@RepWPH@elonmusk So much garbage from both sides of the political spectrum. We need a party that caters to normal people so we can vote the two extremes out of office.
Maja Chwalinska has changed her life at this year’s Roland Garros.
Her total career earnings before Roland Garros:
$864,030.
What she’s earned at this tournament:
$1,624,000.
Because the players don’t get the money til after the tournament, she was worried she wouldn’t be able to cover her costs for a hotel as she went further and further in the draw.
Polish company OSHEE had to step in and pay for the rest of her hotel fees.
It’s nothing short of heartwarming to see this happening to such a humble person who has overcome her share of struggles.
She overcame a battle with depression and stopped playing tennis entirely for a period to take care of her mental health.
She wasn’t sure if she’d ever come back to this sport.
Absolutely unreal story. 🥹
🇵🇱❤️
Legendary former Alabama football coach Nick Saban issues a stark warning on the devastating trajectory of college sports under current NIL rules.
"It's become an arms race, who spends the most has got the best chance to win.”
“But I think it's a race to the bottom because if you don't spend to win, you lose your fan base and you don't have any revenue."
🚨 SCIENTISTS JUST INVENTED A WAY TO PRINT CIRCUIT BOARDS WITH LIQUID METAL AND IT LOOKS LIKE SOMETHING OUT OF TERMINATOR.
A startup called Itera has developed a system that can create working PCB prototypes in minutes instead of weeks.
You upload your design, and electric fields force a liquid metal alloy into the exact shape of the traces on a glass substrate. The board is then tested and ready almost instantly.
Why this matters:
• Traditional PCB prototyping can take days or even weeks this could reduce it to minutes
• It uses liquid metal instead of etched copper, making it potentially much faster and more flexible for rapid iteration
• Backed by $12 million in funding, the company is already focusing on single-layer boards with surface-mount components
• The process looks genuinely futuristic glowing rivers of metal flowing into place on command
The deeper implication is enormous:
We may be watching the beginning of a completely new era of hardware development.
Instead of waiting days for a prototype, engineers and makers could design, test, and iterate multiple versions in a single afternoon. This could dramatically speed up innovation in electronics, robotics, AI hardware, and even consumer devices.
What happens when making a new circuit board becomes as fast and easy as printing a document?
Follow for more frontier physics and future technology.