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Cool
Tfue wins a Fortnite game at 40,000 feet using Starlink on Qatar Airways https://t.co/Se5roYjFqe
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United Airlines Starlink review: "Throughout the 90-minute flight, I regularly clocked download speeds of over 100 Mbps, with speeds peaking at 222 Mbps. I was able to download the YouTube app (308.4 MB) in seconds, watch YouTube videos, stream shows, listen to Spotify and even FaceTime some friends and family, who said my picture quality was extremely clear. (Keep in mind you aren’t allowed to make calls on regular commercial flights; this was a media flight.) Someone was even playing World of Warcraft in the air. When compared to my flight earlier this week, which had abysmally slow speeds of 0.53 Mbps download and 0.01 Mbps upload, calling Starlink a significant improvement feels like an understatement." Full review: https://t.co/WOrzZmP54o
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I've built 4 game prototypes with @grok so far. I've always wanted to make games since young but I suck at coding, until... Grok happened. I think I need to go lie down for a bit. https://t.co/VWdmOgvbyp
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Cool breakfast idea https://t.co/eoID9iLSGG
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Tonight is the first time I have seen @Grok summarize one of my videos. Within seconds of posting it.
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BREAKING: 𝕏 is now the #1# news app on the AppStore in India 🇮🇳 https://t.co/jMxDsVje74
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Late night using @grok DeeperSearch as my copilot for open ended physics-based algorithms research. I love living in the future.
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DNAi: From 0 to AI Agent to Health Data Platform.🧬 6 months. Tens of thousands of lines of code. One goal: Real impact. No shortcuts. No hype. Just work. https://t.co/hW3I8vA06Y
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I had my Tesla model S drive me home the other day with FSD, and it’s fucking wild. Changes lanes to avoid slow traffic, stops at red lights and stop signs, hits the blinkers and turns for you. It’s bananas.
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Grok 3 Beta ranks #1# in CaseLaw Benchmark! Surpassing Gemini 2.5 Pro https://t.co/ri6vfc0Ceh
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Cool, when you key in https://t.co/63lvCcHF8H, the default is @BNBCHAIN now! 😄
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Cool. @k8em0 in IEEE Security & Privacy Magazine https://t.co/04iQZZiqoG
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A cool ceramic toilet speaker a student made in class https://t.co/lDsaFJy7q6
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So cool https://t.co/gb8HwjLoKF
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Because cooling scales as a square with body surface area, but heat generation scales as a cube with body mass, there is an upper limit to the size of a whale before it gets so hot that it overheats even in near-freezing water!
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The physics of heat transfer are way cooler than you think. If we designed homes with them in mind, they'd be a lot more resilient and energy efficient, and people would be a lot more comfortable. Insulation standards and HVAC systems are designed around maintaining the air temperature inside a building, but air temperature is only a tiny slice of the picture. In typical conditions, only ~15% of the human body's heat loss is from convection. ~60% is from radiation, and ~20% is from evaporation (breathing and sweating). Your body glows like a light bulb with infrared radiation. You are constantly emitting infrared radiation into the environment and absorbing infrared radiation from the environment. Radiative power scales with the 4th power of temperature, so even small changes in temperature result in large changes in heat flux. If your skin temp is 34°C (93.2°F), you emit 505 W/m^2. A wall at 10°C (50°F) emits 364 W/m^2 while a wall at 40°C (104°F) emits 545 W/m^2. Your body is ~100 W and ~2 m^2. You need a net cooling of ~50 W/m^2 to maintain your body temperature. If you weren't constantly bathed in infrared radiation, you'd quickly lose heat to the environment. If you're surrounded by hot surfaces, you can be baked by infrared even if the air temperature is low. The temperature of the walls, ceiling, and floor is more important than temperature of the air. Underinsulated surfaces can be cold even when the air is warm, and hot even when the air is cold. This (and humidity) is why your house at 70°F doesn't feel the same in the winter and the summer. Doubling the amount of insulation in a home cuts the energy required to maintain a given air temperature in half, but it also cuts the differential between the temperature of the walls and the air. With better insulation, not only do you not need as much energy to maintain the same air temperature, you don't even have to maintain the same air temperature. Air conditioning can reduce humidity, but most air conditioners can't intentionally control humidity, and most HVAC system have no way to increase humidity. Better control over humidity reduces the temperature differential your house has to maintain with the outside to provide the same heat transfer for the people inside. Having air that's not overly dry in the winter means it doesn't have to be as warm to be comfortable. Having air that's not overly humid in the summer means it doesn't have to be as cold. The goal is to maintain human body temperature, not air temperature. Radiation and evaporation make up most of the heat transfer. Looking only at air temperature completely misses the big picture. We underinsulate our homes and don't provide adequate control over the aspects that are most important for comfort. Insulation provides a much larger efficiency benefit than you'd expect from a simple Manual J calculation. That's compounded by the fact that the economic value of that energy savings is far larger than flat volumetric pricing indicates. (because insulation provides the most benefit in extreme conditions where capacity is constrained and prices are high) Heat and cooling are the majority of energy use in homes, and the vast majority of energy costs. Real consideration of the physics of heat transfer and the economics of energy systems in the way we design homes and HVAC systems would provide massive economic benefits.
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Moose cooling down in someone’s garden https://t.co/o38OqV63Or
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So cool. https://t.co/j8e3519AWv
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New Coolproducts report is out 👇
🚨 New report 🚨 Combustion heating & cooking are putting European homes at risk: 🚑900-1,800 fire-related injuries annually 🌬️+1,000 fatal carbon monoxide poisoning in 2021 Public safety calls for cleaner alternatives! #BurningIssues# 📖https://t.co/bCi9Mx5uyr National stats⬇️ https://t.co/xGO820Rsal
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🔥New @CoolproductsEU report🔥 Sign up and join our press launch event on Monday 30 September 👇
🚨 Last few seats available! 🚨 Heating and cooking with gas (and other combustible) are endangering us and our homes🌍🔥 Join us on 30 Sep, 11:00-12:30 at the @PressClubBXLEU /online for a press briefing with @CoolHeatingCo and @EPHA_EU. Sign-up: https://t.co/pfDgiblx2i https://t.co/bwUaFsvrB6
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This is the coolest edit I’ve seen https://t.co/D1RuEQnWaa
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