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Krumlar

@CryptoKrum

Frogs-n-Dogs Its it time? It's time. -- https://t.co/KtNpMvXOBj

Petrópolis, Brazil เข้าร่วม Şubat 2018
331 กำลังติดตาม708 ผู้ติดตาม
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Emre Can Kartal
Emre Can Kartal@eckartal·
> be Asimov > buys a Unitree G1 > starts testing policies > knee breaks > waits 2 months for one replacement part > realizes closed humanoids kill development speed > builds its own humanoid robot > makes it open-source > puts everything on GitHub, from policies to parts > launches a humanoid DIY kit with a $499 deposit > does almost $1M in sales in 30 days > starts setting up manufacturing > begins shipments in the next few months Asimov gives every AI and robotics builder a fully customizable humanoid robot. Open.
Asimov@asimovinc

You can build your own humanoid at home. Asimov – Here be Dragons is now available for presale. $499 deposit, $15,000 target price. asimov.inc/diy-kit

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Whale.Guru
Whale.Guru@Whale_Guru·
NOBODY IS TELLING YOU HOW FUCKED THE FARMERS ARE IN AMERICA RIGHT NOW. NOBODY IS TELLING YOU HOW FUCKED THE FARMERS ARE IN AMERICA RIGHT NOW. The Agriculture Secretary just confirmed it publicly. 1 in 4 American farmers has NO fertilizer secured for spring planting. No fertilizer. No crops. No food. Farm bankruptcies are up 46% in 2025. 160,000 farms closed since 2017. Less than half of all farmers will even turn a profit this year. They're not struggling. They're being wiped out. And the media is busy covering everything else.
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Morgan
Morgan@MorganC000·
So…Qatar LNG gets hit. By morning Cheniere is at an all-time high, Venture Global up 61%, and Wall Street has buy notes out before the damage assessment is in. European firms had signed forward supply deals for U.S. LNG seventeen days earlier. What the headlines missed: every facility struck was already scheduled for demolition or redevelopment. -Ras Laffan phased out for North Field expansion, plan filed 2020. -Ras Tanura had a $2.6B modernization filed in 2019. -Jebel Ali mid-demolition for luxury redevelopment. The “Iranian strikes” kept landing exactly where the bulldozers were already going… Then look at Iraq. The Development Road — $17B corridor bypassing Hormuz, outside every U.S. financial chokepoint, with Chinese engineering and investment throughout. Al Faw/Basra. Baghdad. Mosul. Erbil. Struck node by node before it could become operational. The only military air presence tracked consistently over every strike corridor was American. Just enough damage to knock competing infrastructure offline. U.S. LNG steps into the gap. The competing corridor is gone before it opens. Everyone covering this is somehow not seeing any of it. This isn’t a war. It’s a restructuring. And the invoice was already written.
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madeofmistake
madeofmistake@madeofmistak3·
at work everyone was uncomfortable with using "master" as the main branch name on git so i changed it to "slave_coordinator"
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anand iyer
anand iyer@ai·
This feels like physical product design's ChatGPT moment. This team just ran an autonomous agent against the entire chip design process: 219-word spec in, tape-out-ready silicon layout out, 12 hours later. The agent ran continuously against a simulator, found its own bugs, rewrote its own pipeline, and iterated to a working CPU! Chip design costs well over $400M and takes up to 9 years. Not because writing hardware code is hard (it is actually brutally hard) but because a respin costs 10 of millions. So teams spend more than half their total budget just verifying the design is correct before a single transistor is placed. That cost structure is why most chip designs never get built. Entire product categories that were previously too low-volume to justify a tape-out are now buildable.
Towaki Takikawa / 瀧川永遠希@yongyuanxi

Design Conductor: an AI agent that can build a RISC-V CPU core from design specs. The agent is given access to a RISC-V ISA simulator and manuals... to enable an end-to-end verification-driven generation. The most important thing for design intelligence is a verifier 😎

