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windshields

@windshieldsvr

25/bi/pilot DH8 | B-737 | B-757 | B-767 |

My house شامل ہوئے Mayıs 2022
156 فالونگ447 فالوورز
Brie 🛸🍿☭
Brie 🛸🍿☭@BanhmiBrieoche·
@windshieldsvr @yellowparenti Can *later* be grown into a colony. I do Agree a mars mission will need something much more akin to a base then a moon mission but my idea of a mars base is a structure that supports multiple visiting crews through handover periods
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Brie 🛸🍿☭
Brie 🛸🍿☭@BanhmiBrieoche·
@windshieldsvr @yellowparenti Cargo starships can get to mars but theres a huge jump between sending stuff to the mars and having a colony. You need alot of equipment developed, built and tested and prove out alot of stuff. And things don't go perfectly, a mars base in 2040s/2050s is possible Very possible
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windshields
windshields@windshieldsvr·
@BanhmiBrieoche @yellowparenti I never said they were analogous, but when the tech level is present I see no reason why it'd be waiting until the 2040/50's. If starship HLS can get to the moon, then there's no reason why unmanned cargo starships can't get to mars.
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Brie 🛸🍿☭
Brie 🛸🍿☭@BanhmiBrieoche·
@windshieldsvr @yellowparenti Ofc the point of the Artemis program is proving ISRU and deep space operations close to earth. But it doesn't mean mars missions are completely analogous to moon missions because of Delta V requirements
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windshields
windshields@windshieldsvr·
@BanhmiBrieoche @yellowparenti I don't really get this. the DV requirements for taking payloads to mars are lower then that of the moon. If Artemis IV is possible in 2028 then building a base on mars is equally possible at the same time pending ISRU technology for a return mission.
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Brie 🛸🍿☭
Brie 🛸🍿☭@BanhmiBrieoche·
@yellowparenti Depends on the timescale. I can't imagine anything resembling a colony either pre 2050 lol
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windshields ری ٹویٹ کیا
Jess
Jess@Sundancing_·
believe in the hail mary
Jess tweet mediaJess tweet mediaJess tweet media
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Paul Muszynski
Paul Muszynski@pamuszynski·
If the Earth is flat, why can't we draw it on a flat map without distorting the proportions? Not only do you have to ignore aircraft route times and distances, but you also have to deny the distances travelled by millions of people every day.
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windshields
windshields@windshieldsvr·
@ZeteticV3 it isn't. It fluctuates by minute percentile depending on latitude. You would not expect a significant change with a rotation rate as low as one rotation per day. (This has been measured in numerous experiments on the ground and in flight).
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The Great Delusion of the 21st Century
@pamuszynski @packers_owner_j @Xentrik85 I fly aircraft you don’t adjust for earth curvature or spin and your map isn’t reality! At local level, you have accuracy at global level you don’t! The Earth is so massive like you say you claim that man can map it all I know, man man can’t! ! there is no 8 inch/ mile squared!
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Pudgy
Pudgy@Pudgy890633·
@HJarsz The only thing immediately obvious is that space cowboys get offended when we call out a fake picture for what it is.
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Pudgy
Pudgy@Pudgy890633·
Ball, oval or oblate spheroid? I wish they could make up their mind.🤣 Thanks for the Friday fun Astonomy Guy.
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windshields@windshieldsvr·
@ryzerth In 2070 or so my raid 0 array will consist of an entire satellite constellation and there's nothing you can do about it
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windshields
windshields@windshieldsvr·
@trustedfragger @alexboge AI datacenters in space are not an idea exclusive to Elon, if it was such a stupid idea multiple entities including the CCP wouldn't be racing to have their own solutions.
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twas merely an act
twas merely an act@trustedfragger·
@alexboge Brother, spaceX engineers didn't miss anything. They know this is stupid. It's Elon who blurts out half witted ideas with impossible timelines just to boost spaceX IPO valuation. And he did it many times before. If this will come it will be much smaller and much much later.
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Alex Boge
Alex Boge@alexboge·
A lot of people have already jumped on the technical errors here, and I’ll get to those. But what bothers me isn’t that he got the physics wrong - it’s that he was so confidently, publicly wrong without a moment’s hesitation. That’s the meta-failure. JerryRigEverything has a very specific lane: destroying brand new phones on camera. People love it. It's genuinely entertaining. But that lane doesn't come anywhere near spacecraft thermal engineering, vacuum physics, or orbital systems design - and that's exactly where he planted his flag here. And I get it, a little. He saw something posted by a company whose founder he clearly and passionately despises. That's a powerful bias trigger - it shortcuts the critical thinking path before it even gets started. Motivated reasoning is real and it gets everyone sometimes. But here's what that shortcut cost him: he announced to 14 million subscribers that SpaceX engineers had missed something blindingly obvious - without taking 30 seconds to ask "Has anyone smarter than me already dealt with this problem?" The answer is yes. Emphatically. Repeatedly. For 65 years. Every satellite ever launched operates in vacuum. The ISS manages 100+ kW of heat rejection in vacuum. The James Webb Space Telescope radiates waste heat so efficiently it approaches 6 Kelvin. The entire discipline of spacecraft thermal engineering exists specifically to solve the problem he thinks nobody solved. Confident ignorance driven by motivated reasoning - and it's a dangerous failure mode at 14 million subscribers. [2/2 to follow]
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ThunderBuns
ThunderBuns@HarperDean935·
@peterrhague Yes, and they stopped doing that because several of them failed and scattered radioactive material all over populated areas. Holy shit how are yall this fucking stupid. You'll also notice how a nuclear reactor is not a sensitive CPU. In fact, getting hot is the entire point.
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Peter Hague
Peter Hague@peterrhague·
The Soviets put nuclear reactors in space you idiot
ThunderBuns@HarperDean935

