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@lauriewired LaurieWiredLaurieWired is likely related to "egg computing," a growing field of research that utilizes eggs and their components, such as egg whites and shells, to develop new technologies like organic field-effect transistors and supercapacitors. Researchers have been experimenting with egg-based materials for various applications, marking significant advancements in this unusual field. This area of study has gained attention on social media platforms, with some enthusiasts sharing updates and papers on the topic.
Social category influence stocks technology brands products gaming currencies automotive brands social networks countries
Social topic influence math #1324, just a, the first, flow, so i, vram, playstation, loops, $7846t, single
Top assets mentioned Shopify Inc (SHOP)
Top posts by engagements in the last XX hours
"Using text opacity to visualize information flow of source code is such an insanely good idea. Imagine using a small model to auto-highlight fuzzier concepts like contextual relevance. Only working on backend code Opacity fade UI functionsetc"
X Link 2025-10-20T22:31Z 120.6K followers, 220.4K engagements
"okay so i posted this initially as a joke but apparently traeger grills are now having a major outage today lol"
X Link 2025-11-27T19:05Z 120.6K followers, 116.1K engagements
"can someone help this poor man"
X Link 2025-11-29T07:39Z 120.7K followers, 492.8K engagements
"pov: your a nvidia board partner in 2026 frantically "sourcing" vram from playstation 5s"
X Link 2025-11-29T21:51Z 120.6K followers, 339.9K engagements
"The design looked ridiculous. There were islands of logic not connected to any input or output. But it worked. After much investigation Dr. Thompson discovered that the XX gate solution relied on feedback loops EMI effects between unconnected logic units and even the temperature of the lab The evolved circuit only functioned correctly within a 10C range because of its reliance on analog physical effects"
X Link 2025-11-24T19:20Z 120.7K followers, 47.6K engagements
"This.is Programming Like a Fighter Pilot. A single unhandled exception destroyed a $XXX million rocket in seconds. The F-35 wasn't going to make the same mistake. By carefully slicing C++ engineers created one of the strictest coding standards ever written"
X Link 2025-12-03T19:28Z 120.7K followers, 369.5K engagements
"@mov_axbx no but that sounds super neat and would get around a ton of light pollution problems"
X Link 2025-12-05T01:10Z 120.7K followers, 14.2K engagements
"This music video can crash your computer. It even has its own CVE number (CVE-2022-38392). Janet Jacksons Rhythm Nation contains specific resonant frequencies that cause errors on certain 5400rpm hard drives. Play at your own risk"
X Link 2025-07-11T18:09Z 120.7K followers, 218.4K engagements
"Shader systems are ridiculously powerful if youre clever enough. Most people use them to create visual effects. You know whats cooler Running Linux. Inside an emulated RISC-V CPU. Inside a pixel shader. Inside of VRChat"
X Link 2025-11-10T21:24Z 120.7K followers, 171.7K engagements
"My favorite kind of tech story is when unexpected capabilities arise from something a human would never try. In the late 90s Dr. Thompson was experimenting with genetic algorithms on FPGAs. The goal was simple; distinguish between two audio tones 1kHz and 10kHz. He wanted novel solutions so he severely restricted scope. The chip was crippled to a maximum of ten cells wide and XX cells tall with no system clock. - An typical EE student might use a few hundred gates - An expert might get it down to XXX - Thompsons genetic algorithm found a solution with 32 Gates"
X Link 2025-11-24T19:20Z 120.7K followers, 230.7K engagements
"The FPGA that made this evolutionary algorithm possible no longer exists btw. The Xilinx XC6200 series was quite special in that it was essentially the only FPGA with documented bitstreams. You cant really do these sort of low-level analogue experiments without a bitstream. (the only modern attempts are community projects that attempt to reverse engineer the internal architecture like Project IceStorm which is pretty cool)"
X Link 2025-11-25T01:56Z 120.7K followers, 27K engagements
"The US has one of the best policies for tech folks that not many think about. Code is Speech In EU Law Code is a literary work Its a super important distinction. Its come up in a few court cases: In 1995 a mathematics student at Berkeley (Bernstein) published their own encryption system called Snuffle. Technically classified as a munition Bernstein would have to register as an arms dealer in order to post code online. He thought it was ridiculous so he sued"
X Link 2025-11-25T18:27Z 120.7K followers, 75.8K engagements
"my favorite thanksgiving tradition is the annual grill software update"
X Link 2025-11-27T05:25Z 120.7K followers, 4M engagements
"Every year shopify makes a website tracking the massive surge in compute on black friday. Right now they are tracking 45+ million Kafka requests per second and about 88000 gigabytes of data per minute. (it's also just a really cool website)"