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Ethan Loosbrock
Ethan Loosbrock@ELoosbrock·
Total insanity from the recent Dahn lab paper. Batteries that last 27,000 cycles, equivalent to 7.5M miles!!! Enough to go to the moon and back 15 times. In the future, literally everything in your car will break before your battery, including you. You'll pass down your battery to your kids and grandkids and great grandkids. And most surprisingly, these are NMC cells!
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Nav Toor
Nav Toor@heynavtoor·
🚨Someone just open sourced a computer that works when the entire internet goes down. It's called Project N.O.M.A.D. A self-contained offline survival server with AI, Wikipedia, maps, medical references, and full education courses. No internet. No cloud. No subscription. It just works. Here's what's packed inside: → A local AI assistant powered by Ollama (works fully offline) → All of Wikipedia, downloadable and searchable → Offline maps of any region you choose → Medical references and survival guides → Full Khan Academy courses with progress tracking → Encryption and data analysis tools via CyberChef → Document upload with semantic search (local RAG) Here's the wildest part: A solar panel, a battery, a mini PC, and a WiFi access point. That's it. That's your entire off-grid knowledge station. 15 to 65 watts of power. Works from a cabin, an RV, a sailboat, or a bunker. Companies sell "prepper drives" with static PDFs for $185. This gives you a full AI brain, an entire encyclopedia, and real courses for free. One command to install. 100% Open Source. Apache 2.0 License.
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Rowan Cheung
Rowan Cheung@rowancheung·
This robotic hand can be 3D printed by anyone and assembled in under 8 hours. Researchers at ETH Zurich created the Orca hand, fully open-sourced with artificial bones and tendons. For context, advanced robotic hands cost over $100,000 and require constant maintenance... Orca costs under $2,000. 50x less (!) A self-calibration system maps every motor to every joint, eliminating the manual tuning that tendon-driven hands usually need. Each fingertip has built-in tactile sensors covered by silicone skin. The hand can actually feel when it touches something, giving it feedback to grip objects without crushing them or letting them slip. It can hold over 20 lbs, learn tasks by watching human demonstrations, and transfer skills trained in simulation directly to the real world. The team proved its durability by having it pick up and place a cube over 2,000 times across 7 hours with no human intervention. The full design files and source code are open source, so any robotics lab in the world can start building one today.
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Krumlar
Krumlar@CryptoKrum·
In a world of AI slop, we crave authenticity
Anish Moonka@AnishA_Moonka

You're watching a $248 million film and not a single green or blue screen was used. The alien is a handmade puppet. The cockpit physically rotates to simulate gravity. I looked at the production tech behind this 95% score, and the engineering is wild. Phil Lord and Chris Miller, directing their first live-action movie in 12 years, built the entire Hail Mary spacecraft as a real set at Shepperton Studios in England. Not a miniature. Not a digital model. A full-size ship interior you can walk through. Production designer Charlie Wood studied the International Space Station, Russia's Mir station, and the Boeing 747 cockpit to get the look right. He deliberately made the panels mismatched, because real spacecraft are assembled from parts made by different companies. Nothing matches perfectly. That's what makes it feel real. The cockpit is only about 8 feet wide. It sits on a mechanical platform that can tilt, spin, and shake, so when the ship changes direction or enters different gravity conditions, the whole set moves. Chairs end up on walls. Ladders flip direction. Gosling was suspended inside a spinning ring so he could float and move through the ship for real, reacting to actual hardware around him. No guessing where a wall might be added later. Then there's Rocky. He's the alien co-lead, and he's not CGI. Neal Scanlan, the creature designer who built the Porgs for Star Wars, spent a full year on this character. Over 300 designs before they landed on the final look. Rocky is a thin, hollow shell, 3D-printed from a digital sculpture, then hand-painted in see-through layers so light passes through him like skin. His arms pop off and swap out depending on the scene: one set has a closed fist for walking, another has tiny motorized fingers strong enough to pick up objects. Five puppeteers (nicknamed the "Rockyteers") operated him in every scene. James Ortiz, an award-winning puppet designer from New York theater, voiced Rocky and controlled him on set. When Scanlan met him, he told Ortiz, "You're Frank Oz, and I'm making Yoda for you." Every reaction Gosling gives to the alien is to something physically in front of him. Greig Fraser, who won the Oscar for shooting Dune, filmed the space scenes in the larger IMAX format (that taller image you see in IMAX theaters) and the Earth flashbacks in regular widescreen. Then the team did something unusual: they took the digital footage and printed it onto real film strips, twice, using two different types of film stock. Then they scanned those strips back into digital. It sounds redundant, but it adds a texture and warmth that you can only get from physical film. Fraser used the same technique on Dune and The Batman. Drew Goddard spent six years writing this screenplay. His last adaptation of Andy Weir's novel, The Martian, earned him an Oscar nomination. He described the challenge this way: a screenplay gets about 5% of a novel's word count. The lead is alone for most of the runtime. When he finally gets a co-star, that co-star doesn't speak English, communicates through sounds closer to whale song, and has no face. Goddard called it a screenwriter's nightmare, then said that difficulty was the whole point. He and the directors fought studio pushback to keep Weir's original ending intact. 95% from 212 critics. 98% from over 2,500 audience ratings. And the lead isn't a superhero, a cop, or a soldier. He's just an ordinary middle school science teacher.

