U-k_LyA1DQQ @27:54 = Cardman playing with her own deck of cards, man!
206O9S9GLbg @3:38:38 = Zena emerging from the Zena'ith Port.
U-k_LyA1DQQ @27:54 = Cardman playing with her own deck of cards, man!
206O9S9GLbg @3:38:38 = Zena emerging from the Zena'ith Port.
If you told a hundred people that one of these rockets is called Black Arrow, how many would guess that it's actually the one which looks like something out of Thunderbirds?
(i.e. The bottom one. Thunderbird 1 perhaps?!)
The capsule landed pretty close to the booster!: https://youtu.be/JH4_bghcTjg?t=41m15s (41:15)
I'm guessing this is not supposed to happen?
Either way, I wonder how close the capsule would have to be before it would have led to a significant delay in the passengers being allowed to exit. Ground crew having to maintain their distance until booster 'safing' was complete, etc.
Indeed.
I assumed the comment was satirising one common form of misguided critique of SpaceX's "hardware-rich" approach to this development programme. But yes, now I'm not so sure.
Groaning:
And of course, some of us contain multitudes ...
Until now I've been too lazy to look into what rules/guidelines exist for this community. Am I now right in thinking there aren't any? (If so, I'm not complaining!) Or am I just not finding them (as an inexperienced Lemmy user)?
The thing I was going to look into was any posting guidelines. How significant should something be to warrant its own post? For example, this tweet includes a video with an F9 barge landing perspective that I don't remember seeing before.
FWIW, my own feeling is that I'd like a quarterly "General Discussion Thread" (as with the equivalent Subreddit), to gather up all the minor stuff.
Are posts automatically 'published' or do they go through moderation first? (If this is something I should be able to determine myself, if I knew more about Lemmy, LMK and I'll go & do some reading!)
P.S. My thanks to you and all the team for all your efforts.
I'm a rocket ship on my way to Mars [in a sense]
I'm burnin' through the sky, yeah [over Namibia, at about ~3:43:11 for about a minute]
LMK if you find anything interesting! My guess is that if there is any melting & re-solidifying going on, it will be nothing larger than a droplet.
Love the view of the ISS from Dragon at 1:33:34 (and 1:34:30, 1:35:31, etc.)