🦁🦁Tito Estanqueiro🦁🦁
32K posts

🦁🦁Tito Estanqueiro🦁🦁
@Titovsky
Português de nascimento, brasileiro de coração, pai e esposo dedicado economista, acredito que o mundo pode ser diferente, depende de cada um. Sócio 8823-0
Mato Grosso do Sul - Brasil Присоединился Mayıs 2009
4.9K Подписки871 Подписчики
Закреплённый твит


Uma vergonha estas punições da @ligaportugal aos corruptos do @FCPorto que pressionam os árbitros e fazem o que querem em campo, roubam toalhas do guarda-redes, escondem bolas e lesionando jogadores e ainda têm benefícios. #Fifa #Uefa #Portugal
𝑳𝑬𝑨𝑶 𝑫𝑶𝑺 𝑭𝑨𝑪𝑻𝑶𝑺 🦁@LeaoDosFactoss
10 mil euros de multa por esconder bolas. 12 mil por coagir um árbitro ao intervalo. O roubo compensa, quando é feito por corruptos. O campeonato da mentira, o campeonato português. 🤡💰
Português
🦁🦁Tito Estanqueiro🦁🦁 ретвитнул

Brazil's most underappreciated strategic asset is a tree.
Brazilian eucalyptus is the most efficient timber crop on Earth.
Eucalyptus in Brazil reaches harvest in 6 to 7 years.
Pine in the U.S. South takes 22 to 40 years.
Pine in Canada and Scandinavia takes 60 to 100 years.
Brazil's average eucalyptus yield is 35.7 cubic meters of wood per hectare every year.
That is almost double the productivity of pine plantations in the Northern Hemisphere.
Same hectare. Same year. Twice the wood.
Brazil now operates more than 10 million hectares of planted forests.
Three out of every four trees planted in Brazil for industrial use are eucalyptus.
Suzano alone operates 2.7 million hectares across seven Brazilian states.
That makes Suzano the largest pulp producer on the planet, and Brazil the global leader in cellulose, tissue, and packaging supply chains.
Climate, soil, and decades of breeding research at Embrapa.
Three structural advantages no Northern Hemisphere forestry operation can replicate.
The most underappreciated industrial advantage in the world is growing on Brazilian land right now.
Most investors are still treating forestry as a slow asset class.
In Brazil, it compounds in 6 years.

English
🦁🦁Tito Estanqueiro🦁🦁 ретвитнул
🦁🦁Tito Estanqueiro🦁🦁 ретвитнул

👀 Antigo árbitro espanhol comenta lance polémico do jogo em Alvalade (2-2)
👉 Sabe tudo aqui: record.pt/futebol/arbitr…

Português
🦁🦁Tito Estanqueiro🦁🦁 ретвитнул

Vilas Boas: “Na 'Taça Sporting', frente ao Sporting, ficámos pelo caminho. E, mais uma vez, ficou exposto aquilo que temos vindo a sentir durante toda a época: o FC Porto tem de superar não só adversários, mas também o lado imprevisível e caótico do jogo, em mais um encontro em que apetece dizer: 'É raro, mas acontece muito'.”

Português
🦁🦁Tito Estanqueiro🦁🦁 ретвитнул

El Coliseo Romano, originalmente llamado Anfiteatro Flavio, es una de las obras de ingeniería más impresionantes de la antigüedad. Su historia es un reflejo del auge, la caída y la transformación de la civilización romana.
Tras la muerte de Nerón, el emperador Vespasianoinició la construcción sobre el antiguo lago artificial de la lujosa Domus Aurea de Nerón. Fue un gesto político para devolver al pueblo romano un terreno que el tirano anterior había tomado para su uso privado.
Fue inaugurado en el año 80 d.C. por su hijo Tito con juegos que duraron 100 días. Se estima que se sacrificaron miles de animales salvajes y cientos de gladiadores murieron en la arena.
Español
🦁🦁Tito Estanqueiro🦁🦁 ретвитнул

