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WALZ REFERENCED THE COUCH-F****R MEME!
  • Hubris. They were up in the polls at the time and didn't think they needed to expand their appeal, so they caved and took Thiel's guy.

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    Some subreddits could be paywalled, hints Reddit CEO - 9to5Mac
  • There are private/paywalled Discord servers and forums out there, too, so this could replace some of those. I think the Reddit format is better than a lot of alternatives, so I don't actually hate this idea.

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    US Email Providers - Other then Google, MS, Apple, ...
  • I'm not really into the idea of moving everything to a baby Google, even if they're currently good about privacy. They just added an AI tool to email and a crypto wallet, which could be either awful or great signs depending on your perspective.

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    Biden endorses Harris as Democratic nominee after ending his candidacy
  • Regarding ballot eligibility- I think part of timing for this is that the Dems are about to have their "roll call" in the next week or two to officially nominate a candidate to get on ballots before the official full convention.

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    US health care now unaffordable for nearly half of Americans
  • The US healthcare system is completely broken unless you're rich.

    Multiple things can be true at the same time, though: people don't take care of themselves and live very unhealthy sedentary lifestyles with awful diets.

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    Elon Musk's SpaceX contracted to destroy retired space station - BBC News
  • One of Starship's engines on the lowest setting would tear the station apart. Regardless of whether they make this based on Starship instead of something more reasonably sized like a Dragon or Falcon 2nd stage, it'll still need either a new engine design or a big cluster of Dracos. It'll be something custom.

    Regarding their Artemis work- the payments are milestone based, so they get money as they pass milestones. Engine relights and ship to ship prop transfer are some of the next ones.

    Regarding their other customers- the Starship manifest includes another moon cruise, several satellite launches, and a lot of Starlinks.

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    Elon Musk's SpaceX contracted to destroy retired space station - BBC News
  • There's no way Russia builds a new station. The timeline for them getting Nauka to orbit basically proves that it's impossible. They've been trying to buddy up with China to visit theirs, though.

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    NASA indefinitely delays return of Starliner to review propulsion data
  • The docking adapters look pretty much the same (interlocking petals, not male/female) and can be active, passive, or both, but Dragon's is only active. Active has to dock to passive, so two Dragons couldn't dock.

    SpaceX developed a new one that can be active or passive for Starship, which will have to dock with Orion and the Lunar Gateway.

    https://www.nasa.gov/image-article/nasa-spacex-test-starship-lunar-lander-docking-system/

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    NASA indefinitely delays return of Starliner to review propulsion data
  • Maybe? Soyuz is too cramped, but Dragon might be able to fit extra people. A few years ago a NASA astronaut flew up on a leaky Soyuz, so they looked at using Dragon as a lifeboat:

    https://www.space.com/nasa-spacex-dragon-rescue-spacecraft-soyuz-leak

    Dragon was drawn up to fit 7 people, with 3 seats on the bottom and 4 on top. They ended up changing the seat angles for reentry, so now they only have 4.

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    Starliner is still their emergency ride home in case a real alarm goes off, but they want to study the leak issue as much as possible before they separate their service module, which burns up during reentry.

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    Spacex team’s Starship partially melts during renterty of test flight 4, makes soft splash down anyway.
  • This process led to Falcon, which is one of the most reliable rockets of all time. The launch rate and reuse are unprecedented. Iterative design is a big part of how they got there. Their prowess in manufacturing and mass production is another large part of that success.

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  • spacenews.com Space industry urged to take a broader view of sustainability

    The space industry need to take a broader examination of issues related to space sustainability that go beyond preventing the growth of space debris.

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    arstechnica.com Why interstellar objects like ‘Oumuamua and Borisov may hold clues to exoplanets

    Two celestial interlopers in Solar System have scientists eagerly anticipating more.

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    spacenews.com Japan’s SLIM spacecraft lowers orbit ahead of Friday moon landing attempt

    Japan’s SLIM spacecraft lowers orbit ahead of Friday moon landing attempt Japan’s SLIM moon lander has entered a lower, near-circular lunar orbit ahead of its Jan. 19 landing attempt.

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    spacenews.com Peregrine lander suffers anomaly after launch

    Astrobotic said its Peregrine spacecraft suffered an unspecified anomaly hours after launch Jan. 8, putting its plans to land on the moon in jeopardy.

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    spacenews.com NASA report studies options for a future national laboratory in orbit after ISS

    A NASA study examined several options for continuing a national laboratory in low Earth orbit after the ISS but stopped short of recommending one

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    spacenews.com To sustainably develop space, we must manage orbital capacity

    In the age of megaconstellations, managing orbital capacity requires a more thoughtful, holistic approach than simply counting satellites.

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    arstechnica.com Daily Telescope: Tracking the Sun’s path every day across the sky

    The image is a vivid demonstration of the changing of the seasons.

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    spacenews.com Hubble glitch renews talk about private servicing mission

    A problem with the Hubble Space Telescope has renewed discussion about whether and how NASA might approve a private mission to service it.

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    spacenews.com Amazon adds Falcon 9 to multi-billion-dollar Project Kuiper launch campaign

    Amazon has signed a contract with SpaceX to launch an unspecified number of satellites for its Project Kuiper broadband constellation on three Falcon 9 rockets from mid-2025.

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    www.jhuapl.edu NASA Authorizes Dragonfly Mission to Proceed With Estimated 2028 Launch Readiness Date

    NASA’s Dragonfly mission team is moving on to the next stage of development on the revolutionary, car-sized nuclear-powered drone it plans to fly over and land on the organic-rich sands of Saturn’s large moon Titan.

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    spacenews.com Astrolab announces first customers for commercial lunar rover mission

    Lunar rover developer Astrolab announced eight customers have signed contracts worth more than $160 million for its first mission to the moon in 2026.

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    spacenews.com NASA acknowledges possibility of short-term post-ISS gap

    A NASA official said a short-term gap between the International Space Station (ISS) and commercial successors would not be “the end of the world.”

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    spacenews.com Virgin Galactic to halt Unity suborbital flights by mid-2024

    Virgin Galactic will reduce the frequency of flights of its current suborbital vehicle and stop them entirely by mid-2024.

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    spacenews.com Small launch companies struggle to compete with SpaceX rideshare missions

    Industry executives argue that SpaceX’s dominant position in the launch market is making it difficult for small launch vehicles to compete.

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    spacepolicyonline.com Psyche on Its Way to Metal-Rich Asteroid

    Posted: October 13, 2023 1:43 pm ET | Last Updated: October 13, 2023 6:10 pm ET | NASA launched the Psyche mission to a metal-rich asteroid by that name today on a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket, its first use of the Falcon Heavy. Psyche will arrive its destination in 2029.

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    spacenews.com How wrong were space SPAC projections?

    Wildly missed revenue projections cast a long shadow over space firms that went public by merging with a SPAC as their shares continue to underperform in the market.

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    spacepolicyonline.com Mars Sample Return Scientifically Critical, But Eye-Poppingly Expensive

    Posted: September 21, 2023 8:17 pm ET | Last Updated: September 21, 2023 8:17 pm ET | A second Independent Review Board on the NASA-ESA Mars Sample Return mission concludes that the mission cannot be completed on the cost and schedule NASA advertises. The current design would cost $8-9.6 billion and...

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