ostbender

2.9K posts

ostbender

ostbender

@ostpbender

Erdős number 4, Über rating 4.9

Katılım Şubat 2022
72 Takip Edilen49 Takipçiler
ostbender
ostbender@ostpbender·
@devarbol Why are smaller cities something we need to protect?
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ostbender
ostbender@ostpbender·
@Chris_arnade These takes are always convenient when you're being fed by a king
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ostbender
ostbender@ostpbender·
@PeterRobinsonMD Why even fix it? Why is everyone so obsessed with fixing decaying towns, just let them die
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Peter Robinson
Peter Robinson@PeterRobinsonMD·
There is no solution for the shortage of physicians outside of desirable metropolitan areas in the US. This is a consequence of these areas being 60-70 years into a process of outmigration. Doctors match the distribution of other skilled professions, but people somehow imagine physicians will choose to move to the towns that architects, engineers, scientists and even athletes and artists leave.
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ostbender
ostbender@ostpbender·
@Delicious_Tacos The worst part of all of this is that in real life they're probably super boring to hang out with. That was the appeal of Epstein, he was the only guy actually living like a cartoon billionaire
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ostbender
ostbender@ostpbender·
@Osinttechnical Is there anything wrong with the word "squadron"? Why do we need to use all these gay neologisms?
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OSINTtechnical
OSINTtechnical@Osinttechnical·
Israeli Air Force KC-707 fueling up a strike package of F-15s over Syria on their way to Iran this morning.
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skooks
skooks@skooookum·
British Vanguard class is the most fuckable modern submarine
skooks tweet media
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RE-OPEN THE SIZZLERS
RE-OPEN THE SIZZLERS@SaladBarFan·
People talk a lot about their self-exile to BlueSky, but one possible explanation for the decline of Woke Power today is that they’ve all become hypochondriacs afraid to leave their houses since 2020.
RE-OPEN THE SIZZLERS tweet media
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strangehours
strangehours@dugmartsch·
@2024dion Private equity levered to the tits came at malls first. Forced big rents per square ft and wanted a cut of gross sales. They forced out the synergy that made malls a destination. Outlet malls and high end still strong.
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ostbender
ostbender@ostpbender·
@eigenrobot I hope they occupy it because i bet $50 on it on polymarket
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eigenrobot
eigenrobot@eigenrobot·
what i dont understand is why occupy the island instead of simply knocking out port infrastructure to prevent loading if that's the objective. my context is thin and i imagine there are good reasons but i am curious what could justify the cost
Faytuks News@Faytuks

An interesting article on the prospect of capturing Kharg Island "U.S. troops may well take Kharg Island, only to endure ballistic-missile strikes, drone attacks, and petrochemical smoke, all without a reliable means of obtaining logistical support" theatlantic.com/international/…

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ostbender
ostbender@ostpbender·
@IntractableLion Every time you need to change a lightbulb a committee from the Ministry of Culture must convene and it costs 15000 euros
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ostbender@ostpbender·
@aemonten Even better - don't write a review paper
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Alejandro Montenegro
Alejandro Montenegro@aemonten·
If you write a review paper with a grad student or postdoc in your lab, for God's sake, please let them be first authors.
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ostbender
ostbender@ostpbender·
@devarbol Brexit was pretty funny in this regard
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ostbender
ostbender@ostpbender·
@LiteralSheridan @eigenrobot Yeah, we got an order of magnitude change after the Industrial Revolution and now it's settling in a new equilibrium. The world was *kinda* at equilibrium from the Neolithic up to eg the 1400s, the last 2 centuries were very unusual
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eigenrobot
eigenrobot@eigenrobot·
if a culture has lost the ability to maintain replacement fertility across its carriers it's fundamentally failing irrespective of anything else happening
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eigenrobot
eigenrobot@eigenrobot·
@uckema oh yeah. hmmm. hard to run a refinery on board
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eigenrobot
eigenrobot@eigenrobot·
really impressive thing about USN nuclear carriers is that they have desalination plants and carry trawling nets so that they can operate at sea basically indefinitely
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ostbender
ostbender@ostpbender·
@curtis_yarvin Hitler didn't consider Anglo-Saxons and Germans to be different races
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Curtis Yarvin
Curtis Yarvin@curtis_yarvin·
Name is literally a racial slur
ArchaeoHistories@histories_arch

