

It’s beginning to feel a lot like c o n c e n t r a t i o n


It’s beginning to feel a lot like c o n c e n t r a t i o n


Orbital mirrors, sure… definitely not a weapon for burning stuff with sunlight from space!


Good post but wrong comm. Maybe repost in world news?


Bro did the math


What makes you say so? This was not clear to me. There is at least a good degree of human editing involved


At the end of the day I don’t trust Google, OpenAI, Anthropic, etc. to tell a person what they need to hear if the company can make $1 by telling them something else


And since you know the future Mr Ding Dong, what consequences will they definitely have?


It’s problematic imho bc the “advice” is often incomplete, without context, or wrong. So you end up having to verify it yourself anyway. But if you don’t then you could have harmful advice.
Good pic and decent fit, perhaps a bit uninspired since the fit seems to be 90% FOTU brand. I would like to see a bit more personality. More punk in the cyberpunk pls


Frozen juice concentrate?
Ty for this

Me after tripping


Seems dumb as heck
I had a nice little walk today
Why do you need to learn ffmpeg


By the 1950s, virtually all streetcar companies were in terrible shape. Some were taken over by new municipal bus companies, while a total of 46 transit networks were bought up by National City Lines — the holding company linked to GM, as well as oil and tire companies, that’s at the center of all the conspiracy theories.
While it’s true that National City continued ripping up lines and replacing them with buses — and that, long-term, GM benefited from the decline of mass transit — it’s very hard to argue that National City killed the streetcar on its own. Streetcar systems went bankrupt and were dismantled in virtually every metro area in the United States, and National City was only involved in about 10 percentof cases.
So, there is merit to this claim that auto manufacturers were involved. Interesting to read about the financial history as well… pre-1920s bankruptcies… does feel like a failure of government to see the value here. Interesting read, ty!
One of my favorites, I share it every chance I get