JustAPerspective
JustAPerspective t1_jefglt3 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in TIL that Walt Disney World began as "The Florida Project". Dummy corporations were used, by Walt Disney Productions, to buy up 27,000 acres of land to avoid bursts of land speculation in the Orlando area. Early rumors assumed possible development by NASA, Ford, the Rockefellers, and Howard Hughes. by jdward01
Subsistence existence people don't form corporations - that was begun by rich white dudes.
JustAPerspective t1_jebh7uf wrote
Reply to TIL that Walt Disney World began as "The Florida Project". Dummy corporations were used, by Walt Disney Productions, to buy up 27,000 acres of land to avoid bursts of land speculation in the Orlando area. Early rumors assumed possible development by NASA, Ford, the Rockefellers, and Howard Hughes. by jdward01
Headline Translation: Rich White Dudes outmaneuvered other Rich White Dudes to claim stolen land.
JustAPerspective t1_jebgys3 wrote
Reply to A group of college students are sending a rover the size of a shoebox to the moon by speckz
The Human Legacy: flinging trash everywhere with no thought to clean-up.
Evolutionarily equal to shit-flinging simians, except humans use middlemen.
JustAPerspective t1_jdwy2bv wrote
Reply to Paradoxically, what makes you unique is your relation to other people. The more robustly we try to identify who we are, the more we become embedded in all others. by IAI_Admin
Check of Theory: Those who care not what others think about them would value that input less.
Instead of fixating about how others perceive one, focus instead on what one does that affects others... & the perception should handle itself.
JustAPerspective t1_jdbosmo wrote
Reply to comment by BirdsLikeSka in The Northern Lights could dazzle the skies from Washington to New York on Friday, blown by winds from a giant 'hole' on the sun by thisisinsider
>I confess, I do expend energy over things I can't control, but I try to control that.
Same - the reminders to the selves are constant, and necessary. Still, what we practice, we improve at.
JustAPerspective t1_jdbn197 wrote
Reply to comment by BirdsLikeSka in The Northern Lights could dazzle the skies from Washington to New York on Friday, blown by winds from a giant 'hole' on the sun by thisisinsider
Worrying about the sun is to expend energy over something one has zero control over - that sounds pretty crazy.
JustAPerspective t1_jd9w78t wrote
Reply to The Northern Lights could dazzle the skies from Washington to New York on Friday, blown by winds from a giant 'hole' on the sun by thisisinsider
"The bigger the display, the steeper the mark-up." - Rule of Acquisition #287, maybe
If the flashing lights are getting brighter, the beat may be about to drop.
JustAPerspective t1_janvgnj wrote
Reply to Royal Astronomical Society announces all journals to publish as open access from 2024 by magenta_placenta
Aw... innit it cute when exclusive clubs hit that tipping point for open sourcing?
JustAPerspective t1_j9zepko wrote
Reply to comment by AbandonedPlanet in Massive 'forbidden planet' orbits a strangely tiny star only 4 times its size. by Rifletree
>I mean, aren't gas giants just "failed" stars that never got big enough?
No one knows.
See, the article talks about how previous theories are no longer necessarily applicable - which means everything we've been assuming about this stuff now gets rechecked, because right there in front of us is proof that what we believed before... ain't so.
It disrupts the presumed accuracy of every model that has relied on the previous interpretation. All speculation that relied on the previous theories for validity is now suspect, and how much of a rewrite will need to happen is yet to be determined.
Which is a constant in all facets of science, just btw. Every discovery, from the coronal loop optical illusion theory to the actual diameter of Terra's atmosphere, to the true electromagnetic strength of Sol, even the existence of tectonic plates... are updates to what humans believed was completely true.
"Imagine what you'll 'know' tomorrow." - K, MIB
Some minds refuse to accept new data if it contradicts what they believed before. Other minds are eager to accept and integrate new concepts. Reckon we're all finding the happy balance between both guidances?
Unsolicited Advice: Don't worry about the emotional stability of internet randos - if they're adults, they know it's their job to regulate their own feelings. If they're children, they'll blame you whenever they're unhappy anyway.
