Nope, not astronauts in the ocean. This week cj & Jeff cover submarine cables - the 850,000+ miles of cable that stretch along the ocean floor between countries and along coastlines. There are about 500 cables currently in service around the globe, and today July 27th, marks the 157th anniversary of the completion of the first transatlantic telegraph cable.
And with your favorite blue-bird being renamed “X” overnight, the guys reminisce about some of their favorite products and companies that have started with X throughout the years (there are more than you think!).
Of course, no Nonsense episode would be complete without a discussion of satellites (Amazon’s Kuiper), crypto-related-fraud (SBF’s push to buy an island), and a new type of drug (good for cholesterol, your lungs, and brain!).
12 Shark Facts That May Surprise You | NOAA Fisheries
70 Shark Facts That Will Make You Say "Oh, These Guys Are Pretty Cool Actually"
Twitter is being rebranded as X - The Verge
These are all porn except one. That one's Twitter.
FTX crypto whizzkid tries to 'buy island and make genetically enhanced human species'
New class of cholesterol-lowering drugs can affect lung function and brain size, study finds
Amazon’s Project Kuiper will open a new satellite-processing facility at Kennedy Space Center
Google co-founder comes back to company to bolster its AI efforts
Elon Musk's X takes @X handle from longtime Twitter user
Twitter rebrands to 'X' as Elon Musk loses iconic bird logo
When X-Rays Were All the Rage, a Trip to the Shoe Store Was Dangerously Illuminating
Xanthan Gum — Is This Food Additive Healthy or Harmful?
FedNow may finally be live, but will it be too costly for businesses to adopt? | TechCrunch
$100,000 Bill | Museum of American Finance
Star Trek: Enterprise - Wikiwand
15 years ago, the Xbox 360 launched in the desert. It was a wild event..
Software versioning - Wikiwand
Shoe-fitting fluoroscope - Wikiwand
X10 (industry standard) - Wikiwand
Tour de France champion Jonas Vingegaard feted in Denmark
Subsea Internet Cables Light Up the Bottom of the World's Oceans