p1t1o
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Just some guy, y'know?
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I dont know if anyone else is running into this issue, but just in case: I have identified the "cruise control" feature to bug the NavBall accelerometer and disallow time acceleration with error "cannot warp when ship under acceleration" (even when all engines shut down and craft under positive CommNet control). I was able to remove the MM patch which added this module to stock ion engines, after removing the patch the issue did not re-occur. The bug appeared to only occur with multiple stock ion drives which have had the cruise control module applied, a single engine worked fine. Have only tested "Dawn" ion engine vigorously. Not sure if this bug is caused by interaction with another mod (Im running most of the fan faves and then some, have 119 folders in GameData - there arent many that mess with thrust though), but hopefully this might provide a datapoint if you are trying to diagnose something. First time back on the forums in years, nice to be back, hope you are all well!
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Batman isnt the word for a Bat-like man, (although of course he is somewhat bat-like) he is a unique thing with its own name "Batman". There isnt another Batman and if you created one, he wouldnt be Batman, he'd be something else with another name (Like "Ultimate BAtman" "Batman Alpha" or anything, but there would never be two "Batmen" - well not at the same time at least), because you would always be able to say, "Theres this guy, and theres Batman" and you'd always know which one is Bruce wayne, because he's Batman. And if someone were to liken himself to bats somehow or whatever, or dress up like Batman and call himself Batman, you'd always be right to say "You're not Batman", but you could say "You ARE a Bat-Man!". Questionable whether or not Batman even *is* a Bat-Man, since he doesnt actually have any powers or mutations, bats are just his symbol. Same with Superman. Technically, every Kryptonian has identical properties to Supe, but none of them are "Supermen". There is only one Superman, he isnt a "Super-man" he is Superman. (I mean, it *is* kinda overlooked that this kindhearted soul, this gentle god who tortures himself over hurting a fly and who would sacrifice his very soul for humanity, got up one day and decided that the name the world should know him as, that he calls himself and that other people should refer to him as, should be: ABOVEANDBETTERTHANALLHUMANS) Of coure, Superman IS a Super-man, if you take that to mean that many of his abilities are superior to man's, which of course they are. But Superman is his name, a noun, and not his type or category. Spider-Man implies that if someone else were bitten by a radioactive spider and acquired the same properties, then you would also become a Spider-Man - which is arguably true, and not something common to Superman or Batman. Thus Peter Parker considers his monicer, not a name, but an adjective. His catchphrase "Your friendly neighborhood Spider-Man" also implies the existence of Spider-Men allocated to other neighborhoods - or at least it allows the implication. Its probably just his youthfully optimistic/humorous way of talking, but the idea is there. And now we have the "Spider Verse" which is literally full of Spider People. Captain America is a more obvious superhero name, he is the USA literally in soldier form, the country itself given rank. "Captain America" implies that "America" is his superhero last name, his full name presumably being "Captain United States of America". Strangely this implies the existence of higher ranking officers who arent America, although for some reason that never comes up. He-Man is just a mess Im not even going to try. Man-Man? Masculine-Man? A man with all of the powers of a human male? wat? My name is TypesTooFastTooMuch and this has been my TED Talk.
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Absolutely Absolutely Absolutely Absolutely Absolutely Absolutely Absolutely Absolutely Absolutely Absolutely Absolutely Absolutely Absolutely Absolutely Absolutely Absolutely Absolutely ***************************************** What if. Predators evolved from facehuggers. Like a bunch of eggs left on a planet for a long time without any suitable hosts. Just look at that face. Also the hunting for sport thing, instinctive. Thats it, thats all I got.
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Maybe it's not formal evidence, but if causality violations were happening commonplace, I believe we'd see many more things that didn't make sense. And with so many physicists et al looking pretty closely at so many things, wouldn't it be likely that we'd notice? Which may only relegate causal violations to "rare but possible" like "forbidden" transitions seen in physics (eg: how lasers work) but I think if they were common, we'd see it. Lack of evidence is not evidence of absence, but it is a pretty strong indicator when so much effort is spent on observation. The fact that the scientific method exists does support a causal universe. If acausality were truly discovered, we'd have to come up with a very, very good explanation as to why so many things appear causal in spite of that. Now none of that is proof, but it shows that just because it is hard to prove something doesn't exist, it would still take extraordinary evidence to prove it did, or even to suspect it.
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Do we have any handle on how many satellites could be destroyed in this way before we run a strong risk of a runaway Kessler? Closer to 10 or 100 or 1000? Or is it an unknown? Seems to me that specifically targetting and depleting an observation or navigation constellation would be quite difficult, especially if there are spares available for rapid launch. But a random turkey shoot until space is denied to all might be easier to achieve. Makes it a "MAD" arms race between superpowers mirroring the cold war and thus a fairly familiar thing, countries going through the motions.
