rb3m at prehistoric elephant dot online

10.5K posts

rb3m at prehistoric elephant dot online banner
rb3m at prehistoric elephant dot online

rb3m at prehistoric elephant dot online

@rb3m

I like playing around with php and WordPress. I like all animals, except maybe roaches, though I don't hate them.

Querétaro Arteaga, México เข้าร่วม Aralık 2006
153 กำลังติดตาม288 ผู้ติดตาม
1926 Live
1926 Live@100YearsAgoLive·
A permanent armed military guard is posted at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier for the first time.
1926 Live tweet media
English
2
47
848
15.9K
rb3m at prehistoric elephant dot online
@25YearsAgoLive It’s fine. I didn’t even notice it was sponsored. Some people will always react negatively to any kind of sponsorship but the reality of the situation is that maintaining this kind of accounts is not free, and very few are willing to pay for it.
English
0
0
0
112
2001 Live
2001 Live@25YearsAgoLive·
[Fourth-Wall Break] I want to sit down with you all and seriously address something that happened today: I posted a piece of sponsored content and the backlash was overwhelmingly severe and extreme. I lost hundreds of followers and my replies and DMs were filled with accusations of being a “sellout,” a “grifter,” a “scammer,” and a “Jew.” I want to introduce myself and my case a little bit. I have worked on this project for several years, and each and every week I put 20-30 hours of work into this project. I make almost nothing - from X revenue sharing, I can usually expect less than $100/month, and from Patreon, another $75. I’m really passionate about this project and I want to continue it as a hobby while balancing my real job and my real life, but that’s difficult when I’m bringing in almost nothing from it, so that’s why I decided to run ads. Many creators on YouTube thank their sponsors. They spend many minutes of video time doing so. Many Instagram posts are devoted wholly to sponsored content. But when a post of mine on X featured sponsored content, many of you felt that was intolerable and lashed out in extreme ways. A concern some of you expressed in DMs was that posting sponsored content is a “slippery slope” that inevitably leads to “selling the account” or “making every post sponsored.” I want to reassure you all that this account is my life’s passion and I will continue doing it until the day I die. But I have to make a living as well. I have run sponsored content in the past; I am running sponsored content in the present. I am not sure why that act merits anger, if it’s only one post a day and it’s one reply that you can disregard easily. I make sure that the companies with whom I partner are ethical, and are doing it for the right reasons. I will never ever push a scam, crypto product, or meme coin on you. And today’s sponsor was none of those things, as much as many of you aggressively claimed that it was. Anyway, I welcome your feedback.
English
337
89
10.1K
476.3K
1976 Live
1976 Live@50YearsAgoLive·
A British Airways Concorde makes the first flight by a Concorde from the UK to the United States.
1976 Live tweet media
English
3
28
313
29.1K
2001 Live
2001 Live@25YearsAgoLive·
A Ghanaian youth, Aleobiga, dies after smearing a lotion all over himself that he believed would make him impervious to bullets, and then asking his friends to test it by shooting him.
2001 Live tweet media
English
143
245
5.6K
411.3K
2001 Live
2001 Live@25YearsAgoLive·
Sabiha Gökçen, pioneering Turkish aviatrix and adopted daughter of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk (in 1925), dies in Ankara. She was 88.
2001 Live tweet media2001 Live tweet media
Filipino
32
75
2.1K
149.8K
1976 Live
1976 Live@50YearsAgoLive·
Kidnap victim turned militant Patty Hearst is convicted of bank robbery and use of an illegal firearm during the commission of a felony. She is sentenced to 35 years in federal prison.
1976 Live tweet media
English
6
9
134
8K
1976 Live
1976 Live@50YearsAgoLive·
Sir Alec Guinness, who was expected to play “Obi Wan” on the new George Lucas film “The Star Wars,” almost quits. He calls the dialogue “rubbish,” but admits that “the bread [salary] is lovely.”
1976 Live tweet media
English
23
88
1.8K
41.4K
1976 Live
1976 Live@50YearsAgoLive·
Happy 50th birthday to liquid-fueled rocketry! Incredible that in the first half-century of this technology, we’ve managed to launch satellites and put dozens of men on the Moon. I’m optimistic for what the next 50 years will hold!
1976 Live tweet media1976 Live tweet media
1926 Live@100YearsAgoLive

American engineer Robert Goddard launches his invention, a “liquid-fueled rocket,” from a farm in Auburn, Massachusetts, for the first time. The rocket reaches an altitude of 41 feet (12.5m) and the flight lasts 2.5 seconds. Goddard dreams one day of launching rockets that can reach outer space.

