Petit rappel sur les «innocents» pro-🇷🇺 d’Odesa, 2 mai 2014: des anges en casques, masques, boucliers, cocktails Molotov, des flingues et des fusils. Des vrais hippies venus apporter paix et amour, n’est-ce pas ?
Petit thread 🧵:
Tout à commencé par une attaque contre une manifestation pacifique pro-ukrainien, 6 pro-ukrainiens sont tués par balle.
Chaque 2 mais Odesa leur rend hommage.
Beaucoup de ces « pacifistes » n’étaient même pas d’Odesa. Plusieurs venaient de russie ou de Transnistrie. Tous financés, organisés et armés directement par le Kremlin. Comme par exemple ce Gennady Kushnarev venu tout droit Tcheliabinsk.
Kurt Olsen, Trump's Director of Election Security, spent the last several months and millions in federal resources chasing the debunked theory that Venezuelan code lives inside Dominion machines.
When his own contractor proved him wrong, he got them fired.
2/12 In February, I broke the story of a January 2025 phone call where Flynn-linked operatives tried to recruit Michigan attorney Matt DePerno into expanding a baseless Puerto Rico voting machine investigation to every swing state.
DePerno warned U.S. Attorney Muldrow he was "dealing with a fraudster." The case, he said, "clearly fell apart" when he pressed for evidence.
3/12 Reuters now confirms: Muldrow and Tulsi Gabbard seized Puerto Rico's Dominion machines in May 2025 and hired Mojave Research to scour them for months.
Result? Software vulnerabilities similar to ones identified years earlier — but zero evidence the machines were ever hacked or manipulated. No Venezuelan ghost code. Tulsi's and Flynn network claims completely disproven.
The Riemann Hypothesis is the biggest unsolved math problem in history… and it secretly runs half of computer science.
Your encryption, AI randomness, prime-based algorithms - they all quietly depend on it.
Let me explain it so even non-math CS folks get the “whoa” moment. 🧵
Primes are the “atoms” of multiplication.
We know they get rarer as numbers get bigger, but their gaps feel random.
The Riemann Hypothesis is a precise prediction of exactly how those gaps behave.
If true → we get perfect formulas for prime distribution.
If false → some of our fastest algorithms and crypto assumptions break.
Mind-blowing, right?
The secret weapon is the Riemann zeta function ζ(s).
Think of it as a magical machine that “listens” to all primes at once.
You feed it a complex number s = x + yi (real + imaginary part), and it spits out a value.
When that value hits zero → we call it a “zero” of zeta.
Most zeros are boring (on the negative even integers).
The interesting ones live in the “critical strip”.
🧵1/ Our new study on AI and physician reasoning just came out in @ScienceMagazine. As co-senior author, I'm excited about our findings, and I do think AI will reshape medicine. But after seeing some of the discussions, I'm also worried about how our findings may be misinterpreted.
2/ First, a huge shoutout to our superstar co-first authors @PeterBrodeurMD (IM resident @BIDMC_IM) and @tabuckley_ (PhD student in @AIM_Harvard_PhD). Without them this paper would not exist.
3/ Now, some background. In 1959, Ledley & Lusted published a paper (also in Science!) arguing for complex clinical cases (such as the NEJM CPCs) to be a gold standard for evaluating the reasoning abilities of medical AI. That gauntlet motivated every generation of medical AI since and for decades, AI systems fell short.
Thread de vulgarisation : comprendre le conflit malien 🇲🇱
(1960 – aujourd’hui)
« Un conflit complexe, trop souvent mal expliqué »
⚠️ Ce thread vise uniquement à vulgariser les grandes lignes de l’histoire du conflit malien. Il ne prétend ni à l’exhaustivité ni à l’analyse détaillée de chaque cas.
Il appartient à chacun d’approfondir le sujet à travers les nombreuses sources et reportages existants déjà.
À l’indépendance du Mali en 1960, l’Etat hérite des frontières coloniales et d’un pouvoir centralisé à Bamako.
Le Nord est vaste, difficile à gouverner et très peu intégré.
Les populations locales se sentent rapidement marginalisées et délaissées.
Shell and other companies usually include a “technical presentation" as part of the interview process.
I had one the day before my Shell Recruitment Day.
Presented to a bunch of folks from the Technical Safety Engineering team.
One of the biggest scams in the corporate world is in that name – technical presentation – because I can assure you that the last thing they want is something technical.
I have seen so many smart candidates fall for this.
You think you impressed them.
But the next thing you get is a rejection email.
