「ディズニーのチケット余ってるけど来て」朝一でネクステにグループラインしたら全員集まる? - Summary

Summary

This is a very long and confusing text. It seems to be a transcript of a video or audio recording, but it is not clear what language it is in or what topic it is about. It might be a mixture of different languages, or a poorly translated or transcribed text. It has many spelling and grammatical errors, and it does not follow a coherent structure or logic. It mentions various names, places, dates, numbers, products, and events, but without any clear connection or relevance. It also contains some musical notes and laughter sounds. A concise summary of this text is:

- A person talks about various random and unrelated things, such as Disneyland, nuclear fusion, dog cafes, golf, and carbon nature.
- The person does not make much sense and often contradicts or repeats themselves.
- The person seems to be waiting for someone or something, and occasionally addresses other people or responds to questions.
- The person also sings, laughs, and makes noises at some points.

Facts

This is a difficult task. The text seems to be a transcript of a video or audio recording, but it is not very clear or coherent. It might be in Japanese, but some parts are in English or other languages. It might also be corrupted or incomplete. I will try to extract some facts from the text, but I cannot guarantee their accuracy or relevance. Here are some possible facts:

- The speaker went to Disneyland and bought e-tickets
- The speaker waited for someone near a rotating section of 3 slices
- The speaker had a 5-minute tanning session
- The speaker sustained a nuclear fusion reaction at 100 million°C for 30 seconds
- The speaker likes dog cafes and coastal tapas
- The speaker took a photo from the side where it was too tight
- The speaker ate popcorn and salmon
- The speaker wore a lizard outfit and a straw hat
- The speaker listened to the March par and played at home

: Document(page_content="00:00:00.00: Yes, it's\n00:00:01.50: late 1. I wanted to check the post at Disneyland.\n00:00:10.74: Asai Disney e-tickets were left. So I\n00:00:13.41: told them this was the version, and the one who did it\n00:00:15.87: came. The security guard said it was\n00:00:19.05: 10 o'clock in the morning. Next group\n00:00:21.68: 2There aren't many tickets this month on the 22nd, so please let me know\n00:00:24.77: when\n00:00:27.56: someone can come.Okay, I'm at Disney in the back mountain.Please wait by the\n00:00:30.14: place in the photo.I'll send you the line.In the\n00:00:32.60: photo, there's a rotating section of 3 slices. It's\n00:00:35.96: me who sends it and it bounces back, and I'm\n00:00:39.38: waiting here.", metadata={})

: Document(page_content="Korean nuclear fusion reactor achieves 100 million°C for 30 seconds A sustained, stable experiment is the latest demonstration that nuclear fusion is moving from being a physics problem to an engineering one Physics 7 September 2022 By Matthew Sparkes The Korea Superconducting Tokamak Advanced Research experiment Korea Institute of Fusion Energy", metadata={})

: Document(page_content="00:02:51.99: taking a photo from the side where it's a little too tight. This place\n00:02:54.21: is pretty much in the middle.", metadata={})

: Document(page_content="I guess I like dog cafes, right\n00:30:32.12
? I thought to myself,\n00:30:34.47
now ume ume.\n
Well then, I'm really into coastal tapas, and I feel
like I'm a tea-lover.", metadata={})

: Document(page_content="Scientists in South Korea's **Korea Superconducting Tokamak Advanced Research (KSTAR) facility (Korea Institute of Fusion Energy)** have managed to sustain a nuclear fusion reaction running at temperatures in excess of **100 million°C** for **30 seconds** for the first time", metadata={})