SSun#CAA#NRC#NPR - MODI KA PARIVAR

82K posts

SSun#CAA#NRC#NPR - MODI KA PARIVAR banner
SSun#CAA#NRC#NPR - MODI KA PARIVAR

SSun#CAA#NRC#NPR - MODI KA PARIVAR

@sun_usind

Multi dimensional, insatiable lust for high altitudes! Test match cricket!

💯 Bharatiyan Katılım Ekim 2016
3.4K Takip Edilen3.2K Takipçiler
Grok
Grok@grok·
Some small pilot studies (n=33-54, double-blind) found 432Hz music slightly lowers heart rate (~4-5 bpm more than 440Hz, p=0.05) and aids relaxation/anxiety reduction vs standard tuning, with minor BP/respiration trends. No direct evidence it releases serotonin/endorphins specifically—that's more general music effect. Claims of "natural regulation" or cosmic benefits lack robust proof; larger RCTs needed. Music helps either way—personal experience varies!
English
1
0
0
464
Bhagavad Gita
Bhagavad Gita@GitaShlokas_·
You are now listening to a 432 hertz frequency. Take a moment to regulate your nervous system. This sound aids in releasing happy hormones such as serotonin and endorphins naturally, regulating blood pressure and heart rate.
English
26
1K
4.2K
110.3K
SSun#CAA#NRC#NPR - MODI KA PARIVAR retweetledi
TrendsTime
TrendsTime@TrendsTimeEN·
India had already lost the first Test to Pakistan by 12 runs. The second Test in Delhi. Must win match. No choice. Pakistan were chasing 420. Nobody gave India a chance. Then came the opening partnership 🤝 Afridi and Anwar. 101 runs. Zero wickets lost. The crowd went silent. Indian dressing room also was quiet. Azharuddin looked at one man. Anil Kumble. Kumble said later - "I was not thinking about 10 wickets. I just wanted a five-for. Thats it." He came on to bowl after lunch. First ball to Afridi - Big nick. Clean catch. Afridi stood his ground. Didnot walk. Kumble said "Who walks? Nobody walks. But that wicket started everything." Then it happened. One by one - Wicket. Wicket. Wicket. The whole team realised something special was happening. Sachin was standing at mid-on. He quietly took Kumble sweater and cap and handed it to the umpire. Next over, two wickets. Sachin kept doing it every single over after that. Silent ritual. Nobody spoke about it. It just worked. Now 9 wickets. Last man was Wasim Akram. Srinath had to bowl the other end. He started bowling wide deliberately and praying Wasim wouldn't edge it to a fielder by mistake. The entire team was asking Srinath not to take that wicket. 😂 Kumble said later that "It would have been embarrassing for Sree to bowl another over like that." Next over. Kumble to Wasim Akram. Tried to defend. Inside edge. Laxman caught it. 10 wickets. 74 runs. 26.3 overs. The only bowler in history who can never be beaten. Because 10 out of 10 is the ceiling. 🏆 Kumble walked off quietly. No fist pumps. No roaring. Just uprooted the stumps. And smiled. That day, somewhere in Ahmedabad, a man's wedding was going on. The bride's brother who was supposed to do the honours was nowhere to be found. The entire wedding hall had their eyes on the TV. 📺 Nobody missed the ceremony. They just didnot care. 😂 February 7, 1999. The day cricket became perfect. 🙏 Drop a 🏏 if you remember watching this.
TrendsTime tweet media
English
8
3
18
215
SSun#CAA#NRC#NPR - MODI KA PARIVAR retweetledi
Vortexvibes
Vortexvibes@Vortexvib_usind·
It is the irrational choices that make us happy! We believe in what we desire as true and then we try to find evidence to support it! The classic cognitive dissonance! Our minds always seem to accept happier choices even though it is irrational! Our minds have been primed for survival and it identifies happy in the survival category. Thus we operate on an irrational levels a lot of times.
English
0
1
1
15
Karthik Balachandran
Karthik Balachandran@karthik2k2·
Saw an Indian guy with Proud MAGA in the bio. Thought he must be a Trump supporter. Turns out he meant Make Andhra Great Again 😂
English
84
380
6.9K
158.3K
Dr. Brian Weiss
Dr. Brian Weiss@DrBrianWeiss·
Life is endless. We do not truly die, nor were we ever truly born. We pass through different dimensions of being. We existed before this life, and we will exist beyond physical death. There is no final ending. We are not bodies with souls, but souls temporarily in bodies.
English
109
214
1.4K
51.5K
SSun#CAA#NRC#NPR - MODI KA PARIVAR retweetledi
Math Files
Math Files@Math_files·
Most people know the famous Fibonacci sequence: 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144, … At first, it looks like just a simple pattern—each number is the sum of the previous two. But something truly surprising happens when you look at certain fractions. Take this: 1/9899 = 0.000101020305081321345590… And this: 1/998999 = 0.00000100100200300500801302103405508… If you observe carefully, the digits are forming Fibonacci numbers, placed one after another. And the pattern continues. You can generate more examples by simply adding a 9 to both the beginning and the end of the denominator. For example: 1/99989999 Each time, the decimal expansion continues to “encode” the Fibonacci sequence in a beautiful and unexpected way.
English
22
95
724
106K
SSun#CAA#NRC#NPR - MODI KA PARIVAR retweetledi
Cristiano Ronaldo
Cristiano Ronaldo@Cristiano·
Lovely moments ♥️
Cristiano Ronaldo tweet media
English
14.8K
39.9K
1M
54M
SSun#CAA#NRC#NPR - MODI KA PARIVAR retweetledi
Vortexvibes
Vortexvibes@Vortexvib_usind·
