Droplet

joined 1 year ago
[–] Droplet@hexbear.net 16 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I've seen a lot of people compare Pluto to LiberalSocialist. I don't not believe that they are the same.

They are not the same, but both had history of throwing baseless accusations against users on this site as “patsocs” to the point of harassment and bullying. That alone should lead to a ban. There should never be any harassment on this site.

Otherwise their behavior, as ridiculous as they are, seem quite harmless if not a source of amusement to some of us here.

[–] Droplet@hexbear.net 35 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Esha’s documentary about her experience in Donbass:

https://www.historicly.net/p/documenting-donbas

[–] Droplet@hexbear.net 16 points 1 year ago (41 children)

Any brainworms in his speech that I should know about before I start reading?

[–] Droplet@hexbear.net 32 points 1 year ago

Analysis from Russian space nerd telegram:

As you remember, space has become a topic close to us since last year, and therefore we want to talk about NASA’s epic with the Boeing Starliner as an example of an engineering approach

So. On June 5, 2024, Starliner was finally launched with a crew of 2 and successfully docked with the ISS on June 6. We suspect that Boeing’s joy knew no bounds; it was only the press that wrote that it flew on the third try. In fact, the Boeing spaceliner is plagued by quality problems comparable to those experienced by the company's aircraft. Having received an order to create spacecraft at the same time as SpaceX, Boeing was able to send its manned spacecraft 4 years later and has already lost more than $1 billion on its creation! But why does NASA continue to mess with Boeing and wait for its ship?

Reason 1. NASA is in trouble

Typically, NASA financed complex space missions using a fee + cost formula. That is, it paid contractors for the costs of creating space technology and paid extra for the actual product received. But as a result, the cost of space projects began to fly even further than its ships could reach. Therefore, in the 2000s, NASA switched to paying for the product. And it worked out great: SpaceX and Orbital Sciences made the cargo spacecraft, and NASA only paid for the launches.

Then NASA applied the same approach to manned spacecraft and quickly got the SpaceX Crew Dragon. But the Boeing Starliner project is stalling, having difficulty completing the necessary flights. But this doesn’t cost NASA anything, so the agency is waiting for Boeing to bring its equipment up to standard.

Reason 2. Uniqueness of Starliner

Boeing Starliner and SpaceX Crew Dragon are made according to the same mono-volume design, but they are somewhat different and not always in favor of Musk’s brainchild. Thus, the internal volume of the Boeing product is almost 1.5 cubic meters larger.

If you think that Musk is a genius and everything works out for him, then let us remind you of one feature - his spaceships land on water. They need to be found, caught, and brought to land. SpaceX planned to develop the Red Dragon spacecraft with a jet landing system on Mars. But she canceled the project - it is not so easy to develop a reliable and safe landing system. And the Boeing company coped with this - landing is carried out using traditional parachutes, and at the end air cylinders are inflated under the ship and soften the blow. When Starliner returns, we will find out whether such a scheme is safe for people.

Reason 3. Reservation

NASA got burned by the Space Shuttle project, which became prohibitively expensive - each launch cost about $500 million. SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket was able to deliver approximately the same mass of cargo into orbit at almost 9 times less the cost.

Now SpaceX is showing an example of how to do space projects quickly and inexpensively, but NASA no longer wants to wait for the next supplier to start being stupid and raising prices, so it wants to have an alternative way to deliver astronauts into orbit - the Boeing Starliner. Finally, the manned SpaceX Dragon has not yet demonstrated proper reliability. This ship made only 14 flights. For comparison, the Space Shuttle exploded on its 25th flight. So the shortcomings of the system are not always immediately visible and it is better to have insurance.

This is how the Boeing Starliner became a manual for the engineering approach: competent financial incentives, unique characteristics and redundancy allow it to remain in the focus of NASA and claim the role of a full-fledged ship for delivering astronauts into orbit.

This last paragraph is the embodiment of everything wrong with neoliberal privatization.

[–] Droplet@hexbear.net 61 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Boeing Starliner not ready to come back to Earth – leaving astronauts on International Space Station

Boeing’s troubled Starliner spacecraft will stay at the International Space Station for longer than expected, just the latest in a series of problems for the capsule.

It means that the astronauts who were carried to the space station in a mission earlier this month will have to stay for longer than expected, coming back on 22 June. They may end up staying for longer.

Nasa said that the delayed return will allow Nasa and Boeing to spend more time planning for the astronauts’ return and their journey back down to Earth.

Mission a success or failure?

[–] Droplet@hexbear.net 47 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

You underestimated the mental gymnastics of these liberals.

In no time they will adopt the “everyone else is doing it anyway! If China and Russia are playing dirty, we can do the same too!”

Source: personal experience with libs

[–] Droplet@hexbear.net 25 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

There was a referendum in the four regions where the public voted overwhelmingly to join Russia, though it has been argued that because many people have fled the region, it was not legitimate.

This also took place during the infamous Kharkiv retreat in September, which forced the bulk of the Ukrainian forces to take up the territories in the north and away from launching assaults (which had been rumored since August) and posing a security threat to the regions that underwent the “snap” referendum.

[–] Droplet@hexbear.net 50 points 1 year ago (1 children)

June 14 - the birthdays of Comandante Che Guevara and Supreme Leader Donald J Trump

[–] Droplet@hexbear.net 40 points 1 year ago (3 children)

IMAGINE GIVING CZECHOSLOVAKIA TO HITLER. WHAT COULD GO WRONG??

[–] Droplet@hexbear.net 37 points 1 year ago

If you haven’t noticed, Biden is intent on escalating this war towards nuclear annihilation. They have been provoking Russia by destroying their ICBM surveillance radars.

This is Putin giving peace one last chance, before the world goes to waste.

[–] Droplet@hexbear.net 40 points 1 year ago (5 children)

Putin is getting desperate! They are losing! Don’t give in to his demands! FINISH RUSSIA OFF!

[–] Droplet@hexbear.net 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Yeah I can see that, I just feel like Cuba always get caught between great power struggles who are recklessly waving their guns around with real potential of sparking a nuclear war.

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