Phones have crowded out all these kinds of gadgets; pocketable clamshells with keyboards are essentially extinct! An updated SL-C3200 with newer OS and wireless would be ππ (still the best size, form factor, utility, etc.)
@Tesla Another month has passed (and four months overall!) and still π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦π¦ @Tesla
1/2 Thought I'd get a quote for @Tesla Powerwall. Found an approved installer and scheduled a visit for the following week via their web site. Received this text...
Another month has passed (and three months overall!) and still π¦π¦π¦
Hey @Tesla "the nation's #1 Tesla-certified installer" apparently is not interested in selling your product!
Larry Johnson argues that Trump having been quiet the last few days is due to having received this threat. This assumes that President Trump could actually keep quiet rather than trumpeting that he was right all along! This seems rather... π’π§ππ¨π§πππ’π―πππ₯π!
Air conditioning has been turned off throughout the entire building of the European Commission due to extreme heat, except on the 13th floor, where Ursula von der Leyen's office is located, reports Politico
Holy Sh*t: that changes the whole Fable 5 story completely:
On June 11, the very same day Amazon reportedly uncovered the jailbreak, βMythosβ allegedly breached almost all classified systems belonging to the NSA and U.S. Cyber Command, not over the course of weeks, but within hours.
"On June 11th Mark Warner, the vice-chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said that General Joshua Rudd, who leads the National Security Agency and the Pentagonβs Cyber Command, had told him that Mythos βbroke into almost all of our classified systems, not in weeks, but in hoursβ."
Via Economist
You said "A green card holder commits a serious felony. Even then, they are not deportable..."
This is just wrong, "aggravated (not serious) felony" is grounds for deportation, does not need to be a CIMT!
P.S. Not arguing *this* case, just your statement...
Four perspectives. One question.
How close are we to solving aging?
I joined @aubreydegrey , @BKennedy_aging , and Johannes Weiss on the Beyond Tomorrow podcast with @juliankissa for a wide-ranging discussion on what the science actually saysβand where the field is getting ahead of the evidence.
https://t.co/fJ5kVAlbpW
We covered:
β’ Why I think we're not close to "solving aging"
β’ Why rapamycin still has the strongest evidence base
β’ The peptide hype cycle (and the real safety concerns)
β’ Longevity clinics: what's evidence-based vs. what's marketing
β’ Biological age tests, reprogramming, NAD, GLP-1s, and more
If you're interested in separating signal from noise in longevity science, I think you'll enjoy this conversation.
Entirely correct. It's quite amazing how many people seem to believe the U.S. can just change the rules and add conditions now, when none of those items could be achieved militarily in the first place!
Right now, there is significant debate taking place in the public sphere as to whether or not the United States should add an escrow account mechanism to General License X, which unsanctioned Iranian oil and petrochemical sales. This, if implemented, would allow the United States to have complete control over the funds from these sales. That's good, right?
Let me break down in the most SIMPLE manner why it's utterly insane.
Put quite simply, this would make zero sense whatsoever for Iran to agree to. It would be actively DETRIMENTAL to their positioning, and would turn a benefit for Iran into a benefit for the United States. It would make no sense for Iran to sell their oil into these escrow accounts instead of the alternative, which would be selling oil to China at what is currently a very small discount and RETAINING full control of the revenues.
Why on Earth would Iran WILLINGLY choose to hand over control of their oil revenues to the United States when the alternative is... not?
The other aspect to this, and what it TRULY taking place by Maleki and Goldberg at FDD, is that there is a major push right now for the United States to retroactively alter the terms of the Memorandum of Understanding. We see this with the push for an escrow account mechanism to be added after the fact to General License X, and we see it with the push to demand US-Only purchases with the release of frozen assets to Iran.
Here is the reality FDD is intellectually incapable of grasping: IRAN WON THE WAR.
They get to dictate the terms. If we do not agree to those terms, Iran closes the Strait of Hormuz.
It's. That. Simple.
Hospitals denouncing insurers for the beam in the insurers' eyes... while ignoring what is in their own (more than "a mote" but less than "a beam")
Chip? Slat? Lath? Plank?
Itβs time to hold insurance companies accountable. Learn more about how insurance companies are hurting Hoosiers at https://t.co/UULDIFtjRG #AccessDenied
πΊhttps://t.co/hVjmWLtv38
These guys really need to quit flapping their gums and shut the hell up. If this was easy to do and could be successful, they would ππ₯π«ππππ² have done this rather than signing the MOU!
An Open Letter in Support of Academic Freedom and Ivan Katchanovski which is published by New Paradigm magazine & signed by 227 people from 36 countries, including 116 scholars, is also available via Academia. https://t.co/Dkuq1Gs3C1
It can still be signed by sending to [email protected] the name, position/job title, institutional affiliation, country, and if prefer that the name is not published and only institutional affiliation and country are listed.