Aaron Peavler
31 posts


@ulalaunch One more Leo flight to go but this is it. This is the final fight of the Atlas the rest of the flights will be starliner flights but after this point the mighty Atlas will be retired. For the final time, #GoATLAS!
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Atlas V received its payload of 29 satellites for the next United Launch Alliance mission to space for Amazon. The Leo 7 launch enables expansion of the Amazon Leo constellation to provide fast, reliable internet to communities around the world. The launch is planned for Friday, May 29, pending range approval. The 29-minute window opens at 12:27 p.m. EDT.
bit.ly/av_leo7 // @Amazonleo


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@TheNorthernAlex I did some searching on Wikitubia Black Hallow and AZ are one and the same so is Smean and Polecat if you read their bios it shows the truth. Also if you look up their names on Google they have several convictions on them from Ice violations to child porn.
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@TheNorthernAlex Here is what I know Tech started connecting with Polecat and Black Hallow in 2019 before the pandemic but by that time they already in trouble with you and Squirrel because of that DOJ video they posted.
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@TheNorthernAlex remember when you banned Polecat and Black Hallow from Code Zero back in 2018? that is when they contacted Tech and forked Truck Sim Wiki over to Wiki Game Guide. Patrickov and I were against it and when I seen that Youtube video you know why.
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@NASAHubble Happy Birthday Hubble! 36 years of taking pictures of the universe. You never cease to amaze me. Keep up the good work.
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@USNINews What he did was court-martial. You do not collide with a Navy vassal. Any collision with a vessel will result in the captain being relieved of command and sent to Leavenworth on a dishonorable discharge.
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CO of USS Truxtun Removed from Command after Oiler Collision — USNI News
news.usni.org/2026/02/22/co-…
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@DAGToddBlanche @POTUS What the Democrats did is illegal! Article 2. Section 2. Clause 2 and 3 " Only the president and the Senate can fill vacancies!" It is there in print Democrat appointed judges do not fill vacancies! So I agree with this decision.
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Judges don’t pick U.S. Attorneys, @POTUS does. See Article II of our Constitution. You are fired, Donald Kinsella.
Brendan Lyons@Brendan_LyonsTU
In an extraordinary end-run on the Trump administration, New York's Northern District judges appoint former federal prosecutor Donald T. Kinsella as new interim U.S. attorney in Albany. timesunion.com/capitol/articl… via @TimesUnion
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@Space_Station Won't be for long station soyuz 23 is scheduled to leave in a couple of days and Dragon 33 will be leaving on Friday that will clear up ports for the arrival of the next dragon mission which is around Christmas.
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For the first time ever, all spacecraft ports at the space station are full with 8 docked vehicles as 10 crewmembers conduct cutting-edge science in orbit. The station will shift to a seven-person crew next week as a Soyuz trio returns to Earth. nasa.gov/blogs/spacesta…
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@Space_Station @northropgrumman @csa_asc @HTVX_JAXA This is temporary so Cygnus does not strike the soyuz solar arrays. Right now things are packed on the space station. Soyuz 23 will be undocking on Wednesday and Dragon 33 will be undocking on Friday to free up the port for the arrival of the next Crew Dragon mission.
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@NorthropGrumman's Cygnus XL is seen in the grip of Canadarm2 after making way for an incoming Soyuz crew vehicle that would arrive on Nov. 27, 2025. Nearby, JAXA’s HTV-X1 remains berthed to the Harmony module as the station orbits high above the Pacific.

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@NASA @Astro_ChrisW @Space_Station Guest coming I will tell @AstroAnnimal to put the turkey in the oven they should be here in 3 hours on @inter
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LIVE: Watch @Astro_ChrisW launch aboard a Soyuz rocket to the @Space_Station, scheduled to lift off at 4:27am ET (0927 UTC). twitter.com/i/broadcasts/1…
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@MuratPetroic @NASASpaceflight They are running out of time there are only four Atlas rockets left once they are gone there is no way to get the starliner spacecraft into space until Vulcan is complete. Another problem in 2026 Russia is going to pull out and end of the decade station is going to be deorbited.
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@NASASpaceflight A big reset for Boeing. If Starliner nails the 2026 uncrewed test, NASA gets the redundancy it needs—and Boeing finally gets back in the game. Until then, everything hinges on flawless execution.
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NASA Statement. Contract with Boeing modified to four Starliner flights. April 2026 mission with an uncrewed Starliner, followed by three crewed flights if that goes well.
>In 2014, NASA awarded a Commercial Crew Transportation Capability contract to Boeing to fly astronauts to and from the International Space Station with its Starliner spacecraft. As part of its contract, Boeing was awarded up to six crewed flights to the orbital complex.
After a thorough evaluation, NASA and Boeing have mutually agreed to modify the contract. As part of the modification, the definitive order has been adjusted to four missions, with the remaining two available as options. The next Starliner flight, known as Starliner-1, will be used by NASA to deliver necessary cargo to the orbital laboratory and allow in-flight validation of the system upgrades implemented following the Crew Flight Test mission last year. NASA and Boeing are targeting no earlier than April 2026 to fly the uncrewed Starliner-1 pending completion of rigorous test, certification, and mission readiness activities. Following Starliner certification, and a successful Starliner-1 mission, Starliner will fly up to three crew rotations to the International Space Station.
“NASA and Boeing are continuing to rigorously test the Starliner propulsion system in preparation for two potential flights next year,” said Steve Stich, manager of NASA’s Commercial Crew Program. “This modification allows NASA and Boeing to focus on safely certifying the system in 2026, execute Starliner’s first crew rotation when ready, and align our ongoing flight planning for future Starliner missions based on station’s operational needs through 2030.”
Certification of Boeing’s Starliner remains important to NASA’s goal of sustained human presence in low Earth orbit and dissimilar redundancy is essential to supporting the agency’s goals and international obligations.<

