Elon Musk is playing a long game most people don’t think about.
The idea lines up with the Kardashev scale. Not just improving life on Earth, but increasing how much energy humanity can use and control over time.
Tesla, SpaceX and Starlink all fit into that direction. Energy, transport and connectivity are the foundation layers if you’re thinking beyond a single planet.
It sounds far off, but the early pieces are already in motion.
Today we're introducing the world's first AI CMO.
Enter your website and it deploys a team of agents to help you get traffic and users.
Try it now at https://t.co/KbAE6FNgzE
The lobster has molted into its final form 🦞
Clawd → Moltbot → OpenClaw
100k+ GitHub stars. 2M visitors in a week.
And finally, a name that'll stick.
Your assistant. Your machine. Your rules.
https://t.co/d39LXKRE9h
“The Pyrenees” (1875) by Narcisse Virgilio Díaz de la Peña captures a lone rider crossing a stream beneath vast skies and towering trees. Balancing grandeur and intimacy, the scene turns nature into a living, breathing presence—quiet, majestic, eternal. 🏞️
🎨 PRISMATIC POLYGON PORTRAIT 🎨
Prompt :
A Prismatic Polygon Portrait of [SUBJECT] in Low Poly Art, where facial features are composed of vibrant, multifaceted shapes. Utilize a spectrum of [COLOR1] and [COLOR2] hues to create a striking interplay of light and shadow across the angular surfaces
Check ALTS
“Antibes” (1888) by Henri Biva captures the Riviera’s fortified walls against the calm Mediterranean and distant Alps. With delicate color and crystalline light, Biva transforms a coastal view into a serene postcard of the Côte d’Azur. 🌊
“Portrait of Mademoiselle Irène Cahen d’Anvers” (1880) by Pierre-Auguste Renoir shows the young Irène with radiant red hair and a pensive gaze. Commissioned by her banker father, the portrait became one of Renoir’s most famous—and later endured a turbulent history during WWII. 🎨
“Butterflies” (1895) by Charles Edward Perugini captures a young girl gazing at a bowl as butterflies hover and take flight. Blending innocence with dreamlike wonder, the painting reflects the Victorian fascination with fleeting beauty and reverie. 🦋
Homer captured modern leisure at a time when croquet was wildly popular, especially among women, as one of the first outdoor sports considered socially acceptable for them.
“A Game of Croquet” (1873) by Winslow Homer captures a new leisure craze of the 19th century. Once novel for women to play outdoors, croquet became a symbol of elegance and social change. Homer sets the scene with poise, play, and even a dog as spectator. 🎐
“The Birth of Venus” (1879) by William-Adolphe Bouguereau reimagines the goddess with Academic precision and sensual grace. Surrounded by nymphs, tritons, and cupids, she rises on a shell—her luminous form embodying 19th-century ideals of divine beauty. 🐚