The US didn’t “invent” the internet. It did play a pivotal role in its development, but CERN also was there at the beginning! The US arguably just deployed it widely first.
I added “most of the time” to match my experience. If the entire building is a SCIF, I’ve usually left my phone in the car. If it’s just a room in a building, they usually have lockers outside and use the honor system.
That’s still wild IMO for a 152. Economical trainers they are, but summer mountain flying plane they are not. Maybe if you ride some thermals…
Oh yikes. Every 152 I’ve flown makes 172s look like Superman. They are anaemic even at sea level in the summer! In that class of plane, 182s are my personal minimum up here in the summer. I have heard of very…
Even in the US, nothing is technically stopping you from walking into a SCIF with a phone most of the time. We used the honor system. I would almost automatically assume that any SCIF in a foreign country was…
Lots of comments here about a 172 at these altitudes. Our field is at 7,500’ and has the continental divide with peaks over 14,000’ on one end of the runway. A 172 can fly up here, but you have to be smart and very…
> What used to take a dedicated research team and millions of dollars of compute (to play professional go), can now be done with a sub $1 gpt4 call (to do something like make strategy slides). Is that an accurate…
It’s really not that bad unless you really don’t want to be found. Most DMCA/copyright firms just do a basic investigation which stops at the IP AFAIK. Mullvad and I’m sure other modern VPN clients have “kill switches”…
I find their error model to be off for my location. I'm in a mountain valley in Colorado, and forecasting the weather is like throwing darts at the wall (especially with precipitation). We have no radar coverage, and…
I think for SEALs in particular the issue would be cumulative large shockwaves, and how to better protect against them.
I think it depends on the shockwave. Maybe someone can math it out, but it’s like the sound leaf blower makes vs standing right next to a jet engine. I have never seen a shockwave on the ground behind a “normal”…
Never underestimate the ability of humans to throw something really hard ;) I actually think if the object was on the right trajectory and we had enough time, that you could pretty much park an impactor in its path. You…
I wonder if a one-way trip with an impactor would be useful. It would at least be easier than a roundtrip journey to and from solar escape velocity. Also, it seems like the space base weapons treaty is being ignored now…
I had a similar experience recently. Massive turbulence on a commercial flight low over the continental divide flying into Denver. I personally witnessed 3 people vomiting, but I was all smiles the whole time. I am in…
Yes. Worst case, they will have to take a Dragon or Soyuz home.
What happens in peacetime is low funding and stagnant military leadership. If things ramp up, you’ll see something akin to what happened around WW2 or Ukraine more recently. “Peacetime” officers will rapidly be…
I don’t know much about LLMs, but is it possible to throttle their training? Solar has gotten pretty cheap, and I’m just wondering if you can throttle up and down based on how much output the panels are producing.
Sure it does! I’m rural and our phones/ISP went out last week. I activated our Starlink roam (you can access the captive portal while service is disabled) & all the remote working neighbors came over and shared the…
I had to check, but you're not wrong - only 47% of total are controlled re-entries. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spacecraft_cemetery#cite_note-...) I thought I recently read about a law requiring a de-orbit plan for…
Not only this, but they fall in a randomly-distributed fashion. Most satellites are still under control and steered to a predetermined area for reentry over the South Pacific.
It's kind of like the industrial revolution. I don't think anyone knows what will happen (it's the classic human behavior of kicking the problem down the road), but the collective human mind has decided we want global…
Yes whoops. I should have made that distinction. The parent comment was talking about electricity, and that’s what I meant. I would argue that the USA as a whole generally has more climate variability than the UK in…
Keep in mind that the UK is much smaller and has a colder climate in general. If you look at a state like Colorado, the energy usage is vastly different than Florida or Texas with lots of heat and humidity. I would bet…
Long term yes, but people still go to the ISS in 0g. I was just pointing out that some things that are bad for humans actually make the rocketry problem for returning easier for this bullet point.
It doesn’t really make sense, but some childhood part of me likes to imagine us as a species of explorers. There are tons of things humans do that don’t make sense. IMO, the original moon landings didn’t make a lot of…
The US didn’t “invent” the internet. It did play a pivotal role in its development, but CERN also was there at the beginning! The US arguably just deployed it widely first.
