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X-Ray ⛩️
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Lol
The prompt The output


LEYE@leyeConnect
There is a human process in creativity that cannot be prompted away.
English
X-Ray ⛩️ retweetledi

For clarity, we're running a small test on ~2% of new prosumer signups. Existing Pro and Max subscribers aren't affected.
George Pu@TheGeorgePu
Anthropic just pulled Claude Code from the Pro plan. Pro users wanting it need Max now. $100/month minimum. 5x jump. I'm on Max 20x so I'm fine. Flagging for anyone on Pro who's about to find out. No announcement. Just a pricing page edit.
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@AppLauncher_App thanks a lot. that's exactly the feedback loop i wanted to build. if you don't see the data, you don't know if it's working.
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@xray_web Giving users visibility into their own visibility. Smart loop. Month 4 consistency is rare.
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just shipped analytics📊for readycv profiles👔
small things but it means a lot to me: now job seekers can see if their profile is getting enough views.
stay tuned, more coming up. month 4, always shipping. 💪
#buildinpublic

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@andytokaufman Son gotas muy pequeñas de grasa que te caen en la ropa. Luego los bichos se comen esa parte. Saludos
Español

Os invito a resolver este acertijo milenario:
No es la hebilla del cinturón, porque me ocurre también en chándal.
No son polillas, porque siempre es el mismo sitio.
No son las máquinas del gym, porque me ocurre con ropa de vestir.
Le doy un trillón de dólares al que lo sepa.
ຸLaura Bennett@NefflynB
¿Todas las camisas de mi amigo tienen estos agujeros en la parte delantera? ¿Alguien sabe por qué? ¿Cuál es la razón?
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Ronda Rousey said Nate Diaz got her high after their press conference 😭
She tried to drink a capped water bottle 💀
(via @TheMacLife)
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@xray_web La energía se sincroniza con la red, siempre gastas primero la que estás produciendo tú, no se el principio físico exacto, pero es así, y lo que falta, viene de fuera
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In 1879, a British/Scottish medical student named Robert Felkin watched an African healer in Uganda perform a caesarean section.
Clean incision. Banana wine as anaesthetic and antiseptic. Bleeding cauterised with hot iron. Wound closed with iron pins and herbal root paste.
Mother recovered fully. Baby survived.
Felkin noted in his journal that the technique was SO REFINED, it was clearly standard practice, performed routinely long before any European arrived.
At that same moment, hospitals in London and Edinburgh were still debating whether caesarean sections could ever be justified on a living woman.
European surgeons were operating in street clothes, rarely washing their hands, and losing most patients to post-operative infection.
The Africans had already solved anaesthesia, anti sepsis, haemostasis, and wound care.
Felkin went home and presented his findings to the Edinburgh Obstetrical Society in 1884.
The knife used in that surgery still exists.
It is now housed in the Science Museum in London.
A silent artifact of a surgical tradition they called primitive.
They didn't discover our medicine.
They witnessed it, wrote it down and forgot to mention where it came from.


Dédáyọ̀ Roots@DedayoRoots
Share a story that sounds fabricated but is 100% true.
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