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HealthRanger
HealthRanger@HealthRanger·
I believe we are standing on the precipice of the most profound, intentional collapse of human civilization in recorded history. The trigger isn’t a meteor, a supervolcano, or even a world war in the traditional sense. It’s the potential destruction of a single industrial facility: the Ras Laffan liquefied natural gas (LNG) complex in Qatar. Modern civilization doesn’t just run on energy; it is fundamentally architected on a steady, massive flow of natural gas, supercooled and shipped as LNG. This isn’t an abstraction. Our global food supply, our industrial chemical production, and the very stability of nations are tethered to this flow. That tether is frighteningly thin. Qatar's Ras Laffan is the heart of this system, a nexus of technology and geography that is effectively irreplaceable. Its 14 processing 'trains' and the critical Main Cryogenic Heat Exchangers (MCHEs) that chill gas to -260°F are marvels of engineering, but they represent a catastrophic single point of failure. As noted in energy literature, the specialized machinery for this process is made by only one or a handful of companies globally. This infrastructure isn't just important; it is singular. Its loss would not be a temporary market disruption. It would be a decade-long severing of the global energy artery. The recent, deliberate sabotage of critical infrastructure like the Nord Stream pipelines has shown us that such attacks are not theoretical. They are tools of geopolitical warfare. When you understand that over half the world's food depends on fertilizer made from natural gas, the picture becomes horrifyingly clear. We have built a world of astonishing abundance on a foundation of shocking fragility. One facility, in one volatile region, now holds the key to whether billions eat or starve. Two of QatarEnergy's 14 LNG trains have now been destroyed. The rebuild time is 3-5 years. If all 14 trains are destroyed, 25% - 50% of the world's current population will starve. Trump did this.
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FinancialJuice
FinancialJuice@financialjuice·
QatarEnergy CEO: We may have to declare force majeure on long-term contracts for up to five years for LNG supplies to Italy, Belgium, Korea, and China.
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NEXT
NEXT@NEXT_HD24·
Speaking about the deep contradictions in human nature, Japanese actor Hiroyuki Sanada said: “Some people dream of having a swimming pool at home, while those who have one barely use it. Those who have lost a loved one feel a profound sense of loss, while others often complain about the relatives still in their lives. Those without a partner long for one, while those who have a partner often fail to appreciate them. The hungry would give anything for a meal, while the full complain about the taste of their food. Those without a car dream of owning one, while those who have a car are always looking for a better one. The key to happiness is gratitude—to truly see and value what we already have, and to understand that somewhere, someone would give everything for what we take for granted.”
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Klara
Klara@klara_sjo·
In this video you shall become acquainted with ancient Japanese fart art. Please enjoy.
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ℏεsam
ℏεsam@Hesamation·
bro created a skill inspired by Karpathy's autoresearch to fine-tune his other Claude Code skills and iteratively make them better. one skill went from 56% → 92% in just 4 rounds of changes. the method is to define a set of tests for your skills: what to improve. then it changes the skill slightly to see if there's an improvement or not.
Ole Lehmann@itsolelehmann

x.com/i/article/2033…

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Todd Saunders
Todd Saunders@toddsaunders·
I know Silicon Valley startups don't want to hear this..... But the combination of someone in the trades with deep domain expertise and Claude Code will run circles around your generic software. I talked to Cory LaChance this morning, a mechanical engineer in industrial piping construction in Houston. He normally works with chemical plants and refineries, but now he also works with the terminal He reached out in a DM a few days ago and I was so fired up by his story, I asked him if we could record the conversation and share it. He built a full application that industrial contractors are using every day. It reads piping isometric drawings and automatically extracts every weld count, every material spec, every commodity code. Work that took 10 minutes per drawing now takes 60 seconds. It can do 100 drawings in five minutes, saving days of time. His co-workers are all mind blown, and when he talks to them, it's like they are speaking different languages. His fabrication shop uses it daily, and he built the entire thing in 8 weeks. During those 8 weeks he also had to learn everything about Claude Code, the terminal, VS Code, everything. My favorite quote from him was when he said, "I literally did this with zero outside help other than the AI. My favorite tools are screenshots, step by step instructions and asking Claude to explain things like I'm five." Every trades worker with deep expertise and a willingness to sit down with Claude Code for a few weekends is now a potential software founder. I can't wait to meet more people like Cory.
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exQUIZitely 🕹️
exQUIZitely 🕹️@exQUIZitely·
One of gaming history's most influential and badass studios turned 35 this year: id Software, founded im 1991 by John Carmack, John Romero, Tom Hall, and Adrian Carmack. Thanks for making the 90s so freaking memorable! I don't think their place in the Olympus of FPS games can be questioned by anyone. Opening the gates to a whole new world!
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