Your zen should be far more precious than internet rando opinions. 🖖
JustAPerspective t1_j9zbmb9 wrote
Reply to comment by Kleanish in Massive 'forbidden planet' orbits a strangely tiny star only 4 times its size. by Rifletree
Any pretense you read the article? 🤔
JustAPerspective t1_j9zbcnj wrote
Reply to comment by Brickleberried in Massive 'forbidden planet' orbits a strangely tiny star only 4 times its size. by Rifletree
This.
The idea that human theories of the universe have any inherent credibility is patently absurd - like an infant in the womb asserting how things work on other continents, based solely on their limited experiences under vastly different circumstances.
Everything humans "know" is a guess that might be wrong.
Every mistake we discover is an opportunity to celebrate how many more options there truly are in the universe.
JustAPerspective t1_j6paw7w wrote
Reply to comment by AUFunmacy in The Conscious AI Conundrum: Exploring the Possibility of Artificial Self-Awareness by AUFunmacy
>I don't think we are any more than the electric and chemical signals in our brains, simply because there isn't anything else that we can point at yet.
Pragmatic.
The limitation of the practice is that it presumes anything humans haven't discovered yet isn't relevant... while simultaneously refusing to allow for what people haven't learned.
Yet science is merely observation of what is - any incomplete observation will be suspect in its conclusions due to the variables not yet grasped.
That the atoms comprising your system shift by 98% annually indicates that - at some level - what makes up "you" is not physical.
Which leaves a lot of room for learning.
JustAPerspective t1_j6ivooh wrote
Reply to ‘Extraordinary’ footage shows one of the closest known approaches of a near-Earth object — On 26 Jan. 2023, asteroid 2023 BU was about 2,200 miles above the surface of the Earth by marketrent
This footage was definitely not made in the 50s for a high school presentation on the moon launch.
It just looks like it was.
JustAPerspective t1_j6iq57z wrote
Reply to NASA tested new propulsion tech that could unlock new deep space travel possibilities by Creepy_Toe2680
The best part about this discovery?
They used existing tech that had been assumed not to work... & made it work better than anyone had ever thought.
Discovery oft comes in simply finding the assumptions others missed.
JustAPerspective t1_j64obtr wrote
Reply to comment by DidaskolosHermeticon in Earth's inner core may be slowing down, but “Nothing cataclysmic is happening,” says Hrvoje Tkalcic, a geophysicist at Australian National University. “The inner core is now more in sync with the rest of the planet than a decade ago when it was spinning a bit faster.” by clayt6
It's easy to be confident when there's limited information available.
While what you're saying is highly probable based on our current understanding, these two phenomena may be related - it is not absolute. Assumption precludes, and oft forgets, discovery.
JustAPerspective t1_j63vlzi wrote
Reply to comment by oalfonso in Earth's inner core may be slowing down, but “Nothing cataclysmic is happening,” says Hrvoje Tkalcic, a geophysicist at Australian National University. “The inner core is now more in sync with the rest of the planet than a decade ago when it was spinning a bit faster.” by clayt6
Magnetic North has been wandering around a lot the last decade or so. Might be related, though doubt it's causal.
JustAPerspective t1_j63vchz wrote
Reply to comment by Sharlinator in Earth's inner core may be slowing down, but “Nothing cataclysmic is happening,” says Hrvoje Tkalcic, a geophysicist at Australian National University. “The inner core is now more in sync with the rest of the planet than a decade ago when it was spinning a bit faster.” by clayt6
>It’s not a “magnetic engine” in any relevant sense.
Preposterous. Relevance is a matter of perspective; your prerequisite appears to be something along the lines of "if it ain't human-made it ain't real"?
​
>It’s a huge rotating ball of iron and nickel and conservation of angular momentum is a thing! Truly ludicrous amounts of momentum would have to be transferred somewhere else for it to stop rotating.
...humans think.
See, until the 1960s, the existence of the core-as-a-core wasn't known. So the "obvious reality" you're assuming is younger than television.
​
>(Now, to be fair, a mechanism does exist that slowly bleeds off Earth’s rotational momentum, and has done so for billions of years: the moon and its tidal forces. In the far future Earth would become tidally locked with the moon, and rotate very slowly, if the sun didn’t become a red giant first.)