English
10
44
496
16.3K
1926 Live
1926 Live@100YearsAgoLive·
American engineer Robert Goddard launches his invention, a “liquid-fueled rocket,” from a farm in Auburn, Massachusetts, for the first time. The rocket reaches an altitude of 41 feet (12.5m) and the flight lasts 2.5 seconds. Goddard dreams one day of launching rockets that can reach outer space.
1926 Live tweet media
English
32
126
1.2K
48.5K
Bob Golen
Bob Golen@BobGolen·
Did you know vending machines kill more people than sharks? Sharks rarely use vending machines.
English
7
10
104
2.4K
1926 Live
1926 Live@100YearsAgoLive·
The Belgian Franc collapses and there is a run on the banks.
1926 Live tweet media
English
9
25
534
14.5K
2001 Live
2001 Live@25YearsAgoLive·
A curious new restaurant, the Cure Maid Café, opens in Akihabara, Tokyo. In this café, waitresses dressed in French maid costumes treat their customers as masters, as if they were in a private home. Women’s rights groups denounce the practice as shameless fetishism.
2001 Live tweet media2001 Live tweet media
English
108
303
6.5K
461.3K
Scott Manley
Scott Manley@DJSnM·
Seeing ‘real programmers’ complain about only 8Gb of memory while I try to work with 8kb of memory on this device. (Please don’t use the wiring as reference I can’t remember which photo showed the working version)
Scott Manley tweet media
English
56
11
608
28.1K
Scott Manley
Scott Manley@DJSnM·
Of course they’re not getting my phone number for a chance to win a $25 gift card
English
5
0
64
12.3K
Scott Manley
Scott Manley@DJSnM·
I had to get up at 3:30 to get to the airport but car trivia just demanded my attention
Scott Manley tweet mediaScott Manley tweet media
English
2
1
100
16.7K
1926 Live
1926 Live@100YearsAgoLive·
Denmark begins a unilateral disarmament in the interest of pursuing a lasting peace.
1926 Live tweet media1926 Live tweet media
English
15
9
300
19.4K
2001 Live
2001 Live@25YearsAgoLive·
The spacewalk endurance record is set when American astronauts James Voss and Susan Helms spend eight hours and 56 minutes outside the space shuttle Discovery during a mission to the International Space Station.
2001 Live tweet media2001 Live tweet media2001 Live tweet media
English
3
7
262
16.5K
Bob Golen
Bob Golen@BobGolen·
Is there no limit to their treachery
Bob Golen tweet media
English
1.1K
2.1K
16.6K
326.1K
rb3m at prehistoric elephant dot online
@Raeyyne @Math_files This is actually a very good observation on your part. But Cavendish was aware of it and designed the experiment so that the pull of Earth would be countered and only the pull of the balls affected the twist of the wire. In this way he measured the mass, not the weight.
English
1
0
1
26
Tracey Barru-BloodRayne
Tracey Barru-BloodRayne@Raeyyne·
@Math_files I think this does not determine the weight of the earth instead it determines the weight of 2 lead balls and 2 rods in an atmosphere under the influence of magnetic attraction and gravitational pull!
English
5
0
1
141
Math Files
Math Files@Math_files·
In 1798, a scientist effectively “weighed” the Earth — without leaving his laboratory. The English scientist Henry Cavendish designed an incredibly sensitive experiment. Inside a quiet wooden shed, he hung a horizontal rod from a very thin wire. Two small lead spheres were attached to the ends of the rod. Nearby, he placed two much larger lead balls. Because of gravity, the large spheres slightly pulled the smaller ones. The force was extremely tiny — so small that the rod twisted by only a minute fraction of a degree. Yet that tiny twist held a big secret. By carefully measuring this small movement, Cavendish determined the strength of the gravitational attraction between objects. From this, scientists could calculate the mass of the entire Earth. His estimate was remarkably close. Cavendish calculated Earth’s mass to be about 6 × 10²⁴ kilograms, while modern measurements give 5.97 × 10²⁴ kilograms. Sometimes the biggest discoveries come from measuring the smallest forces.
Math Files tweet media
English
1.1K
3.5K
30.7K
30.7M