The jerrycan is one of the most consequential pieces of military equipment to emerge from the Second World War, yet few people know its story. It was designed in Germany in 1937 by Vinzenz Grünvogel of Müller engineering firm in Schwelm. The Wehrmacht specified that a soldier had to be able to carry two full cans or four empty ones, which drove the distinctive triple-handle design. The rectangular shape made the cans stackable, the recessed welded seam resisted impact damage, and an interior plastic lining allowed the same can to carry either fuel or water. An air pocket built into the design allowed the can to float if dropped in water. By 1939, Germany had stockpiled thousands of these cans in preparation for war, issuing them to motorized troops alongside rubber hose for siphoning fuel from any available source. The Allies had no equivalent. American engineer Paul Pleiss encountered three of the cans in Berlin and flew back to Philadelphia to alert military officials, but could generate no interest. The British Army relied on a flimsy four-gallon tin container that leaked at its crimped seams, often losing as much as twenty-five percent of transported fuel before it reached troops. At least one cargo ship exploded from fuel vapors accumulating in its hold from leaking containers. When British forces captured German jerrycans during the Norwegian Campaign in 1940 and later in North Africa, they used them in preference to their own equipment whenever possible. The United States eventually reverse-engineered the design, though their version replaced the recessed welded seam with rolled seams prone to leaking and removed the interior lining from fuel cans. Even the inferior American copy proved transformative: over nineteen million were required to support US forces in Europe alone by May 1945. President Franklin Roosevelt credited the jerrycan directly with enabling Allied armies to advance across France at a pace that exceeded Germany's own Blitzkrieg of 1940. The Soviet Union recognized the design's value and adopted it as their standard liquid container, a version still produced in Russia today. The jerrycan remains a NATO standard container and a direct descendant of Grünvogel's 1937 design is still in use across military and civilian contexts worldwide. #archaeohistories

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ostbender
ostbender@ostpbender·
@laminyaml How many cousins do you have living in the US?
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ostbender
ostbender@ostpbender·
@Archer83Able You know that guy on the right is holding a gun pointed at her so she reads the paper correctly
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Status-6 (War & Military News)
Status-6 (War & Military News)@Archer83Able·
United States Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard: - Russia retains the capability to selectively challenge U.S. interests globally by military and non-military means; - The most dangerous threat posed by Russia to the U.S. is the potential of an escalatory spiral in an ongoing conflict, such as Ukraine, or a new conflict that led to direct hostilities, including the potential deployment of nuclear weapons; - Russia is also building an extensive counter space capabilities to contest U.S. space dominance. Its development of a nuclear counter space weapon poses the greatest single threat to the world's space architecture. - During the past year, the IC assesses that Russia has maintained the upper hand in the war against Ukraine. U.S. led negotiations between Moscow and Kyiv are ongoing. Until such an agreement is met, Moscow is likely to continue fighting a slow war of attrition until they view their objectives have been achieved.
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ostbender
ostbender@ostpbender·
@wrathofgnon It's an industrial product, a machine for working in, you might as well complain that a VW Beetle looks like it does.
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Wrath Of Gnon
Wrath Of Gnon@wrathofgnon·
It is of course sad that he died, my condolences to his family etc. but oh boy. Frank Duffy: "In the 1960s, Duffy was responsible for introducing Bürolandschaft (office landscaping) into the English-speaking world." Bonus: what he designed, where he lived. It never ever fails.
Wrath Of Gnon tweet mediaWrath Of Gnon tweet mediaWrath Of Gnon tweet mediaWrath Of Gnon tweet media
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