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@NASASpaceflight Boeing needs to work out the bugs. We have four flights left until the atlas rocket is retired and Boeing is running out of time. If starliner is not ready they are going to void their contract when the station is retired.
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@MikeBrowning271 @histories_arch I know elephants used to number in the millions today there are only 200 left in the wild. The reason being is poachers keeps shooting them and selling their tusk to the Chinese to be turned into trinkets. We must end that and we must save the elephant.
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@histories_arch Stunning.
Times have changed for the worse.....
New Milton, England 🇬🇧 English

A herd of African elephants roamed the vast, sun-baked plains of Tsavo, Kenya, in 1950s; a time when land still felt overwhelmingly wild and uninterrupted. These giants moved in a slow, deliberate rhythm, their massive silhouettes rising like ancient monuments against the shimmering heat. Tsavo was one of the few places where elephants thrived in large numbers, protected by sheer remoteness and the resilience of the ecosystem that sustained them. Calves walked close to their mothers, learning the quiet language of survival through touch, rumbling calls, and the unspoken discipline of the herd.
In this era, the elephants’ world was both beautiful and harsh. They traveled long distances in search of water, following paths carved by generations before them. The red dust of Tsavo stained their skin, creating a striking contrast with the deep greens of scattered acacia trees. Though unaware, these elephants lived at the precipice of change, just before modern pressures—poaching, shrinking habitats, and human expansion—began reshaping their destiny.
Photographs from 1950s capture more than a moment in time; they preserve the memory of a wilder Africa, where elephants moved as they always had, guided by ancient instincts across a land that seemed endless.
© History Pictures
#archaeohistories

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@the_afterist @histories_arch Today elephants are threatened and are on the endangered list. Since the fifties poachers have been shooting them for their tusk. One tusk on the Chinese Black market makes about 15 ivory trinkets we must end that industry and we must save the elephants.
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@histories_arch That’s a lot of elephants! What a pity it is that elephants can’t get together in such numbers. As they are very social animals such huge gatherings must have been pleasing to them. Well, most, I suspect there have always been introverted elephants. 💔
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@histories_arch Now there are less than 200 the rest of them are living in zoos. The reason being is poachers. Poachers kill the elephants and then sell their tusk to the Chinese where they get turned into ivory trinkets. We need to end that and we need these elephant numbers to climb.
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@histories_arch He was confined to the sanatorium and it was his tuberculosis that ended his life. He died with his boots on.
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This is the last known photo of Old West legend Doc Holliday, a man whose life reads like a gripping novel full of grit, gunfire, and haunted shadows. In this rare and silent portrait, you sense the final act of a figure who was as feared as he was fascinating. Holliday, the notorious gambler, deadly gunfighter, and reluctant dentist, stared down the relentless advance of tuberculosis, a disease that slowly drained the fire from his body but never from his spirit. What thoughts lingered behind his tired eyes? Was it memories of wild shootouts, loyalty to friends like Wyatt Earp, or the weight of a destiny he couldn’t escape?
Doc Holliday’s story was one of contradictions—educated yet outlawed, charming yet deadly, fragile yet fiercely defiant. He lived fast, a man dancing on the razor’s edge between life and death, fame and infamy. This image captures more than a face; it captures a moment frozen between the roaring chaos of the frontier and the creeping silence of his final days. Every wrinkle and shadow whispers stories of gunfights fought, debts settled with cards and guns, and a life that burned too bright to be forgotten.
Looking closely, you can’t help but wonder about the man behind the legend—what dreams haunted him when no one watched, what regrets flickered in his fading strength, and what drove him to live so boldly despite knowing the end was near. This final photograph invites us not just to remember Doc Holliday as a historical figure, but to peer into the soul of a man who, even in decline, embodied the wild, restless spirit of the American West.
© History Pictures
#archaeohistories

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@AstroPeggy @NASA @SpaceX @Astro_Wheels First for everything @AstroPeggy hopefully this suit works because next year it is going to be taking its first walk on the moon that is if we get to the moon.
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Testing a new spacesuit is a huge responsibility; it's not only about keeping the astronaut safe, it's also about functionality. During our @NASA and @SpaceX tests, @Astro_Wheels and I practiced interacting with the control panel to ensure controls could be reached, gates could be easily opened, and where crucial elements, like handrails, will need to be placed. It's important to pay attention to every detail and identify any issues the future Artemis Astronauts could encounter, no matter how small.

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@AstroPeggy First time I seen a starlink parade was when I was coming home from my brothers and I was also coming home from night class over in Gooding a sight to behold when the StarLink parade comes overhead.
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Amazing, Don! I have never seen it from space!
Don Pettit@astro_Pettit
My best sighting of a Starlink satellite "train" from orbit!
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