My_Soul_to_Squeeze
My_Soul_to_Squeeze t1_jcse6cq wrote
Reply to comment by Zenroe113 in Kinnesaw State Owls men's basketball coach sarcastically applauding the refs today by Digita-Pntics
Iirc, it's the second largest university in the state now behind UGA, and just became a tier 2 research institution. Believe it or not, it's on the up and up.
My_Soul_to_Squeeze t1_jcptvi6 wrote
Reply to comment by NoBiasPls in Kinnesaw State Owls men's basketball coach sarcastically applauding the refs today by Digita-Pntics
RIP SPSU. My dad's still bitter about it and he didn't even go there.
My_Soul_to_Squeeze t1_jcptq46 wrote
Reply to comment by _majorT0m in Kinnesaw State Owls men's basketball coach sarcastically applauding the refs today by Digita-Pntics
Stop trying to make "Hooty Hoo" happen. It's not going to happen.
My_Soul_to_Squeeze t1_jcoa68r wrote
Reply to comment by keyboardsitter in Kinnesaw State Owls men's basketball coach sarcastically applauding the refs today by Digita-Pntics
Nooo it hurts...
My_Soul_to_Squeeze t1_j8z519y wrote
Reply to comment by hikekorea in Which spacecraft has travelled farthest from Earth and retuned? by MBen7
Hopefully a record that will fall in the next few years.
My_Soul_to_Squeeze t1_j5akcyi wrote
Reply to comment by Wafkak in Aviation startup ZeroAvia flies largest ever hydrogen-electric aircraft by allstevenz
I was talking specifically about European applications. US passenger rail is a disaster regardless of power source for legal, logistical, political, and social reasons. It's really sad. I like having my car as much as any other suburbanite, but I've seen good passenger rail systems around the world, and they're really nice to have.
My_Soul_to_Squeeze t1_j5ajan4 wrote
Reply to comment by JayGeeCanuck22 in Aviation startup ZeroAvia flies largest ever hydrogen-electric aircraft by allstevenz
Exactly. There are several different ratings for hydrogen sources. If it's not "green" (renewable sourced) or "pink" (nuclear sourced), it is precisely what you described. Just a way for hydrocarbon producers to prop up demand for their products a few more years.
My_Soul_to_Squeeze t1_j5aie3q wrote
Reply to comment by Wafkak in Aviation startup ZeroAvia flies largest ever hydrogen-electric aircraft by allstevenz
You can almost make the case that overhead electrification is too expensive to implement in some places. I'm not totally sold on that math, but I keep hearing there are niche cases for hydrogen.
E: typo
My_Soul_to_Squeeze t1_ixii2ik wrote
Reply to comment by BoringEntropist in Berlin to Back French-Built Rockets in Race Against Musk by Soupjoe5
And political / self sufficiency factors are important enough that this future rocket doesn't have to beat F9 or SH at anything really. It just has to be good/ cheap enough to rationalize paying the "made in Europe by Europeans" premium.
My_Soul_to_Squeeze t1_ixfy6fl wrote
Reply to comment by hdufort in Realistically speaking When do you think we will land humans on Mars? by EnaGrimm
If SpaceX's Starship lives up to a fraction of the hype (mainly if it can touchdown safely on Mars' surface), we can have a small city worth of supplies and shelter on the surface before we send the first people. I think your timeline is pretty reasonable.
My_Soul_to_Squeeze t1_iwq96w4 wrote
Reply to comment by Maleus_ in Overhyping hydrogen as a fuel risks endangering net-zero goals by filosoful
Just replacing one storage problem with another.
My_Soul_to_Squeeze t1_iwf66i3 wrote
Reply to comment by Fiberdonkey5 in The Weird-Looking, Fuel-Efficient Planes You Could Be Flying in One Day by rchaudhary
And me in the 00's. These things might as well be fusion powered. They're just 20 years away.
My_Soul_to_Squeeze t1_iuz7ubw wrote
Reply to comment by TheLianeonProject in The promise and perils of the new space boom by Gari_305
Been there. You point still stands. A new space age is dawning.
My_Soul_to_Squeeze t1_iuxuiba wrote
Reply to comment by TheLianeonProject in The promise and perils of the new space boom by Gari_305
Unfortunately, you're off by a factor of about 1000. The graph says we're below $2000 per Kg, not per metric ton (1000 kg). $2000 per ton is just $1 per pound. Lower than commercial air fare.
We'd have entire cities in space already at that rate.
My_Soul_to_Squeeze t1_ir44hqy wrote
Reply to comment by groovy604 in NASA is now making oxygen on Mars by JumpinKing
Short answer is yes. There are ways to generate a magnetic field / block some of the solar wind, but they're all scifi right now. Even if we could make an atmosphere Mars could hold onto, it would take multiple lifetimes to complete.
My_Soul_to_Squeeze t1_jcsfvuc wrote
Reply to comment by chidebunker in China Built a Hypersonic Generator That Could Power Unimaginable Weapons by ethereal3xp
This literally happened with the Foxbat and F-15, but it was the USSR rather than China. It wasn't until a Soviet pilot defected with his jet to Japan that western scientists realized it was a very clunky, basically single use interceptor, not a gen4 air superiority fighter.