mynextthroway
mynextthroway t1_ivd299n wrote
Earth is the perfect example of what happens if you don't keep your rock collection in a cool dry location away from light.
mynextthroway t1_iu8wjbk wrote
Reply to comment by besttshirtsever in James Webb Space Telescope snaps new, super-spooky image of Pillars of Creation by OkOrdinary5299
What do overlays /blocking the photo have to do with ads? And what does "ffs" mean here?
mynextthroway t1_iu5qjgo wrote
Reply to James Webb Space Telescope snaps new, super-spooky image of Pillars of Creation by OkOrdinary5299
I get that websites need to generate at least enough money to pay for themselves, but an average of 2 sentences per ad is crazy.
mynextthroway t1_iskk0je wrote
I really don't see how this is an outrage article. The concern about waste is a little exaggerated, but warranted. LEO is getting cluttered to the point that India, China and the US are taking steps to do something. A brief bout of antisatellite warefare could render LEO dangerous to unusable. Doesn't matter how pristine outer space is if we can't get out of orbit.
The amount of debris on Mars being "only" a few cars worth, but the point is we aren't even there yet. Of course I wouldn't have expected NASA to arrange to bring it home, and I suspect when we actually get there, the trash will be recycled at some point and the probes enshrined in a museum. But we need to make sure we consider our trash being left around unacceptable.
I think the concern about contamination is very real in the search for life. As the population on Mars grows, that search will wind down. Certainly once the first children are born. They contaminate everything .
Yes. Space is huge. We aren't going to trash it to bad to fast. But then again, the wise in my childhood claimed protection of the atmosphere wasn't needed, it was to big for us to impact, as was the ocean. But now, 50 years and 4 billion more people later, we know differently. We will be lucky to stumble around between Earth and Moon (maybe Mars) in my or your life time. We need to make sure we don't leave a mess for future space travelers to complain about. If a paint chip can do the damage it does at low speed, hitting a discarded 2024 rocket booster at .5 C is going to hurt.
We need to establish the mentality of recycling, efficiency, and cleaning up after ourselves from day one of our journey to the stars. Easier to establish it now than when we have 1,000,000 people living off world. We have a long way to go before we reach the point of unlimited resources and energy promised in sci-fi. Let's act like it.
mynextthroway t1_is1ilon wrote
Reply to comment by phil_style in A breakthrough in electric vehicle battery design has enabled a 10-minute charge time for a typical EV battery. The record-breaking combination of a shorter charge time and more energy acquired for longer travel range was announced today by Wagamaga
A few days ago there was a post with a showboating senator trying to get oil company reps to take an Oath that their companies were no longer spending money to disrupt a shift away from oil. They wouldn't, telling me they are still spending money. I wasn't sure what on since most people believe in global warming. Given the way that discussion went and seeing u/pseudopad response, I am realizing the oil companies are seeding the public with thoughts that we can't change, so why bother. That this change will be too hard for us. It will be a challenge, there will be problems and unexpected difficulties and setbacks. But we must certainly can do this. We must. If this attitude had existed in the 60s, we wouldn't have made it to the moon.
mynextthroway t1_ixfiaso wrote
Reply to comment by onlycodeposts in Associated Press reporter fired over erroneous story on Russian attack by Moynamama
This isn't to amplify the false reports against Russia. This is to make reporters aware of the consequences of actual false news (as opposed to "I don't like that." false news. )