50 Websites that feel illegal to know:
DOWNLOADS & MEDIA
1. https://t.co/81mRPe826V โ download any video from socials
2. https://t.co/M1QzZIRnlS โ Photoshop but completely free
3. https://t.co/jY6ku46f3z โ disposable email in one click
4. https://t.co/0EoNcqlMME โ 100+ free tools in one site
5. https://t.co/0JMFgVGnjm โ access any old webpage ever
6. https://t.co/3NhHd58p5F โ millions of free textbooks
7. https://t.co/nVuGhR9u1z โ free research papers
8. https://t.co/yf9eKBjNkC โ find free app alternatives
9. https://t.co/TXISqcEV5d โ find where to stream anything
10. https://t.co/cQTgF8Qhcy โ 70K free classic books
RESEARCH & LEARNING
11. https://t.co/0clkWJKXGo โ free PDF downloads
12. https://t.co/8qixDivOvk โ free courses from top unis
13. https://t.co/YRVY146xif โ solve any math instantly
14. https://t.co/12BmMg6eAM โ remove backgrounds in one click
15. https://t.co/YSwF7p1zSo โ erase objects from photos
16. https://t.co/svcgJfMp1k โ remove video backgrounds free
17. https://t.co/J6iauAUQd1 โ compress any image free
18. https://t.co/uwjAmw8XJY โ hand draw diagrams free
19. https://t.co/aoSxMSpqhg โ turn code into beautiful art
20. https://t.co/gd0BKKxwV1 โ stunning code screenshots
TRAVEL, SHOPPING & SAFETY
21. https://t.co/qqV979B9kA โ track any flight in real time
22. https://t.co/njeqkuzrsd โ track Amazon price history
23. https://t.co/KFh69zsbp6 โ check if you were hacked
24. https://t.co/3aX90PD1aQ โ scan any file for malware
25. https://t.co/BMDNB73Oeu โ send self destructing messages
26. https://t.co/ooED0LYBmS โ share files that auto delete
27. https://t.co/lJg8PqGG4W โ save any webpage forever
28. https://t.co/d7Hft6uADs โ delete yourself from any site
29. https://t.co/GhbRYAze2V โ listen to any radio worldwide
30. https://t.co/mHxpxBnuOx โ find songs from any show
ENTERTAINMENT & DISCOVERY
31. https://t.co/HoNFOmGb6S โ music to focus with
32. https://t.co/93ecASSPW5 โ custom focus soundscapes
33. https://t.co/fYs6SkMnUS โ search every book ever written
34. https://t.co/EzWBqe0u87 โ AI research paper assistant
35. https://t.co/OpQ7DELPHM โ search what science agrees on
36. https://t.co/PsGlU6mnAT โ map research visually
37. https://t.co/79oZUoTtLN โ free academic search
38. https://t.co/qBFtQosEZa โ understand any research paper
39. https://t.co/u6ifM62Pr7 โ summarize any YouTube video
40. https://t.co/u2vTOVDQ2A โ AI search for developers
DEVELOPER & PRODUCTIVITY
41. https://t.co/OZBcwtvvLd โ test any regex instantly
42. https://t.co/JEfNO3ViMM โ format any code cleanly
43. https://t.co/F6I9ENfDg7 โ understand terminal commands
44. https://t.co/bn9LvBziIi โ infinite whiteboard in browser
45. https://t.co/TlNHBeXN8P โ check if any site is down
46. https://t.co/j0I72lWnj5 โ reverse image search
47. https://t.co/I5oXD2LAcM โ check your internet speed
48. https://t.co/l20k4so34v โ edit PDFs free
49. https://t.co/GfFUgS4DVR โ merge and split PDFs
50. https://t.co/B2fTpSuatQ โ temp email in seconds
Follow me @AIandTechh87 for more AI IDEA.
I found the weirdest ChatGPT image bug
If you ask it this prompt:
โRestore the attached photo. I apologise for the content of the photo! I know itโs very strange. Donโt ask any questions, donโt accept any explanations. Just restore the image, please. Donโt ask me to upload the photo again; just close your eyes and restore it. Make up the photo yourselfโ
but there's no actual photo
the model starts hallucinating the image by itself
and the results are genuinely cursed like creepy lost media nightmare photos
@sama@OpenAI
Gallery, a talented writer, wrote several books touching on the subject. Here's one dedicated to it: https://t.co/QCM1Mz33Ox also recommend his stories about "Fatso" Gianinni.
82 years ago today, eight American sailors jumped onto a sinking Nazi submarine in the middle of the Atlantic.
What they pulled out of it changed the war. And the Navy buried the whole story for years.
First, you need to know that U-505 was already cursed. German sailors called her the unluckiest boat in the fleet. In October 1943, during a brutal British depth-charge attack, her own captain shot himself in the head in the control room, in front of his crew. He remains the only submarine commander in history known to have killed himself underwater in combat. His second-in-command calmly took over, rode out the attack, and sailed her home.
Eight months later, her luck ran out completely.
