciszewski@jonnyarchie·
@Gecko4441 @Flex__J Considering NVDA was a 5-10B company 10yrs ago and now has a market cap of 4-5T. Their GPU dominance created the opportunity. We already know $HG fractal graphene is dominant. Just need widespread market adoption.
English
1
0
4
88
Jonathan Arciszewski retweetledi
Sparc Technologies (ASX:SPN)
@AkzoNobel will commercially offer an ecosparc® enhanced version of its Interzone® 954 protective coating in Australia. This marks the first widely used protective coating to incorporate the ecosparc® graphene additive. “Sparc has spent over 6 years developing a market-leading graphene additive… this release provides a significant platform for revenue growth.” — Nick O'Loughlin “Interzone® 954 has a +25 year track record… the addition of ecosparc® offers even more choice for long-term corrosion protection.” — Jamie O'Brien Key points: * Commercial release from a global leader with a +25 year product track record * Product to be manufactured in Australia, available from May 2026 * Follows >21 months of lab testing and field trials * Builds on Sparc’s first commercial ecosparc® sale in December 2025 Interzone® 954 is already widely used across offshore energy, mining, marine and infrastructure — providing a strong platform for adoption. A clear step forward in the commercialisation of graphene-enhanced coatings View the full announcement: clients3.weblink.com.au/pdf/SPN/030847… $SPN #Graphene #AdvancedMaterials #Coatings #CorrosionProtection #IndustrialInnovation #Energy #Mining #Infrastructure #CleanTech
English
3
15
71
26.9K
Jonathan Arciszewski
Jonathan Arciszewski@jonnyarchie·
@Flex__J I think this is a logical hedge but you’d likely make more long term by spending 15k on HG?
English
1
0
0
44
Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
Your brain has a circuit that doesn't know you live in a city. Its only job is to monitor whether birds are still singing. Right now, in this room, it is on. The circuit predates primates. Mammals have been using ambient soundscape continuity as a predator-detection system for roughly 200 million years. Birds stop singing when something larger moves through their territory. For most of mammalian history, a forest full of song meant no large predator was nearby, and the cessation of sound was the warning. Your nervous system never updated this software. The Max Planck Institute tested the inverse in 2022 with 295 participants. Six minutes of birdsong dropped anxiety with a medium effect size. Six minutes of traffic noise raised depression with the same. The effect worked on subjects who lived in dense urban environments and had no regular contact with nature. The brain still ran the check. Birdsong sits in the 1,000 to 8,000 Hz range. Your brainstem reads continuous patterns in that band as a signal that nothing dangerous is currently moving through the environment. EEG data shows birdsong at 45 to 50 decibels boosts alpha wave activity by 14.1% relative to silence. Alpha is the brainwave signature of relaxed alertness. Push the same birdsong above 60 decibels and the response flips. Stress markers rise 29%. The circuit only trusts the signal at the volume of quiet conversation, which is exactly the volume birds sing at from a typical distance. Three things happen simultaneously when the brain registers ambient safety. The amygdala downregulates. The parasympathetic nervous system takes over from the sympathetic. Heart rate variability rises, cortisol drops. The posterior cingulate cortex, which sits at the center of the rumination circuit, quiets down. King's College London tracked this through a smartphone study with over 1,200 participants and found the mood lift lasted hours after the sound stopped. People diagnosed with depression got the same response as healthy controls. Most of what gets labeled mental fatigue is hypervigilance running in the background. Birdsong tells the circuit it can stand down, and the brain reallocates the freed compute everywhere else. A quiet park feels different from a quiet office because the parks have sentinels.
Aakash Gupta tweet media
English
549
4.2K
27.4K
3M
Jan Wolansky
Jan Wolansky@WolanskyJa91908·
Strong finish for $HGRAF. Bullish.
Jan Wolansky tweet media
English
4
11
117
5.9K
Moose Pasture Minerals
@yseclov Etrade is $4-6 bucks PER trade of sptcf. I've communicated this to those doing 50 dollar rip-off charge and my hope is if enough show them the Etrade price, they will get rid. Until then, if you wish, just open up an etrade, check the price,and transfer your funds 2-3 days effort
English
1
0
3
96
Moose Pasture Minerals
$hgraf #uranium The situation with Sparc (au: $spn otc: sptcf), reminds me a bit of when Hydrograph was under a dollar. Many missed the boat when the price was low and could have profited more from being an early bird ... (disclosure, I now have 40,000 shares of Sparc)
Moose Pasture Minerals tweet media
🧢 Coach SCOTT ! 🏀💰👨🏻‍🦳@NBAJazzChat1

Re-tweeting this just in case someone was interested in a worthwhile deep dive. The tip of the spear. 👀 $SPTCF | $HGRAF | #HG

