CrazyDescent
1.4K posts

CrazyDescent
@crazy_descent
Drawing, guitar, games, 80/90s anime, politics, tech, hastwt, Cheat Engine 🚫AI
Entrou em Aralık 2010
179 Seguindo21 Seguidores

Windows 11 users should be aware that the security update KB5083769 has been linked to significant problems on some PCs.
Reports include:
>boot loops
>Blue Screen of Death crashes
>distorted mosaic-like graphics.
Certain HP and Dell laptops and desktops, particularly with NVIDIA GTX 1080 Ti GPUs, appear most affected.
Users are frequently stuck in Windows Automatic Repair.
Microsoft has not yet added this to their known issues list.
Suggested recovery options are System Restore, Startup Repair, or using “Reset this PC” if needed.


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@jcuth20192 @Goblue30 @DailyMail Dont fucking tell me what I cant celebrate, you disgusting Zionist nazi...fuck off Cuntbert

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@crazy_descent @Goblue30 @DailyMail Try to get countries to enact laws. Maybe start a campaign against big game hunting. Just don’t celebrate a human’s death.
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Millionaire US big game hunter, 75, is trampled to death by five elephants while hunting antelope in central Africa trib.al/51Jpu84
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@Goblue30 @DailyMail No I don’t think it’s cool. But I won’t celebrate a humans death because I don’t like his idea of the sport of hunting antelopes.
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it takes tremendous amounts of dark, corrupting magic to summon land out of the sea. this is why the dutch are irredeemable pervert freaks.
Amazing Maps@amazingmap
The Dutch town that used to be an island
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Shigeru Miyamoto says he finds it strange that film critics were so negative about The Super Mario Galaxy Movie! via Nintendo Patents Watch/ @NDW_info
“Regarding the critics' reviews of the first film, I remember thinking, ‘they have a point.’ But I figured this time would be different... only to find that the they were even harsher than last time, which I found rather odd (laughs).
We stepped in from another medium and did our best to help energize the film industry. And yet the very people who are supposed to champion the film industry are the ones being so negative; it’s truly baffling.”
bsky.app/profile/ninpat…

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In 1995, 45% of British milk was delivered to the doorstep before seven in the morning by a milkman in an electric float.
In 2026, it is 3%.
The milkman has been effectively abolished inside one human generation. The supermarket walked in, undercut the cost by a few pence per pint, and the daily ritual of British household life, glass bottles clinking on the step at half past six, was gone by the time the children of 1995 had finished secondary school.
The cost to the customer was a few pence per pint.
The cost to the system was, in rough order: the glass bottle that was washed and reused hundreds of times, replaced with a plastic bottle that is used once and recycled imperfectly. The local dairy that supplied one town, replaced with a national processor that supplies half the country. The milk that arrived four hours after milking, replaced with milk that arrived three days after milking after a journey of 200 miles. The conversation on the doorstep, replaced with a self-checkout beep.
The milkman himself, incidentally, had the lowest recorded rate of heart disease of any male occupation in Britain. He walked approximately 12 miles a day, finished work by 10am, and ate a cooked breakfast. He has been replaced, in the same delivery role, by a zero-hours Amazon Flex driver sitting in a Ford Transit.
A small piece of British daily infrastructure was quietly demolished.
Nobody was consulted.
The milk is still being produced. It is just being produced further away, transported further, kept in plastic, and sold at a different margin, by a different business, to a customer who never sees who milked the cow.
The milkman knew your name.
The self-checkout does not.

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@Netlify i deleted my account over a month ago, why are you mailing me with privacy policy updates.
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Imagine an ancient Martian lake that surged, dried, and brewed like a prebiotic cauldron in clay that locked these secrets away for billions of years.
Mars wasn’t just wet — it was a cosmic soup pot cooking the ingredients of life.
Curiosity just smashed open a 3.5-billion-year-old rock called Mary Anning 3 and unleashed a chemistry explosion never seen before on another planet.
Using a rare “wet chemistry” solvent — the first time ever deployed off Earth — it cracked 21 wild organic molecules, including brand-new ones like a nitrogen ring that looks like a DNA/RNA precursor, and sulfur double-rings straight from interstellar meteorites.
This is huge. Ancient Mars hosted complex carbon chemistry ready for life’s building blocks. Sample return now.
Who’s ready for the Red Planet’s origin story?
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After years of lab work, the results are in: A rock that our Curiosity rover analyzed has the most diverse collection of carbon-containing molecules ever found on the Red Planet. Of 21 organic molecules found, 7 were detected for the first time on Mars go.nasa.gov/3QiG52h


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@ethanmwolf It is my opinion that this Piker fellow is a fart in a windstorm; and an irrelevant diversion who refuses to acknowledge how insignificant his self is.
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I’ve warned Democrats for months about Hasan Piker’s efforts to insert himself into our party.
Read my op-ed in The Washington Post about why the normalization of Piker within the Democratic Party is a mistake Democrats cannot afford to make. wapo.st/4cyGZyT
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