Steve Burton

4.2K posts

Steve Burton

Steve Burton

@mapsonburt

I’m not “LGBTQXYZ+”, I’m not a “tree”, I’m not “Woke”, I’m not a “Warmist”, I’m am not an antisemite, and I don’t have any respect for those who are.

Where ever I happen to be atm Katılım Aralık 2023
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Steve Burton
Steve Burton@mapsonburt·
It's past time. Boycott any company that advertises as of today on MSNBC, CNN, CBS, ABC, PBS. Tell them why. #BoycottMSMEnablers. If we cut off their funding, they die. It's past time.
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Steve Burton
Steve Burton@mapsonburt·
It’s not HISTORIC unless it fails (and I hope that it doesn’t and meets all its goals). At best it will go ONE percent further than Apollo 13 did BY ACCIDENT and it won’t even pass low or orbit the moon. The three orbital Apollo missions 8,10 and 13 all orbited at about 100-200 miles. Artemis II’s closest approach is 4047 miles. It will appear to be the size of a basketball at arms length vs taking up the whole window on Apollo. To be fair it will also be going about 180-240 mph faster on reentry than Apollo 10 but that’s only less than 1% because they both came in at roughly 25,000 mph. This one might be a bit more exciting as Artemis I lost a bunch of heat tiles on its reentry. Artemis I with nobody on board just controlled by computers did a much more impressive feat as they actually orbited the moon for 6 days and got another 30,000 miles out (almost 10 times the delta between Apollo 13 and Artemis II. Nobody remembers anything about that except some of the heat tiles blew up and they could have penetrated the cabin.
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Matt Walsh
Matt Walsh@MattWalshBlog·
It's ridiculous that NASA is launching a mission around the Moon this week that will send humans farther into space than ever before and it's getting almost no attention. A landmark moment in the history of our species. History books will care about this moment even if you don't.
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Techmik
Techmik@MichaelAluya3·
@MattWalshBlog Apollo 13 held the record for 56 years. On April 1, 2026, that record falls. 4 astronauts. 10 days. The farthest humans have ever been from home. The world is looking at the Strait of Hormuz, but the real story is at the Kennedy Space Center. #ArtemisII #NASA #MoonBound"
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Steve Burton
Steve Burton@mapsonburt·
@Player4life86 @MattWalshBlog Yes moron. The lunar lander wasn’t the same ship they left circling the moon to return to earth on. You spent more time putting those pictures together than it would have taken you to find a picture of them docked before they sent the lander into orbit to head off for earth.
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Player4life
Player4life@Player4life86·
@MattWalshBlog So we landed on the moon with that lunar ship then, landed on the ocean in the cone shape ship?
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Steve Burton
Steve Burton@mapsonburt·
Matt, in two YEARS nobody will remember this mission unless it fails as it is a replay of Apollo 8 and Apollo 10 and very few people remember those. The fact that they are a bit farther out is interesting but it is indicative of a shitty design that I predicted 10 years ago would be overly expensive and would not beat much cheaper alternatives. The fact that they aren’t even repeating it for Artemis 4 proves it.
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Senate Republicans
Senate Republicans@SenateGOP·
Thanks to President Trump, TSA agents are finally being paid despite Democrats’ best efforts to keep blocking their paychecks.
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Steve Burton
Steve Burton@mapsonburt·
@SenateGOP YOU ALL WALKED AWAY IN THE MIDDLE OF THE NIGHT AFTER FUCKING OVER AMERICANS WITH YOUR SLIMY DEAL WITH THE DEMOCRATS. You have no moral justification anymore so until the Save America Act is passed, STFU.
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Senate Republicans
Senate Republicans@SenateGOP·
Democrats walked away from DHS funding they themselves negotiated months ago because Schumer caved to the radical wing of his party. Now, they’re holding all DHS funding hostage in a failed attempt to stop the deportation of illegal alien criminals.
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Steve Burton
Steve Burton@mapsonburt·
@ChrisMartzWX Careful bud. A lot of that generation went to Vietnam and wouldn’t take kindly to being called hippies and weirdos. Don’t generalize. They are used to getting the truth on TV news. They’ve been lied to and don’t know it.
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Chris Martz
Chris Martz@ChrisMartzWX·
When I was a kid, I used to think that old people were smart and wise. That definitely applied to those part of the silent generation. My grandads were in that group, born in 1936 and 1944, respectively. And, boy I miss them. That generation of elders is mostly gone. Now we are stuck with these hippie-era weirdos for the next 10-20 years.
Matt Van Swol@mattvanswol

This is footage of the "NO KINGS" protest in Black Mountain NC... Nearly EVERY SINGLE PERSON at this protest is White and over the age of 65. You cannot make this up!!!!!!