Because nobody is actually evaluating your technical skill.
They are looking for something else entirely.
(I wish they’d just be more honest about this.)🧵
In a technical presentation there’s usually that one person – the boss – that makes the final go/no-go call.
And this is what is going on in the boss’s mind as your mouth is moving:
Can he sell our ideas to clients?
Can he sell our team to the higher ups?
Can he secure buy-in from key stakeholders?
CAN. HE. SELL?
If you can't sell yourself in that room, you can't do any of those things.
And if you can't, he doesn't need you.
Simple.
This is why Daniel Pink’s book "To Sell Is Human" became an international bestseller.
Whether you are a manager, engineer, teacher, project lead or parent — what do we spend our days doing?
Isn’t it in trying to move others?
Selling has always been important but now, with AI, it is super important.
AI has made intelligence cheap: with the right prompt anyone can solve technical problems.
But what AI cannot replicate is YOU in a room.
Your poise.
Your voice.
Your ability to make people lean in.
Your sales IQ.
That is what stands you out now.
And that’s what the “technical presentation" is really about.
In 1962, C.S. Lewis was asked to name the books that most influenced his life philosophy.
The list he came up had many classics, but also some lesser known gems. Here’s his list:
1. The Consolation of Philosophy, Boethius
Written while he awaited execution, the work is a dialogue between Boethius and Lady Philosophy who consoles the author by discussing the fleeting nature of worldly goods. It influenced the late-antique mind more than any other work.
2. Theism and Humanism, Arthur Balfour
Based on a 1914 lecture, Balfour discusses naturalism and challenges adherents to explain phenomena like art, human reason, and human rights. He states:
“My desire has been to show that all we think best in human culture…requires God…”
Composting does not require a bin, a tumbler, a thermometer, or a schedule. The oldest soil improvement method in agriculture is trench composting — digging a hole, filling it with organic waste, covering it with soil, and planting on top. The decomposition happens underground where you never see it, never smell it, never turn it, and never think about it again. The soil organisms that do the work were already there before you started. 🪱
Every piece of composting equipment ever sold solves a problem that a shovel already solved. A tumbler aerates the material by turning it — soil organisms aerate buried material by moving through it. A bin contains the pile so it does not spread — the hole contains it because the walls are dirt. A thermometer monitors decomposition temperature — buried organic matter decomposes at ambient soil temperature without any monitoring because the organisms that work at that temperature are already the dominant population in the ground. The equipment is not wrong. It is just unnecessary for people who have a garden bed and a shovel.
The build takes about 10 minutes:
What you need:
- A shovel or garden fork
- Kitchen scraps, garden waste, shredded leaves, or any compostable organic matter
- The garden bed you are already growing in
How to do it:
DIG — excavate a trench or hole twelve to eighteen inches deep in the garden bed. A trench running between two rows works well. A single hole between two plants works equally well. The shape does not matter. The depth does — twelve inches minimum keeps the material below the surface where decomposition is aerobic, odor-free, and inaccessible to surface-feeding animals.
FILL — add kitchen scraps, coffee grounds, crushed eggshells, shredded leaves, garden trimmings, and any non-meat non-dairy organic material to the hole. Fill to within four to six inches of the surface. Mix a handful of existing garden soil into the scraps to inoculate the material with the decomposer organisms already present in the bed — this accelerates the process but is not strictly necessary because the organisms will migrate from the surrounding soil within days.
COVER — backfill with the excavated soil, mounding slightly above grade because the material will settle as it decomposes. The soil cap seals the scraps underground where they are invisible, odor-free, and unreachable by raccoons, rats, and dogs.
PLANT — wait two to four weeks for the initial decomposition to break down the freshest material, then plant directly on top or alongside. In an active garden, dig the trench between rows or at the end of a bed where nothing is currently growing and plant into that section the following month. In fall, bury the season's accumulated kitchen scraps across the entire bed and plant the whole area in spring. 🌿
What happens underground:
Soil bacteria, fungi, earthworms, millipedes, and microarthropods colonize the buried material within days. The decomposition proceeds from the edges inward as the organisms work through the scraps. Nutrients are released directly into the surrounding soil in plant-available form — nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, calcium, and a full spectrum of micronutrients. The organic matter that remains after decomposition improves soil structure — increasing water retention in sandy soil and improving drainage in clay.
