Luke Igel (@lukeigel) 's Twitter Profile
Luke Igel

@lukeigel

@trykino, previously MIT, JPL, SpaceX

ID: 3279986382

linkhttp://regressions.net calendar_today14-07-2015 23:37:49

1,1K Tweet

2,2K Followers

2,2K Following

muze.fund (@muzefund) 's Twitter Profile Photo

We’re proud to announce the fourth recipient of our $10k artist grant: Jenny Zhang, jenny z, for her project DC Mini. Jenny is a self-taught engineer and filmmaker leaving New York behind to move to Taiwan and Shenzhen—places she’s never lived—to learn about manufacturing

Luke Igel (@lukeigel) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Living with Henry since we returned to SF has been such a joy. He’s a kindred spirit, a fellow media guy, obscenely well-read, deeply aware of tech’s history. The firm, and this town more broadly, is so so lucky to have him.

jasmine sun (@jasminewsun) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This is my favorite podcast I've done so far— Fred Turner is the best historian of Silicon Valley culture over the last 100 years, and the super-enthusiastic history teacher everyone wishes they had. His book From Counterculture to Cyberculture is the iconic chronicle of the

Luke Igel (@lukeigel) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Is there any good, open ended pdf reader that lets you take tons of notes iBooks highlight feature on iPad used to be very close but way too closed off to Apple I’ve tried various iPad apps but they’re all weird and impossible transfer to your laptop or view on the web

Neil Deshmukh (@neildeshmukh) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Excited to announce that Sola has raised a $17.5M Series A led by a16z with support from @Conviction Y Combinator, bringing total funding to $21M 🚀 From the start, we set out to reimagine human-AI interaction to push the boundaries of process automation. Our agents watch

anson ⁂ (@ansonyuu) 's Twitter Profile Photo

nobody tells you this... but a reason we don't have cool new technology is because hardware compliance sucks cue Normal. we're automating testing and certification for hardware teams

matia (@matialee_) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The Kino-Eye, created by Dziga Vertov in the early 1920s, is the idea of using the camera to capture what is “inaccessible to the human eye,” revealing reality rather than imitating human vision. Kino.