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Steve Burton
Steve Burton@mapsonburt·
Yup. My theory is that you measure time by how much time you have lived. When you are 2, last year is half a lifetime for you. When you are 10, it’s 10%. When you are 65 it’s a tiny fraction. The practical impact is that time accelerates when you get older. I’m about 15 years from the age my grandfather died. I retired 9 years ago. That seems like yesterday.
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`@ick_real·
When people get in their 50s and 60s and up, do you start thinking about how many years you have left? I’m curious
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Steve Burton
Steve Burton@mapsonburt·
My first computer was a Commodore Pet 8k. It had a cassette player to load up basic and the operating system. I first learned Basic but quickly learned 6502 Assembly to write a fight simulator for it (way before MS Flight Simulator). I’ve since learned Pascal, Fortran, COBOL, Algol, APL, C, 80386 Assembler, C++, REXX, Visual Basic, Java, JavaScript, Python, Swift and now I’m learning AI programming (not really a language but a different paradigm). I’ve been retired for 9 years but I will never stop learning.
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exQUIZitely 🕹️
exQUIZitely 🕹️@exQUIZitely·
I got my C64 in 1984. One of my earliest memories is the strong desire to understand how it worked. Games obviously had the highest appeal, but I was also curious about what lay “behind” the screen - how things functioned, how they were connected. Not so much from a hardware perspective, but more from how programs actually worked. Naturally, in those days, you would read about programming in magazines, and they often included several pages of code that you could type in to create "your own" program. None of those programs were overly complex or particularly great, but that wasn’t the point. It was simply fascinating to see that if you wrote this, then that happened. If you tweaked a value here, a color would change there. Add an extra parameter and the result looked even better - or it all fell apart, depending on what you changed. I remember one of the earliest programs I wrote in BASIC was a number guessing game. You had 5 guesses and started by entering a number between 1 and 100. The program would then tell you "too high" or "too low" relative to the random number it had generated for that session. What a truly epic experience for a 9-year-old at the time! I changed parameters that were easy to identify in the code, such as the number of tries you had, the range of the random number, and - what made me especially proud - I even modified the computer's replies. Instead of just "too high" or "too low," it would now give more precise feedback (e.g. way too high, too high, a little bit too high, etc.). All of this sounds extremely trivial from today's perspective, but it was a playful way to explore what was possible. I continued writing programs in BASIC and later dabbled in Turbo Pascal. It never went much further than that, but it remains one of my best memories from a time when computers felt more fascinating and accessible - they made you curious and invited you to be creative. Did you ever do this back in the day? If so, what were your first steps? BASIC, Pascal...?
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Steve Burton
Steve Burton@mapsonburt·
@snoopyschimera The didn’t really play up the 1.5G on the trip either. There was one reference to whether he always had muscles on his whiteboard but they had to chop that detail out to shorten the story.
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project hail kiwi
project hail kiwi@snoopyschimera·
i wish the ending of project hail mary had shown how much living on erid affected grace like … he was walking with a cane at the end of the book because the gravity on erid is making his bones degenerate faster
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Wendy Plowman
Wendy Plowman@WendyPlowman·
No way in hell, Absolutely not, Fuck no, Hard pass, Over my dead body, Not a chance, Nope not happening, Hell to the no, Big fat no, Negative ghost rider, Under no circumstances, Not in a million years, Absolutely fucking not, Don't even think about it, Straight up no, No, and that's final,
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Thrilla the Gorilla
Thrilla the Gorilla@ThrillaRilla369·
To the women who are on this app, be honest Are you OKAY with a man claiming to be a woman using the ladies room if you're in there? 🤷🤔
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Steve Burton
Steve Burton@mapsonburt·
@mnemetic @TomjSmith2 @wealthmoose I can’t say it better. We now know exactly who to look out for next time they try to pull this bullshit. Oh and you are acting just like all those Germans who claimed they had no idea what was happening in the concentration camps outside their villages - ASSHOLE.
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Johnny_mnemetic
Johnny_mnemetic@mnemetic·
@mapsonburt @TomjSmith2 @wealthmoose No one cares about your made up bullshit, and hurt fee fees. It was a litmus test, about how much you care about your community, the elderly and society in general. You failed, asshole.
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Steve Burton
Steve Burton@mapsonburt·
