SomePeopleCallMeTheSpaceCowboy
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SomePeopleCallMeTheSpaceCowboy
@TeslaForThe_Win
Trying my hardest to be *part of the solution* and not part of *the problem*! 🤠 👍
Minnesota / USA 🇺🇸 Tham gia Kasım 2018
3.1K Đang theo dõi3.6K Người theo dõi
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I got to sit inside the Tesla Semi, and man, was it cool.
It honestly felt like any other Tesla, but in a good way: same displays, UI, switchgear, etc. It’s not intimidating at all. The visibility out the front is absolutely incredible. I can see why many truckers are loving this thing.
The crazy part is, I think anyone can get into this truck and drive it with no problem, it’s that easy. The seat is also so comfortable, it has its own suspension built in, so it feels like you’re just floating. Awesome experience.

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This Tesla Semi Frito-Lay truck is sitting at the industrial gate fully loaded with a massive trailer when it just takes off smooth and strong like it weighs nothing...
The driver sits calm in the cab as the bright yellow and red cab pulls forward, turns sharp onto the road, and the whole Cheetos-wrapped trailer follows with zero strain while the fence and warehouse slide past.
Electric trucks like this look futuristic and efficient hauling heavy loads without breaking a sweat, but now you’re watching one accelerate right in front of you
Do you get excited about the future of clean trucking and cheer how quiet and powerful it is, or worry that these heavy battery rigs are going to tear up roads, bridges, and infrastructure faster than anyone admits?
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Starship static fire successful!
SpaceX@SpaceX
Full-duration static fire for the first time on Starship V3
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Born in 1968, Tracey showed an early genius for computers. By age 13 he was already working at ComputerLand in Los Altos. At 14 he launched Superior Software, creating custom programs for local businesses. He quickly mastered multiple programming languages and was invited to join the Atari Youth Advisory Board, a national group of 20 of the most promising young minds in computing. He was also featured in the book Computer Kids by George Sullivan.
His peers and friends, including future CBS journalist John Dickerson, recognized his talent early. “Tracey was a legit programmer,” Dickerson recalled. His circle of close friends at school, nicknamed “The Brain Trust,” saw him as both brilliant and down-to-earth, a regular kid who happened to be decades ahead of his time.
Tracey’s future looked bright. With national attention and hopes of attending MIT or Stanford, he seemed destined for greatness. But life took a turn. At 16, Tracey had a seizure while driving. The diagnosis was grim: a brain tumor.
In his final months, he received an unexpected visitor, Steve Jobs. Then head of NeXT, Jobs had heard of the young programmer and spent time with Tracey, even taking him and his brother on a private tour of the NeXT factory. “There was no fanfare. He just cared,” his brother recalled.
Despite efforts to save him, Tracey’s condition worsened. He was accepted into Stanford but never made it to campus. He passed away shortly after turning 18, in 1986.
🎥: NBC / Kay Savetz
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@niccruzpatane here is your distributed ignition source. Or one of them. x.com/ThermalRunaway…
ThermalRunaway@ThermalRunawayX
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@niccruzpatane Shows this to anyone claiming BEVs can't handle heavy logistics. Diesel is obsolete when agility like this exists.
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