The timeline depends on temperature and material. In warm summer soil, soft kitchen scraps (fruit peels, coffee grounds, lettuce leaves) decompose to the point of being unrecognizable within four to six weeks. Tougher material (corn cobs, avocado pits, woody stems) takes three to six months. Shredding or chopping the material before burying accelerates everything because smaller pieces expose more surface area to the organisms.
Three variations that fit different garden layouts:
THE TRENCH — dig a trench twelve inches deep and twelve inches wide between two planting rows.
Fill with scraps and cover. Plant the next crop in the trench line the following season. Rotate the trench position each year so every section of the bed gets buried organic matter on a three-year cycle.
THE PIT — dig individual holes twelve inches deep beside specific heavy-feeding plants — tomatoes, squash, peppers. Fill each hole with scraps and cover. The nutrients release directly into the root zone of the adjacent plant over the following weeks. One pit per plant, filled once at planting time, supplements the entire season.
THE SHEET — in fall after the last harvest, lay kitchen scraps and shredded leaves across the entire bed surface in a four-inch layer. Cover with six inches of soil or finished compost. Leave undisturbed through winter. By spring the material has decomposed into the bed and the entire surface is enriched and ready to plant. This method — sometimes called trench composting's lazy cousin — is the lowest-effort soil improvement technique available.
No bin. No tumbler. No turning. No thermometer. No smell. No schedule. A shovel and ten minutes
Plug a $30 USB stick into your laptop and you can listen to satellites, decode pager traffic, intercept walkie-talkies, and watch TV signals fall out of the air around you.
Free. No license. No subscription.
Just one tool nobody outside the radio underground talks about.
It's called SigDigger. An open source digital signal analyzer that turns a cheap SDR dongle into a full radio intelligence rig.
Here is what it can actually do.
Point it at the sky and you can pull down NOAA weather satellite images as they pass overhead. Tune it to your local airport and you can decode aircraft transponders in real time. Sweep the FM band and you can demodulate analog voice the moment it hits the antenna.
The interface looks like a Bloomberg Terminal for the airwaves.
A live waterfall display showing every signal in your area. PSK, FSK, and ASK demodulation. Burst signal analysis for the weird short transmissions nobody can identify. Analog video decoding. Panoramic spectrum sweeping across entire frequency ranges.
All running on a Linux or macOS laptop with zero specialized hardware.
What used to require a $40,000 spectrum analyzer locked inside a defense lab now runs in your living room for the price of a USB stick.
The author built the entire DSP backend from scratch instead of leaning on GNU Radio. He wrote his own core library called Suscan, his own signal processing library called Sigutils, and his own widget library called SuWidgets. Faster. Cleaner. Optimized for the exact tasks reverse engineers and amateur radio operators actually need.
Plugin support is built in. AmateurDSN for deep space network monitoring. APTPlugin for weather satellites. AntSDRPlugin for the AntSDR hardware. ZeroMQPlugin for piping signal data into other tools. Everything snaps in with one command.
The whole stack supports SoapySDR, which means almost every SDR device on the market works out of the box. RTL-SDR. HackRF. LimeSDR. Airspy. Plug it in and start digging.
Der ehemalige EnBW-Manager @UlrichGraeber im Gespräch mit @thinkBTO räumt reihenweise Legenden der Atomgegner ab & liefert auch einige Überraschungen, zB seine zutreffende Analyse, dass der Eso-Wahn vom „soft energy path“ der Grünen nur deswegen in der 🇩🇪 Ingenieursnation➡️
Fuß fassen konnte, weil opportunistische Manager und bürgerliche Parteien ihm sich beugten. Wie nett, dass wir jetzt jedem Anti-Atom-Schwurbler diese Folge verlinken können, die nochmal aus dem Inneren des Systems wiederholt, was ich ebenda als Forscherin längst gesagt habe:➡️
• „Atomsubventionen“ gab es seit einer Kreditgarantie auf 10 Mio DM seit Obrigheim nicht mehr, was bedeutet: ab Beginn der 1970er Jahre wurden alle 🇩🇪AKW von den Betreibern am Kapitalmarkt finanziert.
• Stromgestehungskosten abgeschriebener 🇩🇪 AKW: 2-3 ct/kWh.➡️
1/17 — Capabilities, not numbers
The possible US drawdown from Germany is not mainly a 5,000-troop story. The key issue is the capability that may not arrive: land-based US Long-Range Fires as a bridge for Europe’s Deep Precision Strike gap.
2/17 — Visible is not decisive
The Brigade Combat Team is politically loud. The harder military problem is the Long-Range Fires battalion. Europe can compensate a BCT more easily. It cannot quickly replace this range, mobility and integration.
