Search Results
7/21/2025, 9:27:10 PM
>>213006101
I am ready.
I am ready.
7/17/2025, 8:55:35 PM
>A supercomputer that is the most powerful in the UK has been made fully operational in Bristol.
>Technology Secretary Peter Kyle "flicked the switch" on the Isambard-AI machine as the government unveiled fresh artificial intelligence plans.
>The computer will become part of the UK's public AI computing capacity along with a machine in Cambridge called Dawn.
Powering up Isambard-AI.
Searching for anglophobic targets.
Dispatching with extreme prejudice.
>Technology Secretary Peter Kyle "flicked the switch" on the Isambard-AI machine as the government unveiled fresh artificial intelligence plans.
>The computer will become part of the UK's public AI computing capacity along with a machine in Cambridge called Dawn.
Powering up Isambard-AI.
Searching for anglophobic targets.
Dispatching with extreme prejudice.
7/12/2025, 2:02:13 PM
>Giant moa de-extinction project begins in New Zealand
>Colossal Biosciences, the Texas-based company known for bringing back traits of extinct animals, has announced a bold new project – to revive the South Island giant moa, one of the largest and most iconic birds in New Zealand's history. The company is partnering with the Ngāi Tahu Research Centre and acclaimed filmmaker Sir Peter Jackson in a highly ambitious initiative that blends cutting-edge genetic science with Indigenous leadership and cultural knowledge.
>The South Island giant moa, Dinornis robustus, stood up to 3.6 metres (12 ft) tall with neck outstretched and weighed 240 kilograms (530 lbs). These enormous, flightless herbivores once roamed New Zealand's forests, shaping the environment for millions of years. They vanished roughly 600 years ago, along with other moa species, around 200 years after Polynesian colonisation of New Zealand. Overhunting and habitat changes caused by early human activities are considered the primary causes of their extinction.
Babe wake up, they made Jurassic Park into a real thing.
>Colossal Biosciences, the Texas-based company known for bringing back traits of extinct animals, has announced a bold new project – to revive the South Island giant moa, one of the largest and most iconic birds in New Zealand's history. The company is partnering with the Ngāi Tahu Research Centre and acclaimed filmmaker Sir Peter Jackson in a highly ambitious initiative that blends cutting-edge genetic science with Indigenous leadership and cultural knowledge.
>The South Island giant moa, Dinornis robustus, stood up to 3.6 metres (12 ft) tall with neck outstretched and weighed 240 kilograms (530 lbs). These enormous, flightless herbivores once roamed New Zealand's forests, shaping the environment for millions of years. They vanished roughly 600 years ago, along with other moa species, around 200 years after Polynesian colonisation of New Zealand. Overhunting and habitat changes caused by early human activities are considered the primary causes of their extinction.
Babe wake up, they made Jurassic Park into a real thing.
6/25/2025, 10:35:00 PM
>>713642132
apology NOT accepted. DIE.
apology NOT accepted. DIE.
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