I added “most of the time” to match my experience. If the entire building is a SCIF, I’ve usually left my phone in the car. If it’s just a room in a building, they usually have lockers outside and use the honor system.
That’s still wild IMO for a 152. Economical trainers they are, but summer mountain flying plane they are not. Maybe if you ride some thermals…
Oh yikes. Every 152 I’ve flown makes 172s look like Superman. They are anaemic even at sea level in the summer! In that class of plane, 182s are my personal minimum up here in the summer. I have heard of very…
Even in the US, nothing is technically stopping you from walking into a SCIF with a phone most of the time. We used the honor system. I would almost automatically assume that any SCIF in a foreign country was…
Lots of comments here about a 172 at these altitudes. Our field is at 7,500’ and has the continental divide with peaks over 14,000’ on one end of the runway. A 172 can fly up here, but you have to be smart and very…
> What used to take a dedicated research team and millions of dollars of compute (to play professional go), can now be done with a sub $1 gpt4 call (to do something like make strategy slides). Is that an accurate…
It’s really not that bad unless you really don’t want to be found. Most DMCA/copyright firms just do a basic investigation which stops at the IP AFAIK. Mullvad and I’m sure other modern VPN clients have “kill switches”…
I find their error model to be off for my location. I'm in a mountain valley in Colorado, and forecasting the weather is like throwing darts at the wall (especially with precipitation). We have no radar coverage, and…
I think for SEALs in particular the issue would be cumulative large shockwaves, and how to better protect against them.
I think it depends on the shockwave. Maybe someone can math it out, but it’s like the sound leaf blower makes vs standing right next to a jet engine. I have never seen a shockwave on the ground behind a “normal”…
Never underestimate the ability of humans to throw something really hard ;) I actually think if the object was on the right trajectory and we had enough time, that you could pretty much park an impactor in its path. You…
I wonder if a one-way trip with an impactor would be useful. It would at least be easier than a roundtrip journey to and from solar escape velocity. Also, it seems like the space base weapons treaty is being ignored now…
I had a similar experience recently. Massive turbulence on a commercial flight low over the continental divide flying into Denver. I personally witnessed 3 people vomiting, but I was all smiles the whole time. I am in…
Yes. Worst case, they will have to take a Dragon or Soyuz home.
What happens in peacetime is low funding and stagnant military leadership. If things ramp up, you’ll see something akin to what happened around WW2 or Ukraine more recently. “Peacetime” officers will rapidly be…
I don’t know much about LLMs, but is it possible to throttle their training? Solar has gotten pretty cheap, and I’m just wondering if you can throttle up and down based on how much output the panels are producing.
Sure it does! I’m rural and our phones/ISP went out last week. I activated our Starlink roam (you can access the captive portal while service is disabled) & all the remote working neighbors came over and shared the…
I had to check, but you're not wrong - only 47% of total are controlled re-entries. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spacecraft_cemetery#cite_note-...) I thought I recently read about a law requiring a de-orbit plan for…
Not only this, but they fall in a randomly-distributed fashion. Most satellites are still under control and steered to a predetermined area for reentry over the South Pacific.
It's kind of like the industrial revolution. I don't think anyone knows what will happen (it's the classic human behavior of kicking the problem down the road), but the collective human mind has decided we want global…
Yes whoops. I should have made that distinction. The parent comment was talking about electricity, and that’s what I meant. I would argue that the USA as a whole generally has more climate variability than the UK in…
Keep in mind that the UK is much smaller and has a colder climate in general. If you look at a state like Colorado, the energy usage is vastly different than Florida or Texas with lots of heat and humidity. I would bet…
Long term yes, but people still go to the ISS in 0g. I was just pointing out that some things that are bad for humans actually make the rocketry problem for returning easier for this bullet point.
It doesn’t really make sense, but some childhood part of me likes to imagine us as a species of explorers. There are tons of things humans do that don’t make sense. IMO, the original moon landings didn’t make a lot of…