@is_OwenLewis @peterrhague Satellites work in space because they don't get all that hot. The insides remain around room temp, and the heat radiators can get to about 60-80°C, but that's it. Data centers would cook themselves, this is a fact. This is not an engineering team at work. Its just Elon.

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windshields
windshields@windshieldsvr·
@ZacksJerryRig the international space station and satellites are infamous for having no processors onboard
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JerryRigEverything
JerryRigEverything@ZacksJerryRig·
You know the reason your Stanley or Hydroflask is so good at keeping your water cold is because there's a vacuum inside the walls of the thermos. Heat can't conduct in a vaccum. And "radiated" heat is ineffective at the temperatures processors operate at. This satellite will be like plugging in your gaming PC without a CPU cooler. It'll be dead in minutes.
Vaibhav Sisinty@VaibhavSisinty

Okay this is genuinely insane. SpaceX just unveiled a satellite whose only job is to run AI. Not internet. Not GPS. Just compute, floating in orbit. It's called AI1, and the reason behind it breaks your brain. AI data centers on Earth are hitting a wall, not a chip wall, a physics wall. They need staggering amounts of power and water just to stay cool, and we're running out of grid and land to build them. So Musk's answer is: stop building them on Earth. In orbit, the sun never sets. Free power, 24/7. No water for cooling, you just radiate heat into the vacuum of space. The two things choking AI on the ground barely exist up there. And here's the wild part: Musk says it's easier to build than a Starlink satellite. Strip out the complex antennas and it's "a lot of solar cells, a radiator, and some laser links." One AI1 carries the compute of an Nvidia GB300 rack, the same hardware data centers fight over down here. AI1 is just the first one. The plan is a constellation of up to a million of them. And the timing isn't an accident, SpaceX goes public this week at a ~$1.75 trillion target. This isn't a rocket company anymore. It's positioning itself as the power grid for AI, in space. The race for AI compute just left the planet. Literally. @SpaceX

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