INSTEAD OF WATCHING NETFLIX THIS WEEKEND SPEND TWO HOURS WITH THIS FREE STANFORD LECTURE THAT WILL CHANGE HOW YOU BUILD WITH AI FOREVER.
Not a Twitter thread.
Not a YouTube tutorial from someone who learned this last month.
A Stanford University lecture taught the way engineers are actually trained to think about AI systems.
The difference between this and every prompt guide you have bookmarked is not the content.
It is the depth.
Most tutorials teach you what to do.
Stanford teaches you WHY it works.
And once you understand the why, every prompt you write, every system you design, and every agent you build operates from a completely different mental model.
The people who watch this weekend will show up on Monday thinking about AI at a level most developers with years of experience have not reached yet.
Two hours.
Free.
No signup. No paywall. No upsell.
Just the curriculum that produced the engineers building the systems everyone else is using.
The people who skip this will spend the next 12 months learning the same lessons the hard way through trial and error.
Bookmark this now.
Watch it before you write another prompt.
Follow @cyrilXBT for more resources that actually compound over time.
English
🦁🦁Tito Estanqueiro🦁🦁 ретвитнул

🦁🦁Tito Estanqueiro🦁🦁 ретвитнул

A conquista da Taça de Portugal pelo #HóqueiSCP em destaque na primeira página do #JornalSporting 🏆
📲 Acede gratuitamente à edição on-line em sporting.pt/jornal-gratis

Português
🦁🦁Tito Estanqueiro🦁🦁 ретвитнул
🦁🦁Tito Estanqueiro🦁🦁 ретвитнул
🦁🦁Tito Estanqueiro🦁🦁 ретвитнул
🦁🦁Tito Estanqueiro🦁🦁 ретвитнул
🦁🦁Tito Estanqueiro🦁🦁 ретвитнул

Centro Comercial, zona de restaurantes, altura em que vou pedir o almoço. Vejo uma nota de 10 euros caída no chão perto de uma pessoa que vai pagar. Apanho-a e pergunto se é dele. Nega. Olho e vejo uma senhora a afastar-se com o tabuleiro e questiono-a. Volta-se surpreendida e quando percebe o que é, nega também ser dela. Ou seja, encontrei no mesmo instante logo 2 pessoas honestas. Acabo por entregar a nota à rapariga que está a aceitar os pedidos da comida que de imediato a coloca não no bolso mas no mealheiro comum. Fiquei mais confiante nas pessoas.
Português
🦁🦁Tito Estanqueiro🦁🦁 ретвитнул
🦁🦁Tito Estanqueiro🦁🦁 ретвитнул

A CARNEGIE MELLON PROFESSOR WAS TOLD HE HAD 3 TO 6 MONTHS TO LIVE.
One month later he walked into a packed auditorium.
His name was Randy Pausch.
He was 46 years old.
He had terminal pancreatic cancer.
He had three children under the age of 6.
And he stood on that stage and gave the most joyful lecture ever recorded.
He did not talk about dying.
He did not talk about regret.
He did not talk about the unfairness of what was happening to him.
He talked about achieving childhood dreams.
He did one-armed push-ups on stage to prove he was still strong.
He made the audience laugh for 76 minutes straight.
He said: "We cannot change the cards we are dealt. Just how we play the hand."
The video hit 20 million views overnight.
Oprah called.
Congress called.
He testified before the Senate about pancreatic cancer funding.
He got a cameo in Star Trek because the director heard his story and personally invited him.
He wrote a book that sold 5 million copies in 48 languages.
He died 10 months after the lecture.
He was 47 years old.
The bridge connecting computer science and the arts at Carnegie Mellon is named after him.
Because Randy Pausch spent his entire career connecting the two.
Watch the lecture tonight.
4 minutes that will permanently change how you think about time.
Bookmark this.
Follow @cyrilXBT for more stories about people who used their time better than anyone else alive.
English
🦁🦁Tito Estanqueiro🦁🦁 ретвитнул
🦁🦁Tito Estanqueiro🦁🦁 ретвитнул











