kcfaul

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kcfaul

kcfaul

@kcfaul

Founder: @conwaygoods, @tamareloliqueur Former: trader @cbot @cboe. vp of dev @reald3d ($0-ipo) Now: outdoors, design, tech. Biophilic. Always OR Duck & MT Griz

Boulder, Seattle, LA, Oregon Katılım Ağustos 2008
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kcfaul
kcfaul@kcfaul·
Things iPhone 7+ camera will be able to do: -measure distance -map objects -capture 3D images -create parallax -depth of field -stream VR
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Ben See
Ben See@ClimateBen·
This means global warming is accelerating to potentially unsurvivable levels by the 2030s or very soon after.
Ben See tweet media
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Bluntly Put Philosopher (BPP)
Bluntly Put Philosopher (BPP)@SocraticScribe·
Microtubules inside our cells look eerily like Lichtenberg figures,fractal scars from high-voltage discharges. Hal Puthoff thinks they might even detect the quantum field. Biology meets quantum plasma?
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James Tate
James Tate@JamesTate121·
In one hand: a clothespin from the 1960s. Solid hardwood, smooth from decades of use. It still works perfectly, some 60 years later. In the other: a clothespin from 2025. Lighter, paler wood, brittle. The spring is thin and unstable. Marketed as “extra durable,” my dad just raised an eyebrow. At first glance, it’s just two clothespins. But they tell a bigger story — the shift from durability to disposability, from craftsmanship to cost-cutting, from stewardship to constant consumption. This is planned obsolescence in action. Products are designed to fail so we must keep buying. Slowly, subtly, they break. Frayed wires, cracked hinges, brittle springs. Not because we want more, but because the old was never built to last. The costs are everywhere. Landfills overflow. Wallets empty. And maybe most quietly, our spirits grow accustomed to impermanence, to the idea that nothing is meant to endure. What if this philosophy extends beyond objects? What if it shapes how we treat relationships, communities, homes, even the Earth — as temporary, replaceable, disposable? It doesn’t have to be this way. That 1960s clothespin reminds us another path is possible. That we once made things to last, and we can again. That quality, care, and intention matter. That we can design for repair, for continuity, for meaning.
James Tate tweet media
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cizikci
cizikci@eylemboss0306·
prime numbers distribution
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Johnny
Johnny@j00ny369T·
That’s why they are called sweatshirts.
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Morgan J. Freeman
Morgan J. Freeman@mjfree·
ICE Chases Protestor In Major Escalation in Minnesota — Air Force Called In
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Jay Anderson
Jay Anderson@TheProjectUnity·
Still processing the fact that Korea is home to roughly 40% of the entire worlds megalithic structures...
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tern
tern@1goodtern·
A couple of very important studies out just in the last 24 hours confirming what we've been saying for years and years now: Covid infections affect your immune system *badly*. Here's a few things you may have missed in them.
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Leon Simons 🌍
Leon Simons 🌍@LeonSimons8·
In a sane world, this would be front page news everywhere. But it will hardly be covered anywhere. The North Pacific Ocean surface warmed over twice as much over the past 15 years than it did over the preceding 156 years. That's an increase in warming rate of >2000%!
Leon Simons 🌍 tweet media
Leon Simons 🌍@LeonSimons8

Acceleration of warming is especially clear over the North Pacific Ocean, which warmed more than twice as much over the past 15 years than it did over the preceding 150 years!

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Amanda Litman
Amanda Litman@amandalitman·
This quote stopped me in my tracks.
Amanda Litman tweet media
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Terrible Maps
Terrible Maps@TerribleMaps·
Love your work
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William A. Wallace, Ph.D.
William A. Wallace, Ph.D.@drwilliamwallac·
🫀 The heart doesn’t start beating the way we thought it did. There is no single “starter switch” for the first heartbeat. Recently, scientists captured the exact moment a developing heart goes from complete silence to rhythm, and it happens as a sudden collective event. Instead of a pre-built pacemaker turning on, many heart cells slowly become electrically active. When enough of them cross a critical threshold, the entire tissue synchronizes at once—producing the first coordinated beat. The earliest heartbeats are irregular, but they already spread across the heart, driven by calcium-based electrical signals. The heartbeat begins as a system-level phase transition, one of the clearest examples of emergence in living tissue. Based on research published in Nature (Jia et al., 2023).
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Chase Senior
Chase Senior@Chase_Senior·
I brought this up and was called a conspiracy theorist and the Alex Jones of NFL content creators. But experts in this field continue to say it could be a reason why the 49ers deal with so many injury problems. Fascinating thread and worth looking into.
Peter Cowan | Sunlight is Life@living_energy

Low-frequency electromagnetic fields can degrade collagen, weaken tendons, and cause soft-tissue damage at levels regulators call "safe." We have a real world case study proving this: An NFL team whose practice facility sits next to a massive electrical substation. THREAD 🧵 peteranthonycowan.substack.com/p/could-chroni…

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Dudes Posting Their W’s
Dudes Posting Their W’s@DudespostingWs·
This might be one of the craziest things I’ve ever seen. A dog at an animal shelter figured out how to escape his cage and then somehow opened the door and got out. This happened in Huntington, West Virginia and they’re still looking for him.
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🧬Craig Brockie
🧬Craig Brockie@CraigBrockie·
Scientists just cracked the multiple sclerosis code after decades of searching. Two specific gut bacteria are triggering the disease, and they've proven it using identical twins and mice. This changes everything we know about MS:
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