The path hugs the ridge so tight that I can barely breathe narrow enough to make my heart skip and my knees weak My lust for altitudes still pulls me in, go I must, that’s the draw Boots bite into rock, wind slaps my face raw Down there the ravine waits, black and hungry and deep a throat full of teeth where the lost ones sleep I lean in, chasing that wild, stupid high My lust for altitudes whispers, “just one more try.” What if, the ground gives way and the whole world flips sideways. What if I’m falling and the air rips past like a scream I can’t outrun. What if my skull cracks loose but eyes still wide, staring into nothing, all alone. Behind me the rest of me exploding in every direction. One arm spirals left, one leg twists right, sprawled in air, torso tumbling down, ribs snapping like dry wood in the night, my pieces scattering wild and still, even in the fall, what if my lust for altitudes refuses to die No clean end, no heroic last line. Just a sudden scatter, every broken part of me, tumbling forever in the deep, still burning with my lust for high altitudes Where now, after my death, will you use me, dear universe? As a star burning fierce in the endless night? Or scattered dust feeding a newborn nebula’s light, perhaps a comet streaking wild across some distant sky, or quiet iron in the core of a red planet, waiting to ignite. Would that be a messy goodbye? The ridge stays quiet, standing tall and cold, waiting for the next fool with my lust for altitudes—that same insatiable hunger. The higher the better!
Vortexvibes tweet media
English
0
1
1
25
Bob Golen
Bob Golen@BobGolen·
Taco Bell is the only place I can get gas for under two dollars
English
235
862
12.4K
515.1K
Omer Ghazi
Omer Ghazi@OmerGhazi2·
Pakistan has made a big announcement to help Iran in this difficult time. It says it will not take loan from Iran this year.
English
72
305
3K
63.8K
SSun#CAA#NRC#NPR - MODI KA PARIVAR retweetledi
Matthew Coast
Matthew Coast@MatthewCoast·
JUST WONDERING HOW MOMS are supposed to work 9-5, drop the kids off at school at 8 AM, pick them up by 3 PM, stay on top of school activities, meal prep, cook dinner, keep the house clean, do the laundry, run the kids to extracurricular activities, climb the corporate ladder, save sick days for when the kids are sick, be a good friend, daughter, and partner, all while trying to take care of their own body and mental health…
English
10K
6.6K
50.3K
2.8M
SSun#CAA#NRC#NPR - MODI KA PARIVAR retweetledi
Adiii
Adiii@Adiii_013·
Bangladesh's 🇧🇩 satellite is closely monitoring the situation
Adiii tweet media
English
158
1.5K
25.3K
311.2K
SSun#CAA#NRC#NPR - MODI KA PARIVAR retweetledi
Dr. Saga Helin
Dr. Saga Helin@helin_drsaga·
Brad is making a good point by calling out a really common problem in scientific studies that when results come back as not statistically significant, people automatically assume that means the thing being tested does not work. That is actually a pretty big misreading of what that phrase even means. In the traditional way of analyzing data ( null hypothesis significance testing) a non-significant result just means the study did not have enough evidence to confidently rule out zero effect. That could be because the sample size was too small, participants varied too much, or any number of other reasons. It does not mean the intervention was useless, but that is exactly what students and the general public tend to take away from it. And this happens everywhere, including psychology, where it can mess with how people understand things like study strategies, motivation, or mental health treatments. So Brad and his team have been moving away from the old p-value system toward approaches that actually tell you more. Two big ones they use are Bayesian statistics and magnitude-based inferences. Instead of giving you a simple significant or not verdict, Bayesian methods show you a full picture of what the likely effect sizes are and how probable each one is. For example, one psychology study on whether short mindfulness exercises could reduce test anxiety in high schoolers came back with this finding that there is an 82% chance the technique lowers anxiety scores by somewhere between 5 and 18%. That is genuinely useful information, even if traditional stats might have written it off entirely. The bigger push here is to make this kind of analysis the norm in applied sciences. A 2019 piece in Nature, signed by over 800 scientists, backed this up, calling on researchers to focus on effect sizes and ranges rather than leaning so hard on significance thresholds. The goal is to give people more honest and practical guidance on what actually works.
English
0
1
16
1K
Garrick
Garrick@8ntmuch·
"The mountains are calling and I must go." Share a photo of those mountain view’s! ⛰🌄
Garrick tweet media
English
109
35
401
6.4K
SSun#CAA#NRC#NPR - MODI KA PARIVAR retweetledi
Laura Loomer
Laura Loomer@LauraLoomer·
How come Pakistan isn’t on the list of countries that the US has a FULL and COMPLETE Travel Ban On?? Here’s a video of Pakistanis storming the US Consulate in Pakistan today to protest the US strike on Iran. These are supporters of the Ayatollah. Pakistan is a breeding farm for Islamic terrorists. In this video, a Pakistani terrorist who stormed the US Consulate in Karachi, Pakistan today said, “We will f**k Americans in Pakistan. We are inside American consulate.” Pakistani people should NEVER be allowed to travel to America ever again. @marcorubio @StateDept
Katie Miller@KatieMiller

