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DDE

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Everything posted by DDE

  1. Meanwhile, we had to consider whether we needed to move the middle cat back to town about 40 miles away because he wouldn't let his claws get trimmed...
  2. My father apparently had something of roughly this category rigged into one of his first, late Soviet cars, alongside a loudspeaker under the hood (an Oka had a lot of space under the bonnet next to the anemic engine). Then of course there's this classic.
  3. I realized there's one thing that's particularly endearing even over CoD2 - the loading screens. CoD2 started to style them like diary entries, whereas CoD1... And for the D-Day missions, entire obsolete sections are crossed out and replaced with hand scribbles.
  4. And smoke. An immediate thought is that this would make aircraft devastatingly effective unless one combatant had VT fuses. Main gun fire would usually sweep away or kill anyone manning the open anti-air mounts.
  5. How to taunt a cat owner: (not mine, because some people got confused in the past)
  6. https://www.foxnews.com/health/eye-injuries-solar-eclipse-surge-following-phenomenon Speaking of staring at the sun...
  7. Well, Nammo's dead-set to fit a ramjet into a 155 mm howitzer shell, although IIRC the US cancelled their development order.
  8. Well, at least those had a decent run... on Lake Ladoga.
  9. I know, but that's an ATGM option, not a simple attempt to cram more velocity. Good point. Reminds me of the Gyrojet's problem. Hey, don't knock the bean counters. They're quite important when acquisition numbers run into the tens and hundreds of thousands.
  10. Speaking of dumb questions: why is no-one trying to bolt a ramjet onto an APFSDS anti-tank dart? This seems like a natural combination. A search yeilded a couple of patents, including one by people well-placed to do something about it (a munitions subsidiry of Roscosmos) https://yandex.ru/patents/doc/RU2724626C1_20200625 Bonus: they use a drop-down nozzle with attached fins. Earlier proposals seemed to make do with a much smaller combustion chamber and a rather ordinary dart, but the patent description cites poor Isp and loss of the fins' function when they find themselves in the exhaust stream.
  11. This does leave a gao in the form of isolationist / secessionist social groups. They'd have to have the necessary resources and not be verboten, but it doesn't sound too impossible. Something like... Yeah, I got ninja'd. That just brings us to the topic of Russia's Northern Thebaid. Granted, the fortress-monasteries involved were by far not the first human settlements, but they emphatically were an anchor for further colonization.
  12. https://www.navalnews.com/event-news/sea-air-space-2024/2024/04/leidos-concept-turns-oil-rigs-into-mobile-missile-defense-and-supply-bases/ Eat your heart out, Toyota.
  13. I suspect it's bevause of the taxing and devastating nature of a modern, mass-mobilization war. The last fifty years (probably more) saw the rise of the post-modern war, what Eugene Messner called the insurgency war and Valery Gerasimov called the hybrid war. However, this state of "not-quite-war" turns out to have a way of turning back into a modern industrial war many seemed to assume was gone for good (hurr-durr, fourth and fifth-generation warfare!)
  14. ...and an ICBM launch from Kapustin Yar. Looks like everyone's celebrating Friday, so no ID on the type of missile. Edit: are, here we go, a video. Looks like a Yars to me. https://t.me/fotozak/6480
  15. I think it was. Today's world is rather small and cluttered. Back then, the Eurasian interior was terra incognita and so Rome and ancient China could peacefully coexist, despite both claiming absolute power over the known world.
  16. And if you thought Leodr would miss the date, you'd be wrong. Astrogator 12042024
  17. Fun fact: "USSR" on Gagarin's helmet was added impromptu on launch day. It's not present in most of the official press photos. https://t.me/sashakots/46066
  18. I'd disagree. The alternative often starts grassroots, although it can be a product of misaligned incentives; the root of collectivism is self-dehumanization, including a disinterest in the products and outcomes of one's labor. Usually such people just wallow in nihilistic misery, but in turmoil or a bureaucracy they may be able to seize power and subject others to the quest for an impossible utopia. The problem with collectivist societies - true collectivist societies, rather than tight-knit ones, where seeming altruism is actually a very utilitarian investment for one's own rainy day - is that they rarely get much done. When everyone is a cog in a machine, no-one can be Gagarin, no-one can be allowed to be Gagarin... and no-one wants to be Gagarin. Contrary to their "marketing", collectivist societies are inert, stale and very atomized, even when everyone wears bright colors, makes worries go away with... pharmaceutical methods, constantly lovebombs each other, and forces a smile on their face.
  19. Maybe apocryphal, ascribed to cosmonaut Valentin Lebedev: "And why is Gagarin a hero anyway?" "Ever seen a ten-storey house. Imagine it's full of jet fuel. Imagine you're locked up in a tiny ball on top. Imagine they tell you that, if their calculations are correct, you're coming back alive, and then they set fire to the ground floor."
  20. Eyes on Orion https://t.me/kiam_ison_network/195
  21. My 2 cents: capital doesn't necessarily take the form of money. Political and social capital are also things that exist.
  22. Nominal, nominal, nominal, nominal. Orbit achieved, payloads away. https://t.me/space78125/2603
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