lemin

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@leminfr

Katılım Ocak 2020
64 Takip Edilen14 Takipçiler
lemin
lemin@leminfr·
@old_memory It’s minimal but it actually has soul
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BAIJ
BAIJ@Hail_BAIJ·
@TonyMichaelX It’s coming brother
Jon L. Noble🇬🇧@CheckCanopy

It’s hard to believe it’s already been 100 days since I received my Neuralink N1 implant. Looking back, the whole journey feels like science fiction that somehow became my everyday reality. The surgery on Day 0 was surprisingly easy. A quick general anaesthetic, a small incision, and the robotic system did the rest — precisely placing the 1,024 ultra-thin threads into my motor cortex. I woke up alert and in good spirits and went home the next afternoon. By Day 3 I was feeling a lot better, and by Day 7 the little scar was already starting to fade. Recovery was genuinely minimal; I felt sharper and more positive than I had been in years after the BCI was turned on. The real fun started in Week 2 when we paired the implant with my brand-new Apple MacBook (my very first Mac). The @neuralink engineers walked me through calibration sessions, and within a couple of minutes I was moving the cursor just by thinking. At first it felt like trying to remember a dream, but by Week 3 it was second nature. Scrolling, clicking, typing — all mind-controlled. The Mac integration was buttery smooth; I went from total Mac newbie to power-user faster than I ever expected. By Day 80 I was ready for the big leagues. That’s when I fired up @Warcraft of Warcraft for the first time with pure thought control. The first raid felt clunky, but once my brain and the BCI synced, it was pure magic. I’m now raiding, and exploring Azeroth hands-free at full speed — no mouse, no keyboard, just intention. It’s honestly brilliant. The freedom is addictive. The social-media side has been just as surprising. Every update I’ve shared has been met with genuine excitement rather than scepticism. Thousands of messages from people with disabilities, gamers, students, and scientists — all asking real questions about the tech and what it could mean for the future. The positivity has been overwhelming and incredibly motivating. 100 days in and I already can’t imagine life without it. The N1 didn’t just give me a new way to use a computer — it gave me a new way to live. Can’t wait to see what the next 100 days bring. Thank you all so much for your support and I will keep you all updated as we continue this journey together.

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Fortissax
Fortissax@FortySacks·
You have 10 seconds to explain why these shouldn’t be one province.
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Oli
Oli@o_lalonde·
@kalomaze still the GOAT to this day
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kalomaze
kalomaze@kalomaze·
this actually happened. there was a period of time where they were pushing this
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Fortissax
Fortissax@FortySacks·
You have 10 seconds to explain why these shouldn’t be one province, the Province of Buffalo.
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Hoppeism ‡
Hoppeism ‡@Hoppeism·
If you filter for only the true Catholics, the number drops to 0
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lemin
lemin@leminfr·
@yacineMTB I’ve only played tactics A2 for the DS as a kid enjoyed it but couldn’t get past the bullshit antlion pit quest then lost the ds game being a kid
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lemin
lemin@leminfr·
@MrEwanMorrison He went on to create Indian people and fucked up vaccines after this BTW
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lemin
lemin@leminfr·
@cyber_razz Idk I use Debian so I have a few extra years for this to happen to me
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Abdulkadir | Cybersecurity
Linux now has a place to store your birthday and it’s not for sending you cake. >systemd, the core program that boots and runs almost every modern Linux computer, just added a new field to its user database: your date of birth. >This isn’t some random feature, it’s a direct response to age verification laws passing in California, Colorado, Brazil, and other places that require apps to confirm a user’s age. >systemd itself does nothing with the date. It just stores it. The actual age checking logic is up to the individual apps that read it. >Only a system administrator can write or change the birthdate entry. Regular users cannot edit their own record. > However, the user themselves and certain sandboxed apps are allowed to read the stored date… so apps can query it when they need to verify age. > Think of it like an ID card slot built into the OS ….. Linux creates the wallet, but someone else still has to put the ID in and decide when to show it. >The bigger picture: operating systems are slowly becoming part of the compliance infrastructure that governments are demanding …. your OS may increasingly know more about you than just your username.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ I wonder what this means about privacy for Linux users.
Pirat_Nation 🔴@Pirat_Nation

The main program that starts and manages almost everything on modern Linux computers, “systemd”, recently added an optional "birthDate" field to its user database records. This stores a user's full birth date so apps can check age, for example, to comply with new age-verification laws in places like California, Colorado, and Brazil. It is not automatic age checking. Systemd only saves the date. Only admins can set or change it, but the user and some sandboxed apps can read it.

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lemin
lemin@leminfr·
@Rostrum0est @liquid2ulu Or just some barren moon does t even have to be in a far away galaxy just across the asteroid belt
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Ey up
Ey up@Rostrum0est·
@liquid2ulu If in 10,000 years we can't just drop our old nuclear waste on some alien homeworld what are we even doing.
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LiquidZulu, most consistent mofo you know
The "but what about aliens or people 10,000 years in the future who want to dig it up!?" concern about nuclear waste is retarded. Who gives a shit? It is vastly more important to have cheap energy than to worry about some random asshole 10,000 years from now getting radiation poisoning.
LiquidZulu, most consistent mofo you know tweet media
David AttenBruh@AlHendiify

Now show us 10,000 years worth of safely stored waste and how you communicate to a society 500 years into the future that no longer speaks the same language that this is an incredibly dangerous material.

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Delta9250
Delta9250@deltaIV9250·
Mind you, FPV drones exist. Dude just hates his chud son
Abdurahman Sheikh Azhari@HOA_ANALYST

Security Alert Breaking Norms, Senior Al-Shabaab Figure Involves His Son in Suicide Mission In a lengthy propaganda video released by the group for Eid, one of Al-Shabaab’s leaders is shown sending his son to take part in the attack on the NISA detention facility Godka Jilicow. The attack, which took place last year, was described in detail by Mahad Karate, the group’s Amniyat oversight. Among those featured in the propaganda footage is a young man identified as Abdirahman, the son of Al-Shabaab’s spokesman Ali Mahmoud Rage, also known as Ali Dheere. As far as is known, this marks only the second time in the group’s history that senior leadership has sent their own children on suicide missions. Previously, in 2013, the son of then Al-Shabaab governor Yusuf Sheikh Isse, also known as Kaba-kutukade, carried out a suicide bombing at the Turkish Embassy in Mogadishu. This remains one of the major criticisms directed at the group’s leadership, that they rarely send their own children to the frontlines or into suicide operations. Such actions are extremely rare and appear largely symbolic. The video, which prominently features Mahad Karate, appears to be a calculated propaganda effort aimed at portraying the group as still capable of sustaining attacks against the Federal Government of Somalia, while attempting to project commitment and sacrifice at the highest levels of its leadership. Stay turned on and please follow @wargelinn for more updates #Security #AlShabaab #Hornofafrica #Counterterrorism

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I laughed
I laughed@found_it_funny·
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