3/17 — MDTF: Not a mass capability
The US Army plans only five Multi-Domain Task Forces. This is not routine force posture. If a Long-Range Fires element drops out of Europe, it hits a scarce strategic resource — not just another battalion.
If there's one solution to partisan gerrymandering that both parties generally agree to, it's that the House should be "uncapped" and expanded to reflect today's population, not 1911. Gerrymandering will still happen but not as effectively bc local pop shifts are more common.
In 1902, each House member represented just under 200,000 people. Today, each House member represents around 800,000 people. That completely defeats the purpose of the original House of Representatives, which is to have Reps close to the people and their opinions.
We're not going to get a 1,745-member House of Representatives to maintain the 1 to 200,000 ratio. But even a third of that would be more representative than what we have today. And the House can change its size without Constitutional Amendment.
The Great Nicobar Project: India’s Ultimate Maritime Masterstroke 🇮🇳⚓
There is a coordinated PR campaign targeting the ₹72,000 Crore Great Nicobar Island (GNI) project.
Cutting through the political noise, the reality is stark: this is the most critical infrastructure project for India’s survival and dominance in the 21st century.
Here are the hard facts. 🧵👇
The Geographic Imperative 🗺️
Look at the map.
Great Nicobar sits right on the Six Degree Channel.
This is the entry point to the Malacca Strait, where over 30% of global sea-borne trade and 80% of China’s oil imports pass.
GNI is the literal gatekeeper of the Indo-Pacific.
The Economic Masterplan: Galathea Bay 🏗️
India bleeds hundreds of millions of dollars annually because we lack a true deep-water transshipment port.
Our cargo goes to Colombo or Singapore.
GNI’s Galathea Bay has a natural draft of 20 meters - deep enough to dock the world's largest mega-ships directly on Indian soil.
1/ The world faces a catastrophic cliff-edge shortage of oil due to the Strait of Hormuz blockade in the next four weeks, analysts warn. This will cause a deep recession, fuel rationing, the shutdown of entire industries, and oil prices potentially as high as $370 per barrel. ⬇️
2/ A month ago, JP Morgan published a report highlighting that the last oil shipments from the Persian Gulf countries would be delivered by 20th April. That date has come and gone, and oil shipments via the Strait of Hormuz have not resumed.
3/ Limited amounts of Gulf oil have continued to be pumped via pipelines to ports on the Red Sea and Arabian Sea. However, instead of producing enough oil supply to meet global demand, the world has been relying on emergency stockpiles.
Cada app en tu móvil guarda archivos temporales llamados caché. Pasas dos horas en TikTok, y cada vídeo se guarda en caché. Abres Shopee, y cada imagen también se guarda. Esto se acumula todos los días y nunca se limpia automáticamente.
Compruébalo tú mismo:
Ajustes > Apps > selecciona la app > Almacenamiento
En mi móvil:
TikTok tiene 4,2GB de caché
Instagram tiene 1,9GB
Shopee tiene 1,6GB
Chrome tiene 1,1GB
🧵🚨 BREAKING: Miles Taylor: "Anonymous," former DHS Chief of Staff, Google security executive launched a website called GTFO ICE that collects your full name, email, phone number, and zip code to join an anti-ICE "rapid response network." And publishes the user infromation via a public API. 🚨
17,662 people have signed up.
The sign-up data is exposed on a public REST API. No true authentication. No rate limiting. Full records: names, emails, phone numbers, zip codes, timestamps.
The man who ran the third-largest federal department (250,000 employees, $60 billion budget) who oversaw election security architecture and led counterterrorism operations, then served as Google's Head of National Security Policy...
...can't secure a sign-up form. But he does milk hundreds of thousands of NGO dollars on these credentials. While freeloading off his fame as the person who wrote the infamous NYT article "I Am Part of the Resistance Inside the Trump Administration."
And despite me pinging @MilesTaylorUSA about this 12 hours ago, the REST API is still wide open and exposed as of now. Everything has been turned over to FBI, HSI, ICE, and more agencies.
As always, patience as I pull together the thread. 👇
Taylor's security clearance was suspended by presidential memorandum in April 2025. Trump called his conduct "treasonous." Five months later, Taylor launched DEFIANCE dot org. Five months after that... GTFO ICE.
GTFO ICE is a coalition of three orgs:
1. DEFIANCE dot org : Miles Taylor + Xander Schultz 2. Save America Movement : Steve Schmidt (yes, of the Lincoln Project) 3. Project Salt Box