X Link 2025-11-28T17:15Z 120.7K followers, 237.3K engagements
"pdfs sometimes open up calculators to help u with the math"
X Link 2025-12-09T04:29Z 120.7K followers, 311.9K engagements
"if youre an EE CS or cryptography student write your thesis on public key cryptography at the image sensor level Proof of Physical capture will become a backbone of society soon"
X Link 2025-09-30T18:36Z 120.4K followers, 1.4M engagements
"ST and ST2 (IPv5) let you punch what was called a Hard State into routers. This reserved a dedicated virtual circuit guaranteeing a specific amount of bandwidth. The researchers even envisioned video call use Way ahead of its time but also a memory hog"
X Link 2025-11-19T21:26Z 120.3K followers, 13.7K engagements
"@i2cjak raytheon style "garbage collection" (overflow slower than the missile explodes)"
X Link 2025-10-23T05:38Z 120.5K followers, 2542 engagements
"The biggest predictor of coding ability is Language Aptitude. Not Math. A study posted in Nature found that numeracy accounts for just X% of skill variance. Meanwhile the neural behaviors associated with language accounted for XX% of skill variance"
X Link 2025-10-31T18:08Z 120.6K followers, 1.1M engagements
"Colleges do a terrible job of teaching C++. Its not C with Classes. Injected into curriculums as a demonstration of early CS concepts it leaves many with a sour taste. Students later immediately fall in love with the first language that doesnt feel that way"
X Link 2025-10-13T21:05Z 120.6K followers, 246.5K engagements
"Programming Isn't Math It's Linguistics. Compilers and Humans have the same problem. We're all terrible at understanding each other. Join me for some formal language theory a lot of C++ and some "recreational" insults"
X Link 2025-10-29T17:31Z 120.6K followers, 986.8K engagements
"The reason we know Radiation causes bit-flips in DRAM is pretty hilarious. In the late 70s Intel Ram was occasionally producing soft uncorrectable errors. Turns out the ceramic packaging on the chip itself had a little bit of Uranium. You know as one does"
X Link 2025-11-03T19:29Z 120.6K followers, 397K engagements
"Everyones heard of IPv4 and IPv6. I bet you dont know about IPv5. Designed in the late 70s it was an experimental protocol by MITs Lincoln Labs for real-time streaming. Basically Zoom before Zoom existed.but for defense:"
X Link 2025-11-19T21:26Z 120.6K followers, 66.8K engagements
"Nearly simultaneously a similar case was being fought Junger v. Daley. Junger was teaching a class on Computer Law and wanted to share some example encryption code. Due to existing law he would be unable to discuss the class with foreign exchange students After years of litigation the courts held that Source Code is speech more specifically: an expressive means for the exchange of information and ideas about computer programming and thus protected by the First Amendment. Its a pretty neat distinction that is very U.S. specific. Publishing exploits encryption tools etc can be shared to"
X Link 2025-11-25T18:27Z 120.6K followers, 21.8K engagements
"pretty proud of how my DIY F16 MFD came out using it to demonstrate some C++ aircraft coding standards for my next video"
X Link 2025-11-26T05:55Z 120.6K followers, 127.6K engagements
"Pro-Tip you can turn your crummy consumer SSD (mostly) into an enterprise drive by formatting it correctly. You can easily get 10x endurance by giving up X% of space. Crucial MX500 1TB: XXX DWPD Micron 5300 PRO 960GB (same NAND): XXX DWPD"
X Link 2025-11-26T19:56Z 120.6K followers, 236.6K engagements
"Outside of minor firmware+controller changesyeah enterprise drives are often overprovisoned consumer drives. Manufacturers know consumers have a bias for capacity but its a pretty terrible endurance tradeoff. Micron (Crucial) Samsung Western Digital all do this"
X Link 2025-11-26T19:56Z 120.6K followers, 41.4K engagements
"The first thing I do whenever I buy a new (consumer) SSD is only format 90%-95% of the drive. I do a lot of video editing for my youtube channel so write endurance is more of a factor. Im often writing multiple TB of data for just a single video and giving up just a tiny bit of capacity is worth it"
X Link 2025-11-26T19:56Z 120.6K followers, 42.8K engagements
"planes are just big flying computers"
X Link 2025-12-01T20:19Z 120.7K followers, 93.1K engagements
"the OG cloud computing"
X Link 2025-12-01T20:41Z 120.6K followers, 13.2K engagements
"this video has been a monster to edit should end up very fun tho :)"
X Link 2025-12-02T23:53Z 120.7K followers, 24.5K engagements
"Occasionally I like to explore what weird things are possible to rent in the cloud. Did you realize theres a whole market for shared time on rare analog synths and audio equipment All remotely controlled by robots turning the knobs"
X Link 2025-12-05T00:43Z 120.7K followers, 198.3K engagements
"Continuing my series on weird things you can rent in the cloud You can zap live human brain cells in a microfluidic life support system in Switzerland and teach it to play games. Only $XXX a month"
X Link 2025-12-11T18:51Z 120.7K followers, 195.3K engagements