CookieOfFortune, cookieoffortune@lemmy.world

Instance: lemmy.world
Joined: 3 years ago
Posts: 1
Comments: 80

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Posts and Comments by CookieOfFortune, cookieoffortune@lemmy.world

I don’t think they have the concept of orbits in Star Wars. Damaged ships just happen to fall into planets all the time.


This is Lemmy, the whole point is to be pedantic.


Isn’t it also about Artemis (Lockheed, Boeing, Northrop, and Rocketdyne)?


Are you saying that any company that takes government contracts initially should not be considered a private company? Wouldn’t this apply to all launch providers? Why is SpaceX singled out?


Yeah they were saved early on by NASA’s private commercial development programs. Are you saying NASA should not have implemented these programs? Do you prefer cost plus contracts?


Because it’s not…? They get the contracts because they’re the cheapest option, and these days they make more money through Starlink anyways.

And who else should CRS have gone to? Lockheed Martin and Boeing?


Even to the space crowd, SLS doesn’t really introduce anything new.

But when the Falcon 9 landed, and then the heavy’s dual landing. That was hype.


Probably would’ve been cheaper, faster, and better engineered if they did though. The reason NASA doesn’t do it is PR.


Yeah so the training data is only one part of it (possibly the easiest since you can just buy it). It’s the other components of model training that’s the real secret sauce. And without users it becomes harder and harder to get the feedback to continue training new models.

That’s why all the companies were rushing to get a product out.


Compile? Is that true? Pretty sure compilers are generally deterministic in their output.


You can’t accidentally give a baby shaken baby syndrome. Babies generally enjoy being bounced and tossed, just don’t violently slam them around.


But the bear trap also has this soft tentacle-like that can make your flesh stick feel good.


Doh they’re going to the moon! I was thinking the ISS.



They could presumably be within 300 miles of him.


Presumably all of this would’ve been avoidable with better planning. Such as, not attacking at all.


You usually don’t have to memorize too much stuff for mathy subjects. At least when I went to uni we were always allowed cheat sheets.

If you’re the type that can lessen the concepts easily, practice and study might not be as important.


Ah yes, the original Imperial Truth -> Imperial Creed pipeline.



What if they were all transported into SWAT Cats?


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Posts by CookieOfFortune, cookieoffortune@lemmy.world

Comments by CookieOfFortune, cookieoffortune@lemmy.world

I don’t think they have the concept of orbits in Star Wars. Damaged ships just happen to fall into planets all the time.


This is Lemmy, the whole point is to be pedantic.


Isn’t it also about Artemis (Lockheed, Boeing, Northrop, and Rocketdyne)?


Are you saying that any company that takes government contracts initially should not be considered a private company? Wouldn’t this apply to all launch providers? Why is SpaceX singled out?


Yeah they were saved early on by NASA’s private commercial development programs. Are you saying NASA should not have implemented these programs? Do you prefer cost plus contracts?


Because it’s not…? They get the contracts because they’re the cheapest option, and these days they make more money through Starlink anyways.

And who else should CRS have gone to? Lockheed Martin and Boeing?


Even to the space crowd, SLS doesn’t really introduce anything new.

But when the Falcon 9 landed, and then the heavy’s dual landing. That was hype.


Probably would’ve been cheaper, faster, and better engineered if they did though. The reason NASA doesn’t do it is PR.


Yeah so the training data is only one part of it (possibly the easiest since you can just buy it). It’s the other components of model training that’s the real secret sauce. And without users it becomes harder and harder to get the feedback to continue training new models.

That’s why all the companies were rushing to get a product out.


Compile? Is that true? Pretty sure compilers are generally deterministic in their output.


You can’t accidentally give a baby shaken baby syndrome. Babies generally enjoy being bounced and tossed, just don’t violently slam them around.


But the bear trap also has this soft tentacle-like that can make your flesh stick feel good.


Doh they’re going to the moon! I was thinking the ISS.



They could presumably be within 300 miles of him.


Presumably all of this would’ve been avoidable with better planning. Such as, not attacking at all.


You usually don’t have to memorize too much stuff for mathy subjects. At least when I went to uni we were always allowed cheat sheets.

If you’re the type that can lessen the concepts easily, practice and study might not be as important.


Ah yes, the original Imperial Truth -> Imperial Creed pipeline.



What if they were all transported into SWAT Cats?