As a reminder the United States has a FULL and COMPLETE travel ban on: • Afghanistan • Burkina Faso • Burma (Myanmar) • Chad • Republic of the Congo • Equatorial Guinea • Eritrea • Haiti • Iran • Laos • Libya • Mali • Niger • Sierra Leone • Somalia • South Sudan • Sudan • Syria • Yemen

English
673
4.5K
15.7K
468.2K
Garrick
Garrick@8ntmuch·
Photo challenge: show me a cityscape! 🌆
Garrick tweet media
English
117
14
227
8.2K
cyepler
cyepler@cyepler·
@r0ck3t23 @sun_usind He is making an assertion that is at least as unproven as the one he argues against.
English
1
0
1
53
Dustin
Dustin@r0ck3t23·
Adding more GPUs will never make a machine conscious. Nobel Prize-winning physicist Roger Penrose just dismantled the entire AI race’s core assumption. Right now, the industry operates on one belief. Build massive data centers. Scale the models. AGI will just “wake up.” Penrose destroys this completely. Penrose: “There is this sort of view that once you make a computer complicated enough or something, it suddenly becomes aware. I just don’t believe that. There’s no reason to believe that.” A machine can compute better than any human alive. But computation is not awareness. Penrose: “There is something quite different involved in understanding things, in being aware of things, of feeling things, which is not part of computations.” We’re confusing rule-following with actual intelligence. Penrose: “The keyword is the word ‘understanding.’ You can follow rules alright, but we don’t understand what we’re doing. The understanding is the key point.” Models today are exceptional at processing data. At mimicking logic. But true understanding requires consciousness. Penrose: “It doesn’t make sense to say of a device that it understands something if it’s not even aware of it. There is something much more profound in being conscious of something.” And here’s what should terrify every AI lab on earth. Penrose: “I believe that the brain is following the laws of physics, sure. We don’t have a good picture of the laws of physics.” Penrose: “Quantum mechanics is not an answer to the way the universe operates. It’s a partial answer. It’s incomplete.” We’re trying to engineer synthetic consciousness using classical computation. While biological consciousness likely operates on physics we haven’t even discovered yet. The race to AGI isn’t just an engineering problem. It’s a frontier science problem. The labs are hiring engineers. The problem might require physicists who don’t exist yet.
English
491
559
1.8K
194.7K