@bizdayyy: Đã vậy trời khoe cơ bắp luôn #bizday #donhathoang #rockstar #tiktokgiaitri

bizday
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Thursday 25 June 2026 08:34:18 GMT
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clare.mee
Clare Mee :
Hoàng hợp đô con 🥰 rất dtrai hehe
2026-06-25 09:25:41
6
elsh31113
Icarus :
Cơ bắp + cười xinh là Đỗ Nhật Hoàng hỏ 🥺🥺
2026-06-25 12:46:40
4
aslanhuynh
aslanhuynh :
Ôi cái bắp tay đã dữ🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-25 16:27:52
0
sn.nam317
Sơn Nam :
Ngon nha🥰
2026-06-25 11:10:57
0
thaothao_tebdnh
Thảo Thảo 🐻 :
Khoe cơ bắp kìa trời:)))
2026-06-25 09:38:12
0
xun.nguyn9451
🐰🦢 :
bá :))
2026-06-25 08:57:10
0
callme.uhca
Rose𝐗Violet :
đô quá mom ơi
2026-06-25 08:57:44
0
ndnh_sm
🐻🐶CYSM✨ :
làm cái dáng cũng giống mấy anh lực sĩ biểu diễn quá hen 🥰
2026-06-25 09:54:36
0
haianh1446
Mai mai :
Đô quá ông ơi
2026-06-25 08:54:10
0
stivan12
𝐁𝐢𝐰. :
quyết tâm đô hơn anh Huy hả mom ơi
2026-06-25 10:51:03
2
thach_yen_my13
𝕋𝕣𝕦̛́𝕟𝕘 ᑕᕼIᗴ̂ᑎ 🍳🥚 :
ê nha, sợ rồi nha Hoàng ơi là Hoàng, đô quá Hoàng ơi.
2026-06-25 09:27:35
0
mc.tr624
Mùa hạ mãi ở bên ANH😍 :
sớm
2026-06-25 08:56:33
0
s._.kiyoko
𝙆𝙄𝙔𝙊𝙆𝙊 :
tr ơi, đag ăn mà xém sặc ớt luôn mà😇😇😇😇😇
2026-06-25 09:12:54
0
boyeukhengg
bơ. :
cẩn thận nó rách cái tay áo á hai😭
2026-06-25 09:41:47
0
quyn.ng.thanh1
F3,otp mãi đỉnh 🥰🥰 :
😳😳😳
2026-06-25 08:40:00
0
user44495203446914
🌱lá✨ :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-25 11:13:22
0
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Other Videos

The emergency power industry got way too comfortable selling people things that die the second you actually need them. Batteries are useful. Solar is useful. Generators are useful. I am not pretending they are not. Every backup plan has a weak spot though. Batteries run out. Solar quits when the sun quits. Generators need fuel, noise, maintenance, and usually a lot more planning than people admit. So I built something different. PiggyPower Ember turns heat into usable power. A flame on one side. Water on the other. No wall outlet. No solar panel. No grid. Just a small burner doing real work. The important part is the loop. Heat makes electricity. Electricity helps move water. The water keeps the cold side useful. The same setup can leave you with warm water instead of throwing all that heat into the air and calling it wasted. That is the part people miss. This is not free energy. The fuel is the fuel. The claim is simpler than that. If you are already burning something for heat, light, cooking, boiling, or emergency warmth, why let all of it disappear into the room when some of it can be turned into usable power? Most emergency gear is built around waiting. Wait for the power company. Wait for daylight. Wait until the batteries die. Wait until the generator runs out. Wait until somebody else fixes the problem. I hate that mindset. I want gear that keeps doing something. Keep a phone alive. Keep lights useful. Keep water moving. Stretch a heat source. Make fire pull double duty. That is where Ember makes sense. Blackouts, storms, cabins, camping, wood stoves, boilers, off grid setups, emergency heat, and any situation where steady heat already exists. The setup in this video is just a small version of the idea. The bigger point is that power does not always have to come from a wall, a panel, or a gas generator screaming in the driveway. Sometimes the heat is already sitting right in front of you. That is the loophole. The grid made people dependent. The power company made people passive. I want to make them dangerous again. Link in bio.
The emergency power industry got way too comfortable selling people things that die the second you actually need them. Batteries are useful. Solar is useful. Generators are useful. I am not pretending they are not. Every backup plan has a weak spot though. Batteries run out. Solar quits when the sun quits. Generators need fuel, noise, maintenance, and usually a lot more planning than people admit. So I built something different. PiggyPower Ember turns heat into usable power. A flame on one side. Water on the other. No wall outlet. No solar panel. No grid. Just a small burner doing real work. The important part is the loop. Heat makes electricity. Electricity helps move water. The water keeps the cold side useful. The same setup can leave you with warm water instead of throwing all that heat into the air and calling it wasted. That is the part people miss. This is not free energy. The fuel is the fuel. The claim is simpler than that. If you are already burning something for heat, light, cooking, boiling, or emergency warmth, why let all of it disappear into the room when some of it can be turned into usable power? Most emergency gear is built around waiting. Wait for the power company. Wait for daylight. Wait until the batteries die. Wait until the generator runs out. Wait until somebody else fixes the problem. I hate that mindset. I want gear that keeps doing something. Keep a phone alive. Keep lights useful. Keep water moving. Stretch a heat source. Make fire pull double duty. That is where Ember makes sense. Blackouts, storms, cabins, camping, wood stoves, boilers, off grid setups, emergency heat, and any situation where steady heat already exists. The setup in this video is just a small version of the idea. The bigger point is that power does not always have to come from a wall, a panel, or a gas generator screaming in the driveway. Sometimes the heat is already sitting right in front of you. That is the loophole. The grid made people dependent. The power company made people passive. I want to make them dangerous again. Link in bio.

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