"If you know how quickly people forget the dead, you will stop living to impress people."
I attended a funeral recently.
The body was there.
The family was grieving.
But something else caught my attention.
#LifeLessons#RealityCheck#Wisdom
Read:
https://t.co/8HDi2gjUKs
sometimes i log onto this app and see people so deeply affected by their victim mentality and having a hero complex its amazing and baffling at the same time
In my column I argue that there is essentially no difference between Islamic and conventional banking. Both charge you fixed interest without risk-sharing. Arabic names for loan products doesn’t make you Islamic. https://t.co/2TjpM0k2UG
People with high standards are very skilled at detachment and cut people off at the slightest sign of disrespect. they don’t tolerate disrespect even as a joke.
I just give people terrible advice and watch what happens. Think of it as a controlled scientific experiment where I get all the wisdom and they get all the character development.
10/10 highly recommend. (But please, don't take my word for it.)
The #Australian Government has today imposed counter-terrorism financing sanctions on the Balochistan Liberation Army and three senior leaders, for their engagement in and support of terrorist attacks.
Source:
https://t.co/HoK2ekI1j9
Pakistan's PRSC-EO3: an unusual orbit for an optical satellite
Radar tracking via @LeoLabs. Processed via COMSPOC SSA.
PRSC-EO3 (visualized in cyan) launched April 25, 2026 on a Long March 6. It's an optical imager — but its orbit is curious.
Most optical LEO satellites use sun-synchronous orbits (~97-105° inclination), which provide consistent lighting for imaging. PRSC-EO3 is in a 38° inclined orbit instead. This sacrifices global coverage and consistent lighting, but increases revisit rates over a specific latitude band: 20-40°N. That's India, Kashmir, and Pakistan.
Now consider PRSC-S1 (visualized in pink), Pakistan's SAR satellite launched July 2025, sitting in a 41° orbit. Similar inclination, similar altitude — but their RAANs are ~175° out of phase. When one passes over South Asia in daylight, the other passes in darkness.
SAR works day and night. Optical needs sunlight. The geometry appears to allow complementary coverage.
We ran the access analysis [Image 1]. The SAR sensor (unconstrained) and optical sensor (daytime-constrained) together provide repeatable revisit across day and night. The gaps left by one are filled by the other.
Then there's PRSC-HS1 — a hyperspectral satellite in SSO [Image 2], capable of detecting camouflage and identifying materials from orbit.
Optical shows you the picture. SAR shows you the picture at night and through weather. Hyperspectral tells you what you're looking at.
Five remote sensing satellites in 16 months [Image 2]. All launched by China. All with orbits favoring South Asian coverage. The stated missions are civilian. The orbital architecture appears consistent with a multi-modal ISR constellation.
@shell_jim , @planet4589, @joroulette, @SpaceNews_Inc , @IntegrityISR
#Pakistan #Space #SAR #ISR #PRSC