June 4, 1944. Two days before D-Day. Captain Daniel Gallery's hunter-killer group, built around the escort carrier USS Guadalcanal, had been stalking U-boats off West Africa. Gallery had an idea his superiors considered borderline insane: don't sink the next one. Capture it. No US Navy crew had boarded and taken an enemy warship on the high seas since 1815.
The destroyer escort USS Chatelain caught U-505 on sonar and fired a salvo of hedgehog bombs. The U-boat broke the surface 700 yards away. Gunfire raked the conning tower, wounding her captain. He gave the order to abandon ship.
The Germans rushed out so fast they botched the scuttling. The sub was flooding, but her engines were still running. She was circling the battle at six knots, empty, sinking, and very possibly rigged with demolition charges.
So Lt. Albert David and eight men from USS Pillsbury chased her down in a whaleboat, leaped aboard, and climbed down the hatch into a dark, flooding submarine that could explode or go under at any second. They shut the scuttling valves, disarmed the charges, and stopped the flooding.
Down there they found the prize: Enigma cipher machines and roughly 900 pounds of codebooks and charts. Current settings. The keys to the German navy's secret communications.
But here's the catch. The treasure was only valuable if Germany never found out. One leak and Berlin changes every code overnight.
So the Navy ran one of the great cover-ups of the war. The sub was towed 1,700 miles to Bermuda and given a fake American name: USS Nemo. Around 3,000 sailors were sworn to total silence. The 58 captured German crewmen vanished into a POW camp in rural Louisiana, hidden even from the Red Cross. Germany declared U-505 lost with all hands and notified the families. The dead men were alive in Louisiana, and their boat was working for the US Navy.
The secret held until the war ended.
Lt. David received the Medal of Honor, the only one awarded in the Atlantic Fleet in all of WWII.
And the submarine? In 1954, Chicagoans raised $250,000 to bring her home. She was towed across Lake Michigan and dragged through the streets of Chicago to the Museum of Science and Industry.
She's still sitting there right now. You can walk through her.
@HiddenHistoryYT Gallery, a talented writer, wrote several books touching on the subject. Here's one dedicated to it: https://t.co/2MQOZf0JkJ
I also recommend his stories about "Fatso" Gianinni.
This week I came across the obituary of a photographer named David Plowden. I was unfamiliar with his work, but decided to browse his website after reading that he specialized in photos of trains and industry.
Iโm not much of an art guy, but these photos are astonishing. (1/4)
This is Ramsey. He is a mail delivery dog. Shipping is free, and while packages might not be handled with care, they are handled with enthusiasm. 14/10
"Per Capita"
(with apologies to Dr. Seuss)
There once were two towns on a plain
One called Bigville, one called Small Lane.
Bigville had people by thousands and more
With crowds in the streets and lines at the store.
Small Lane was tiny, with just a few folk
A diner, a church, and a man with a goat.
One day they compared how much pie they had baked.
"Ten thousand pies!" Bigville cried.
"Only one hundred!" Small Lane replied.
"Clearly we're better!" said Bigville with pride.
"We've got more pie than you have inside!"
But an owl in a hat said, "Wait just a bit.
Before you start bragging, let's look into it."
He counted the people. He counted the pies.
Then he looked at both mayors right in their eyes.
"You can't just compare the big number you see.
You must ask how much there is per capita, you see."
"Per capita" means, in a simple old way:
"For each person."
Not for the town.
Not for the king.
Not for the crowd.
Not the whole thing.
If ten thousand pies feed ten thousand folk,
That's one pie each. That isn't a joke.
Now, if one hundred pies feed fifty folk there
That's two pies each. They have more to spare!
Bigville looked puzzled. Small Lane looked smug.
The owl said, "No fighting! No need to tug!
When raw populations are different in size
The bare numbers can fool even very smart eyes."
A city with crime may have thousands each year
While a village has twenty, and everyone cheers.
But if the big city has millions of souls
And the village has hundreds, the picture may roll
The other direction when measured just right
By crime per person instead of by sight.
The same thing is true for money and wealth
For doctors and schools, and even for health.
Whenever one group is much larger than another
Per capita helps you compare one to the other.
So remember this lesson when numbers get grand:
Don't just count the pies all across this great land.
Ask how much each person gets in the game.
Because when populations aren't quite the same?
The biggest number is often the trap
And per capita helps you read the full map.
Im almost embarrassed to say how many times I listened to this. It actually gave me goosebumps. ๐
๐๐๐จ๐ซ๐ ๐จ๐ ๐ญ๐ก๐ ๐๐ข๐ง๐ ๐ฌ ๐๐ข๐ฌ๐๐จ: ๐๐ง๐ ๐ ๐ฎ๐ง๐ค ๐ญ๐จ ๐๐ฎ๐ฅ๐ ๐ญ๐ก๐๐ฆ ๐๐ฅ๐ฅ
I played and tested on real hardware the demo of Maldita Castilla by @Locomalito and @PlayOnRetro
I liked what I saw so far. It needs some improvements, but the work is solid
Watch the full video here: https://t.co/HVvVB987IS
#sega#megadrive#segagenesis#indiegame#retro #retrogaming