The real issue with them isn’t really the materials (Carbon nanotubes are strong enough to be the tether). It is that the time required to do a round trip would be measured in weeks making it economically infeasible. The top counter mass that pulls the cable tight would need to be about 100,000 km (~60,000 miles) up. You could (and most designs do) build a detransiting station lower down but basic physics comes into play. Essentially if you stepped off at any point below Geosynchronous orbit (~36,000 km or ~22,000 miles) you would not have enough tangential velocity to maintain orbit and you would fall back into earth. At GEO, you are traveling at 3 km/sec or about 6900mph. At 100 miles (the internationally recognized boundary of space aka Kármán line ) you would only have a velocity of ~0.5km/sec or ~1000 mph which is only about -6% of what is needed. The problem is actually exponential as well at 10,000 kms (~6200 miles) you are still only at ~24% of the needed velocity. Those massive rockets aren’t used just to get the mass off the earth up 100 miles, they are used to accelerate to the velocity needed so even if you left the atmosphere you still need to accelerate 94% of the velocity (which still results in significant fuel savings). Realistically then since we aren’t towing rockets into space to be launched perpendicular to the cables, you need to go all the way up to the geosynchronous space station 36000 kms above the equator. The best projections for the maximum speed of any climber are about 400 km/h so you are looking at 6-7 days to get there and 6-7 days to get back. If you had dual tethers (one for up and one for down ) and you put the maximum number of climbers on each cable (determined to be about 7) that’s ONE trip per day each way at peak throughput. That’s about 5500t per year. We can do this today with about 600 Falcon 9 launches or 185 starship launches at a cost of $44.5 and $16.7B respectively. Pretty hard to make a business case on that plus there’s that pesky problem of not being able to reliably produce the tether (we need 100,000 kms of something we can’t grow more than a few feet of in the lab and can’t join it together. )
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Omegilla
Omegilla@omegilla·
Earth spins fast enough to theoretically work for it. Its not entirely about speed as it is finding a material strong enough to withstand all the pressures placed upon a space elevator. We even currently have a contender for that material but its simply too hard to make in enough quantities to build one. If the Eridians have a space elevator then that means they already have the engineering knowledge and materials to make one. Interplanetary exchange would quickly grant us the tools to do so as well, and would change a lot for life on earth and for any plans to colonize the moon or Mars.
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Delta9250
Delta9250@deltaIV9250·
You know in Hail Mary’s world, astrophage solves literally every spaceflight problem ever. Not sure if you can use it for surface-to-orbit, but it makes interplanetary travel so easy.
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Steve Burton
Steve Burton@mapsonburt·
The sun wasn’t “dying”. The Astrophage was soaking up its output radiated out towards earth (and the other planets) so the effect was that earth was getting less of it and cooling. Also in the book Andy was clear that in all the star systems the decrease leveled off - unfortunately for us, this was at a level below which we would lose half the population within 26 years.
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Steve Burton
Steve Burton@mapsonburt·
@JasonLavigneAB The Indians didn’t have the written word so “signing” a treaty was done with a mark. The amount of grievances they shout about after having Canadians (and Albertans) fed and housed them for a century is ridiculous.
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Jason Lavigne
Jason Lavigne@JasonLavigneAB·
If Alberta First Nations had a veto over Alberta independence, they wouldn’t need to file an application for an injunction or appeal to King Charles. The fact is, they are taking legal action, and on April 7, I expect the court to deny their injunction. iclg.com/news/23426-fir…
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MansaMusa
MansaMusa@MansaMusa720·
@RiseOfAlberta I personally never support the separation of Alberta from Canada. It would weaken Canada and its people. The Prime Minister of Canada should be given time to fix everything.
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Rise Of Alberta
Rise Of Alberta@RiseOfAlberta·
Danielle Smith just made it official. The independence question will be counted first in October. Only if it fails do the other nine questions come into play. Because if independence passes, it becomes the defining result of the entire referendum.
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Steve Burton
Steve Burton@mapsonburt·
@SenateGOP No thanks to you! We can only thank a Republican Senator for running out of town and giving Schummer what he wanted.
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Senate Republicans
Senate Republicans@SenateGOP·
Thank a Democrat for long lines and disrupted air travel. Thank President Trump for doing everything he can to keep airports open.
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