To @elonmusk . Your algorithm on here is screwed. I follow people for a reason yet the algorithm shows me what it thinks I want to see. I want to see sports and I want to see politics from both sides. The algorithm has decided I am not interested in that.
@libaanstar1@JustEsBaraheni I see Libman was constantly tweeting about this yet I saw nothing. At one point in time if you followed someone you saw their posts now it's just a stupid algorithm. Maybe that's why I go.on X less and less.
And they do it! Canada takes down the US in the FIBA U18 World Cup finals 67-65!!!
Javion Tyndale: 19 PTS, 8 AST, 3 REB
Deng Ngor: 15 PTS, 2 REB, 3 STL
Lyris Robinson: 10 PTS, 4 REB, 2 AST
Monumental win for the Canadians giving the US their first AmeriCup loss since 2008
Mayor @OliviaChow is a lot of things, but scalper and profiteer taking advantage of Canadians is not something I thought sheโd do, never mind try to defend the indefensible.
Torontonians should remember this at the ballot box in October.
Nashville Zoo is asking the public to help stop an AI data center from being built next door.
One of America's biggest zoos has launched a campaign against a proposed 69,000-square-foot data center that would sit next to habitats housing endangered species, including vulnerable clouded leopards.
Zoo officials fear the facility's constant noise, artificial lighting, and electrical hum could disrupt animal behavior and breeding programs that have taken years to establish.
The dispute highlights a growing side effect of the AI boom.
As artificial intelligence systems become more powerful, companies are racing to build new data centers to provide the computing power they require. These facilities consume enormous amounts of electricity and often operate around the clock.
Across the United States, communities have increasingly pushed back against new data centers over concerns about energy use, water consumption, noise pollution, and environmental impacts.
Now wildlife conservation groups are joining that resistance.
The Nashville Zoo, which houses more than 3,700 animals representing over 350 species, says the project could threaten one of the most important collections of rare animals in the country.
More than 180,000 people have already signed a petition opposing the development.
The company behind the project says it will use waterless cooling systems, meet noise requirements, and comply with environmental regulations.
But for zoo officials, the location remains the problem.
The battle reflects a growing challenge facing the AI age: how to expand the digital infrastructure powering artificial intelligence without creating new pressures on communities, ecosystems, and wildlife.
https://t.co/GdrsNtLz6E
https://t.co/30cohJlJRp
60,000 strong in the face of hate.
๐ช๐จ๐ฆ๐ฎ๐ฑ
When your government doesnโt stand with you, your voice gets louder.
Thank you to all of those who kept us safe today and every ally who showed up to be counted, โ๏ธ
For two decades, Vladimir Putin managed to trick the world into believing he was a master geopolitical chess player.
The catastrophic invasion of Ukraine has permanently shattered that illusion, exposing him as one of the most wildly overestimated strategists in modern history.
Putin's long streak of international โsuccessesโ was never a product of strategic brilliance. Instead, his โvictoriesโ happened simply because he was willing to break international rules and push further than his targets expected. Many of his opponents mistakenly believed that appeasement would preserve stability, which only encouraged his aggressive behavior for years.
The moment someone finally stood up to him, the entire facade came crashing down. Ukraine refused to capitulate, and the Kremlin's supposedly unstoppable military machine failed pathetically. Putin completely miscalculated the resolve of Ukrainian people and the unity of the West, proving that his earlier triumphs were just the result of bullying weak and hesitant adversaries.
By overstretching his forces in this reckless war, he has effectively ruined the economic potential and future of Russia. His legacy is now defined by a bleeding military, crippling sanctions, and absolute isolation from the developed world. It is a pathetic end for a ruler who genuinely believed his own propaganda