English
3
1
15
4.8K
Jonathan Arciszewski
Jonathan Arciszewski@jonnyarchie·
@Flex__J Interesting because lots of people who are also promoting $HG are followers of his. KD, Brett Green, Anders, Coach, etc. seems very incestuous. I’m trying to make sense of all the connections. Maybe coincidence? Seems he has so some reputable followers?? Confusing
English
0
0
0
43
Moose Pasture Minerals
#uranium Mr. 📐is not an investor. He is 100% a promoter / marketer. He cloaks his marketing by using 'Investor' in his handle. He has a history of promoting scams.
Moose Pasture Minerals tweet media
English
1
0
0
90
Jonathan Arciszewski retweetledi
Ihtesham Ali
Ihtesham Ali@ihtesham2005·
A mathematician who shared an office with Claude Shannon at Bell Labs gave one lecture in 1986 that explains why some people win Nobel Prizes and other equally smart people spend their whole lives doing forgettable work. His name was Richard Hamming. He won the Turing Award. He invented error-correcting codes that made modern computing possible. And he spent 30 years at Bell Labs sitting in a cafeteria at lunch watching which scientists became legendary and which ones faded into nothing. In March 1986, he walked into a Bellcore auditorium in front of 200 researchers and told them exactly what he had seen. Here's the framework that has been quoted by every serious scientist for the last 40 years. His opening line landed like a punch. He said most scientists he worked with at Bell Labs were just as smart as the Nobel Prize winners. Just as hardworking. Just as credentialed. And yet at the end of a 40-year career, one group had changed entire fields and the other group was forgotten by the time they retired. He wanted to know what the difference actually was. And he said it wasn't luck. It wasn't IQ. It was a specific set of habits that almost nobody is willing to follow. The first habit was the one that hurts the most to hear. He said most scientists deliberately avoid the most important problem in their field because the odds of failure are too high. They pick a safe adjacent problem, solve it cleanly, publish it, and move on. And because they never swing at the hard problem, they never hit it. He said if you do not work on an important problem, it is unlikely you will do important work. That is not a motivational line. That is a logical one. The second habit was about doors. Literal doors. He noticed that the scientists at Bell Labs who kept their office doors closed got more done in the short term because they had no interruptions. But the scientists who kept their doors open got more done over a career. The open-door scientists were interrupted constantly. They also absorbed every new idea passing through the hallway. Ten years in, they were working on problems the closed-door scientists did not even know existed. The third habit was inversion. When Bell Labs refused to give him the team of programmers he wanted, Hamming sat with the rejection for weeks. Then he flipped the question. Instead of asking for programmers to write the programs, he asked why machines could not write the programs themselves. That single inversion pushed him into the frontier of computer science. He said the pattern repeats everywhere. What looks like a defect, if you flip it correctly, becomes the exact thing that pushes you ahead of everyone else. The fourth habit was the one that hit me the hardest. He said knowledge and productivity compound like interest. Someone who works 10 percent harder than you does not produce 10 percent more over a career. They produce twice as much. The gap doesn't add. It multiplies. And it compounds silently for years before anyone notices. He finished the lecture with a line I have never been able to shake. He said Pasteur's famous quote is right. Luck favors the prepared mind. But he meant it literally. You don't hope for luck. You engineer the conditions where luck can land on you. Open doors. Important problems. Inverted questions. Compounded hours. Those are not traits. Those are choices you make every single day. The transcript has been sitting on the University of Virginia's computer science website for almost 30 years. The video is free on YouTube. Stripe Press reprinted the full lectures as a book in 2020 and Bret Victor wrote the foreword. Hamming died in 1998. He gave his final lecture a few weeks before. He was 82. The lecture that explains why some careers become legendary and others disappear is still free. Most people who could benefit from it will never open it.
Ihtesham Ali tweet media
English
147
1.9K
8.2K
1.1M
Daily Loud
Daily Loud@DailyLoud·
INSANE: Terrorist who stormed a Canadian military recruitment center and stabbed a corporal because “Allah told him to come here and kill people,” has been granted permission to fly to Mecca and continue to Somalia for an arranged marriage.
English
1.1K
2.4K
11.5K
1.2M
Moose Pasture Minerals
Moose Pasture Minerals@Flex__J·
$hgraf #uranium #silver There are so many possible catalysts for Hydrograph (hgraf). Everything from autos, to plastics, resins, engines, coatings, water filtration, construction materials, lubricants, batteries. These all are multi-billion dollar industries.
Moose Pasture Minerals tweet media
🧢 Coach SCOTT ! 🏀💰👨🏻‍🦳@NBAJazzChat1

If just one of these auto manufacturers sees the massive benefits of implementing $HGRAF into the product, and it proves to be a sales catalyst… the rest will copy it IMMEDIATELY. Car companies have copied each other since the beginning. And for HydroGraph, this would be HUGE!

English
1
1
19
1.5K