Yes, extraterrestrial telescopes are hard. And, we need more of them. And we need to give access to amateurs.
Yes, extraterrestrial telescopes are hard. And, we need more of them. And we need to give access to amateurs.
Imagine one orbiting each planet and what we can observe.
As technology advances, our ability to observe the universe from space far surpasses ground-based telescopes. While I appreciate amateur astronomy, let’s acknowledge that satellites like those in low Earth orbit can occasionally interfere with surface observations. Instead of criticizing their presence, perhaps we could focus on working together to minimize disruptions and support continued space exploration – after all, observatories like JWST are pushing the boundaries of our understanding.
Charts like that are great, I love to see them. However, they need to have a year for the inflation-adjusted dollars else it’s nearly meaningless when referred back to.
Internet archive may not be around much longer so grab what you can.
Make sure you have an off-site backup or it, too, will one day poof out of existence!
Wtf is loam?
Hoping for Deckard with this.
What’s new in this release:
Anyone need a dose of Hopium? Maybe this is what Deckard has been waiting on.
Who wants to tell them?
Oh haha yea. I thought that was for the alarm sirens.
I’m a bit slow on the uptake there haha. I started with vi and moved over to nano at some point and never looked back. I can refactor code in production with the best of them. There’s still some tricks I’ve seen done in vi that amazes me that I haven’t tried to figure out in nano, but for the most part it’s fairly easy to use to do nearly anything in. Even supports color for supported files, YAML, etc.
I’m intrigued. How does that work?
Honestly, roll back to previous release for production and use best IDE your developers are used to on their local machines, test the fix in a non production environment then release to prod. When is editing business critical scripts in production really needed?
Same. Stage 1 install will forever be a core memory for me.
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I’d like to subscribe to more 9 roomies in a 5 roomie.
Better late than never, but I really like Nokian Tyres. They are fantastic.
The tools “up there” could be made to rival the capacity and accommodate the man hours required to more science than we do now. The problem is it’s hard and expensive and nobody wants to try because of that fact. It’s becoming easier with cheaper launch vehicles and better communications infrastructure. Now we need folks to start identifying the best locations to send new observation satellites and then start building and launching them.
Your take is very conservative and counter to technological progress and I don’t appreciate the personal attack. We can have a meaningful conversation without that crap.