Yes, that's how an engine operates on a timescale different from the ones humans focus on. You came that closet to getting the idea.
​
> But somehow only slowing down the core? That would require magic.)
Magic is, by definition, merely reality: Magic is defined as a "supernatural force which influences reality" and "supernatural" merely means "attributed to some force beyond scientific understanding or the laws of nature" - and the "laws of nature" were written by humans who do not know everything.
See the one constant limitation here? Human understanding.
​
>Anyway, my use of “absolutely” should be taken in the context of the discussion, just like everything else.
No - your use of a word will be taken at face value - the only use words have in true information exchange. If you are unable to use the words accurately or sincerely, that's your concern to manage.
JustAPerspective t1_j63ge95 wrote
Reply to comment by Sharlinator in Earth's inner core may be slowing down, but “Nothing cataclysmic is happening,” says Hrvoje Tkalcic, a geophysicist at Australian National University. “The inner core is now more in sync with the rest of the planet than a decade ago when it was spinning a bit faster.” by clayt6
>There’s absolutely nothing that could make it actually
>
>stop
>
>.
The limits of human imagination in no way apply to reality.
Also, a magnetic engine can cease to function rather quickly when specific criteria change, so you may want to throttle back on "Absolutely".
JustAPerspective t1_j61kq5f wrote
Reply to Earth's inner core may be slowing down, but “Nothing cataclysmic is happening,” says Hrvoje Tkalcic, a geophysicist at Australian National University. “The inner core is now more in sync with the rest of the planet than a decade ago when it was spinning a bit faster.” by clayt6
There's even supposition it may reverse direction, and researchers are looking for evidence of past impacts.
Thing is, humans didn't even know the core-as-a-core existed 60 years ago. They were still thinking that all the surface stuff was one big shell. So while it's fascinating to learn new things, figuring out what this means will take time.
And NOBODY knows for sure what's next. It's outside of our control, let's enjoy the mystery.
JustAPerspective t1_j61k6c2 wrote
Reply to comment by nim_opet in Earth's inner core may be slowing down, but “Nothing cataclysmic is happening,” says Hrvoje Tkalcic, a geophysicist at Australian National University. “The inner core is now more in sync with the rest of the planet than a decade ago when it was spinning a bit faster.” by clayt6
Reptoid mods would have a hissy fit...
JustAPerspective t1_j5vgtp8 wrote
Reply to Mycotecture — the use of mushrooms and other fungal substances for architectural purposes — could be key to building affordable, fire-resistant, insulated habitats on the Moon and Mars. NASA aims to experiment with the technique on the Moon in 2025. by clayt6
Unfortunately most people would be obliged to live at the base of such structures... >!😎 cuz there ain't mushroom on top.!<
Submitted by JustAPerspective t3_10kenxm in space
JustAPerspective t1_j5ga4za wrote
Reply to comment by TheBroadHorizon in This company just launched a app that allows anyone to purchase satellite imagery. by c4chop
Excellent. Thank you for clarifying our misunderstanding.
JustAPerspective t1_j5fmvig wrote
Reply to comment by Shuber-Fuber in This company just launched a app that allows anyone to purchase satellite imagery. by c4chop
Did they?
Maxar Technologies seems to be a company dedicated to "Integrated space infrastructure and Earth intelligence capabilities that make global change visible, information actionable and space accessible." - basically, selling the data satellites already have.
Plant says "Planet revolutionized the earth observation industry with the highest frequency satellite data commercially available."
When companies make claims about their "data management projects", they aren't constructing satellites - they're marketing the information that's obtained by 'em.
So, we come back to your question: Did they pay for their own satellites?
JustAPerspective t1_jeg3k7p wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in TIL that Walt Disney World began as "The Florida Project". Dummy corporations were used, by Walt Disney Productions, to buy up 27,000 acres of land to avoid bursts of land speculation in the Orlando area. Early rumors assumed possible development by NASA, Ford, the Rockefellers, and Howard Hughes. by jdward01
>This discussion is about Disney cheating subsistence farmers out of their homesteads. Try to keep up.
We mentioned rich white dudes who form corporations - your effort to focus a discussion on something irrelevant to the topic appears willful, so it's simple to read the thread & see how full of shit you are. U.S.A., you are.