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For Questions That Don't Merit Their Own Thread
p1t1o replied to Skyler4856's topic in Science & Spaceflight
F117's design was highly limited by computattional techniques and lack of raw processing power. Once computers were good enough, curved, more aerodynamic designs were possible. There are internal structural features (such as the famous "re-entrant triangles") but you won't find an f117 under the skin of a b2 or f35. Stealth capability and radar signiture tracks very well with technological progress, essentially, newer aircraft are better at it. Hence f35 more stealthy than f22. Stealth always a trade-off, f22 or 35 could easily be made more stealthy, but at cost of speed, range,anouverability etc etc -
For Questions That Don't Merit Their Own Thread
p1t1o replied to Skyler4856's topic in Science & Spaceflight
Question: How thick/thin a shell of neutronium would be required to stop 6Gy of radiation? -
For Questions That Don't Merit Their Own Thread
p1t1o replied to Skyler4856's topic in Science & Spaceflight
What exactly is the resolution limit of the average human retina? Like minimum arc length discernible. Assuming sufficient contrast. -
For Questions That Don't Merit Their Own Thread
p1t1o replied to Skyler4856's topic in Science & Spaceflight
I mean, any missile can be detonated on the launchpad for a range of 0m, or rolled down a hill for a range of several tens of metres, but more realistically: There are ways to manage the energy provided by a solid booster, and methods to shut them off before total burn-out have been devised, but as it happens, minimum range of an ICBM is decided largely by structural integrity. Google "depressed trajectory". This is a tactic whereby a submarine would park close to the target and launch its SLBMs on a shallow trajectory, reducing flight time to very low (for ICBMs) values. This allows various tactical options, as you could imagine for short time-of-flight weapons. Decapitation strikes for example, or the more extreme "pop off nukes in a steady stream over their ICBM fields to prevent their launch (or nuking the silos again and again to guarantee destruction of very hard targets) until you have nuked their entire country into dust", as well as simply reducing the time for defences to react - especially as this type of trajectory also makes them largely immune to exo-atmospheric intercept and vastly reduces the time available for endo-atmospheric interception. The problem here is that ICBMs are designed for maximum range with maximum payload, and thus are designed to withstand the forces of that kind of flight - ie: suborbital ballistic flight through vacuum with a short boost phase and minimal atmospheric flight. Shorter ranges require the weapon to fly for much longer through the atmosphere and are also required to perform much harder (for an ICBM) manouvres. This means that the weapon must be strong enough to resist increased atmospheric heating and drag in the boost as well as stronger transverse aerodynamic forces. The more robust the weapon, the shallower trajectory it can fly, and thus the shorter range it can be reliably targetted. Thus, minimum range is largely decided by structural integrity. Further reading: http://www.scienceandglobalsecurity.org/archive/sgs03gronlund.pdf -
How Would You Do Superiority Adaptation As a Movie
p1t1o replied to Spacescifi's topic in The Lounge
Reminds me of "Brazil" by Terry Gilliam - a dark, dystopic, high-technology future where the main enemy is...poor adminsitration. -
@sevenperforce Oof. No other way to put it. Hang in there bud, we're all rooting for you, whatever happens.
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For Questions That Don't Merit Their Own Thread
p1t1o replied to Skyler4856's topic in Science & Spaceflight
T4 is one of my faves, with the nose up its lines are unlike anything else. And I especially like how the windscreen, with the nose down, looks like it was ripped straight from a Diesel train locomotive. Very Russian. -
For Questions That Don't Merit Their Own Thread
p1t1o replied to Skyler4856's topic in Science & Spaceflight
Went on a skydiving training thing once - didnt end up doing a jump because of weather , but I did learn one thing - skydivers make quite a lot of noise. At one point were were able to watch from the ground as a group did a freefall jump, and we could see them fall from the plane. As they fell, you could hear a quite prominent "tearing" noise that was the noise they made as the moved through the air. Funny the things you think (or that movies make you think) are quiet. Bows, for example (as in bow-and-arrow) make quite a loud noise when shot too - like plucking an enormous guitar string. The well-known Ju87 Stuka famously had sirens installed on the aircraft itself, so that it made a noise whilst on its attack dive, the so-called "Jericho-Trompete", which is a very recognisable sound from WWII movies. This has led to another movie-trope where any diving aircraft in any context would make an ascending siren-like wail. -
I had some of those chocolate covered giant ants. They werent very nice. Not in a gross way, just it was like eating a small ball of those shards of popcorn-kernel-skin that get stuck in your teeth, that tasted like soil.
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For Questions That Don't Merit Their Own Thread
p1t1o replied to Skyler4856's topic in Science & Spaceflight
Im not sure exactly, but I imagine it is to do with various gas-dynamic and thermal issues with flushing cryogenic gases through hot metal parts, in variable external pressure conditions, with turbopumps that have just been in some quite horrific conditions. I think engines have to be specifically designed to be re-startable (and even then its not as easy as on/off/on/off). Parts are designed to be used under certain conditions, like temperatures, pressures and mechanical stresses - and a steady-state is much easier to withstand than a variable state. The answer may be as simple as it was not designed to be reusable because it was not required and to save weight. Only after some very extensive refurbishing, and only for a few flights per engine.