VMware Staff Technical Adoption Manager | vExpert 2013-2025 #MooreStrong | github.com/joeyvmware

Joined November 2012
2,796 Photos and videos
This NED vs JPN game is all action the second half.
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Unloading boxes of tile for the new house but having to store at the current house is exhausting. I am sure I sweated more than water I drank for the last year.
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USA! USA! Goooooooaaaaaaalllllll!
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Hey @djkhaled look up from your phone man! You got great seats! :)
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I need to take my Metamucil and need a nap now.
Ferris Bueller took his "Day Off" 41 years ago today. June 5th 1985. Happy Ferris Bueller Day #80s
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Email Administrators: do you use Enhanced encryption by default?
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Saw it last night, if you want a Deadpool type (minus the 4th wall breaks) comic movie with a feeling of Guardians of the Galaxy cinematography then it's good. If you don't like the cheesy nice of a villian and the constant "I'm weak but look huge" hero, you may not like it.
Respect the crescendo. Masters of the Universe - only in theaters and IMAX this Friday. Get tickets.
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I bet Temu is the biggest user of AI content.
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Still like my @okcthunder. Next year.
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Joey Ware retweeted
Wembanyama getting ultra-physical with Dort and Wallace and Bryant trucking into SGA — all from tonight’s game alone. Funny how the Spurs don’t get the same backlash as OKC does for these types of plays

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Whether a scam or not, @ATT possibly has an out of country phone center calling to ask if they'd like to switch to AT&T. The number showed to be local to my city and area code, it's time for phone spoofing to be illegal. Easily could tell it was not local phone center.
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Wouldn’t it be nice to have a job that you were voted in on by a majority of your state and then just take vacations any time you want and get paid to do it? Paid for food, housing, travel.. make extra money on the side. I see why they don’t want term limits.
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The @AP had some layoffs and OKC lost our sports and other news journalist @CliffBruntOG. I’ve known Cliff personally for the last 10 years as a fellow dance dad and watching our girls grow up together. His reporting and his devotion to the craft is great. Grab him now.
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Happy @vmwarevcf 9.1 GA release day! Check out the release notes techdocs.broadcom.com/bin/ge… Learn more about how @VMware with VCF is empowering customers with accelerated AI workload deployments go-vmware.broadcom.com/whats…

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Joey Ware retweeted
For everyone going to Luke Combs in Norman tonight:
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Joey Ware retweeted
Spirit Airlines died tonight at the hands of the socialist crusader, Elizabeth Warren She must be so proud to add another casket to her achievements. Tonight at 3am, Spirit turns off the lights. 14,000 jobs gone. 30 smaller airports lose service. JetBlue offered $3.8 BILLION in cash to buy Spirit in 2022. Shareholders, flight attendants union, literally everyone voted yes. The combined company would have held 9% of the US market against a Big 4 that already owned 80%. For anyone who understands numbers: 9% isn’t a monopoly against 80%. Warren said no. She wrote letters. She pressured Buttigieg. Biden’s DOJ sued. A federal judge killed the deal in January 2024. Her argument: the merger would cost consumers $1 billion a year. Now look at her collateral damage she dusts under the rug. 510 pilots gone in the months after. 1,800 flight attendants furloughed in December. 14,000 jobs in 2023. 7,500 last week. Zero tonight. And that’s just the people in Spirit uniforms. Catering goes. Fuel guys go. Baggage crews, gate agents, airport coffee shops, hotels and rental cars in 70 cities Spirit flew to. Every airline job carries 3 more on its back. 40,000 people out of work because of one woman’s moronic crusade against the market. And the math ain’t mathing. Spirit abandoned 90 routes during the death spiral. Fares on those routes are up 14% on average. Oakland to Newark: $135 to $288. Fort Myers to San Juan: $92 to $219. Kansas City to Newark up 66%. That’s reality. Not some BS number from a “study.” So @SenWarren tell me how this saves the consumer money? Cheap carriers in a market drop fares 21% across the board. Southwest did this in the 90s and saved Americans $68 BILLION over 20 years. Warren killed it. That’s what moronic politicians led by socialism do. Then with her own blind arrogance, she tweeted Spirit’s collapse is “a Biden win for flyers.” A win. 14,000 people are reading termination letters tonight. And she’s taking credit. This is socialism in 2026. A senator who’s never made payroll thinks she knows how to run a market better than the people who own and work in the company. She saved you a billion on imaginary paper. She cost you ten times that in real life. She didn’t protect consumers from anything. 14,000 will go from working to welfare. She will make sure to blame billionaires, hardworking tax payers, AI, capitalism and whatever monster they will make up tomorrow hiding under your bed. Higher taxes. Fewer jobs. More expensive everything. She called it a win. I hope you enjoy winning.
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Joey Ware retweeted
Twenty five years tomorrow Oklahoma City Marathon was initiated with 3500 runners! Tomorrow there will be 30,000 runners, representing all 50 states and 17 countries. Last week the Boston Marathon had 32,000 participants! @OKCNM @okcmarathon @OU_Athletics @OU_Football
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Proud dad yesterday and today, my oldest daughter was voted Miss MHS (their school) yesterday and today she turns 18. She graduates high school next month but before she even gets her HS diploma she will graduate from OCCC with her associates degree beforehand.
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Gas is back under $3 here in OKC. Let’s keep it going down though.
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Joey Ware retweeted
To my Oklahoma family; this piece comes straight from the heart. I hope you’ll take a moment to read it and feel what I felt. Thank you for allowing me to be a small part of it. I came to @okcthunder to play basketball. I left carrying 168 lives. When I was traded to the Oklahoma City Thunder, I was thinking about basketball, nothing more. I didn’t know that before I ever stepped on the court, this place would show me something that would stay with me far longer than any game. Like any player, my mind was on the game. A new team, a new city, a new opportunity. I expected the usual routine when I landed in Oklahoma City. Physicals, practices, meetings, and a jersey waiting in a locker. But before any of that, Sam Presti pulled me aside and told me there was somewhere we needed to go. He didn’t explain much, and I didn’t think to ask. I was focused on the next step in my career. What I didn’t understand was that, before I could represent the place I was about to play for, I needed to understand it. So instead of heading to the facility, he took me to the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum. I walked in without knowing what I was about to see, and within minutes, everything slowed down. There are 168 chairs at the memorial, each one representing a life lost on April 19, 1995. They are arranged in quiet rows, each engraved with a name, each standing where a person once stood in that building. Then you notice something that is impossible to process the first time you see it. Some of the chairs are smaller. They belong to children. There is no speech that prepares you for that, no headline that captures it. You simply stand there, and the silence carries a kind of weight that is hard to describe but impossible to ignore. As you walk through the memorial, you pass between two gates marked 9:01 and 9:03. At first, they seem like simple numbers, but then you understand what they hold. One marks the last minute before the attack. The other marks the first minute after. And in between those two gates is 9:02, the moment when everything changed. That minute does not feel like history when you are standing there. It feels present. The reflecting pool stretches across what used to be a city street, its surface calm and still. When you look into it, you do not just see water. You see yourself standing in a place where unimaginable loss occurred, and for a moment, everything else in your life becomes quieter. Nearby stands the Survivor Tree, an American elm that was damaged in the blast but endured. It is not untouched. Its scars are part of what it represents. But it is still standing, and in that, it carries a kind of strength that does not need to be explained. We did not speak much while we were inside. It did not feel like a place for conversation. Some places ask for words. This one asks for reflection. When we stepped outside, Sam Presti looked me in the eye and said, “This is what this state has been through.” Then he said something I will never forget. “Every time you step on that court, you are not just playing in front of fans. You are playing for a state that carries this with it. Give them everything you have. They deserve that.” In that moment, basketball felt different. Not smaller, but clearer. Because what I had just seen was not only about what was lost. It was about what remained. A state that had experienced unimaginable pain and still chose to come together, to rebuild, and to move forward without losing its humanity. From that day on, every time I stepped on the court, I carried that with me. On the nights when I was tired, when I was hurt, when I was dealing with challenges that felt heavy in the moment, I would think about those chairs, about that minute, about the people behind those names. And I was reminded that what I was going through did not compare to what this state had endured. oklahoman.com/story/opinion/…
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