rtb001
rtb001 t1_jbf3uj2 wrote
Reply to comment by Welshhoppo in Egypt archaeology: Dig unearths smiling mini-sphinx which may represent Claudius by egg_static5
Although if Tiberius really did assassinate Germanicus, he would have done it whether Germanicus set foot in Egypt or not. Not only was Germanicus more popular than Tiberius's own son Drusus, he also has closer bloodline to Augustus himself, being the grandson of Augustus' sister Octavia.
rtb001 t1_jbf181l wrote
Reply to comment by B1ueEyesWh1teDragon in Egypt archaeology: Dig unearths smiling mini-sphinx which may represent Claudius by egg_static5
It wasn't just Egypt, although Egypt was particularly key to the Emperor. Most Roman provinces were also not given to the senate to appoint a governor. Only a small subset of centrally located provinces along Italy itself and the Mediterranean were called "senatorial provinces". The key frontier provinces, where most of the troops are (Britain, Danube, Rhine, Syria etc) were imperial provinces, where the Emperor directly appointed governors, again to make sure only the people he trusts are given military commands.
rtb001 t1_jbeo96z wrote
Reply to comment by DaddyCatALSO in Egypt archaeology: Dig unearths smiling mini-sphinx which may represent Claudius by egg_static5
I believe the governor had to be of equestrian real, because the emperor didn't want a senator to oversee Egypt and potentially build a power base there.
Supposedly senators were not even allowed to VISIT Egypt, let alone govern it, such was its importance.
rtb001 t1_ja11s7h wrote
Reply to comment by macross1984 in Russia launches replacement spacecraft for astronauts stranded by coolant leak by electromagneticpost
They'll most lushly be fine. There hasn't been a fatal accident on a Soyuz for over 50 years, since Soyuz 11 back in 1971. They are like 120 launches more without any catastrophic accidents. It is a primitive craft in many ways, but easily the most reliable spacecraft in human history.
rtb001 t1_ja114me wrote
Reply to comment by GrannysPartyMerkin in Russia launches replacement spacecraft for astronauts stranded by coolant leak by electromagneticpost
I think he had a working Soyuz module. So he could have dipped at any time.
New podcast about him just dropped, called the last soviet. I think I'm going to have a listen, because it really was a fascinating story.
rtb001 t1_ja0z336 wrote
Reply to comment by Willinton06 in Earthquake death toll surpasses 50,000 in Turkey and Syria by Pierruno
Yet western press is very careful about saying Ukraine and not "The Ukraine" in their reporting, as well as Kyiv, and not Kiev, despite the fact that the latter terms have been used for a hundred years.
They do it because the Ukranians asked them to do so. The Turks have made the same request, but I guess nobody really cares in the western press.
rtb001 t1_j8cambj wrote
Reply to comment by LlamaWhoKnives in [Rapoport] Sources: Raiders QB Derek Carr has informed the team he won’t accept a trade to the Saints or any other team. The team is expected to release him and he’ll be a top free agent. by BCLetsRide69
And give them an excuse to void the contract and lose out on 40 million bucks? Just go out there on opening day and start chucking some INTs. That'll solve the playing for them problem without losing a single dollar.
rtb001 t1_j8cacnb wrote
Reply to comment by Sea-Slide348 in [Rapoport] Sources: Raiders QB Derek Carr has informed the team he won’t accept a trade to the Saints or any other team. The team is expected to release him and he’ll be a top free agent. by BCLetsRide69
Well if they were truly incompetent, they'd somehow mess up the release paperwork and miss the deadline, thereby giving Carr a 40 million dollar payday next week!
rtb001 t1_j7un0j8 wrote
Reply to comment by Emotional_Parsnip_69 in ‘We are not forgotten’: Formerly deported veterans become U.S. citizens in special San Diego ceremony by ProgressiveSnark2
We can keep these benefits and then quit anytime we want?
Yes. Unless of course, war were declared.
--sirens blaring--
What's that?
War were declared.
rtb001 t1_j6gz7ga wrote
Reply to comment by Rogue42bdf in Cowboys fire offensive coordinator Kellen Moore by RollingMoss1
A year or 2 as the Chargers OC might make Kellen look pretty good.
rtb001 t1_j6gtgnm wrote
Reply to comment by Idiot_Savant_Tinker in Scientists lower price of lithium's best competition - flow batteries - by 20%. Makes the battery effectively equal to or cheaper than lithium ion when spread over 30 years (flow battery lifetimes are effectively infinite with light repowering efforts). by PorkyPigDid911
At least 3 major battery makers in China have stated they are planning on mass production of sodium ion batteries sometime this year. Could be very interesting to see how these batteries perform if they do manage it.
BYD is even claiming their sodium battery may be dense enough to go into their cheapest upcoming car, which could be a game changer if it really is feasible.
rtb001 t1_j5kzz6v wrote
Reply to comment by _CDXX_LXIX in Google to merge mapping service Waze with maps products teams | CNN Business by sovamind
Waze seems utterly incapable of search, period. With GMap I can just say navigate to the closest library/Burger King/whatever, and it'll find it and immediately plot a route to it. With Waze it'll find you a Starbucks 3 counties over for some reason and decide that is somehow the closest place you requested.
rtb001 t1_j4xw7ap wrote
Reply to comment by Villedo in Ousted Disney CEO Bob Chapek will get $20 million exit pay by lumpkin2013
I think it is only the baseball HoF which pulls that stringent shit. All the other HoFs let mostly anyone of note in, which is why Rudy being snubbed for so long is such a mystery.
rtb001 t1_j4xup2j wrote
Reply to comment by Villedo in Ousted Disney CEO Bob Chapek will get $20 million exit pay by lumpkin2013
How he couldn't even make the HoF until 2021 is beyond me.
rtb001 t1_j4v5w8s wrote
Reply to comment by JennJayBee in Ousted Disney CEO Bob Chapek will get $20 million exit pay by lumpkin2013
Alright there Elon, you're already "running" 3 companies, at least wait until Twitter is in the ground before you go after another CEO gig.
rtb001 t1_j4v5gum wrote
Reply to comment by thrawn815 in Ousted Disney CEO Bob Chapek will get $20 million exit pay by lumpkin2013
Actually a moderately successful FBS coach is way way more lucrative. Just look at the money super agent Jimmy Sexton got for James Franklin, Mel Tucker, and Jimbo Fisher! All getting nearly 10 million a year just based on like 1 good year of results.
rtb001 t1_j4v45w1 wrote
Reply to comment by mejok in Ousted Disney CEO Bob Chapek will get $20 million exit pay by lumpkin2013
Mourniho wasn't getting jobs just on the initial praise through. He was successful or better at each stop, winning league titles, UEFA Champions League, Europa league etc.
What you want is Doc Rivers. Luck into one championship when your GM creates one of NBA's earliest superteams for you, then ride the coattails of that one trophy for the next 15 years, blowing one playoff after another (damn near blew a 3-0 lead last year! ), sometimes throw your own players under the bus after those losses, yet never without a job, and somehow makes it onto the NBA's top 15 coaches of all time list, because the American basketball world loves to screw over Rudy T for some reason.
rtb001 t1_j29apiw wrote
Reply to comment by breadexpert69 in Over 200 cars involved in fatal crash in China by ihthisham4me2
But but the Great Elon told me that for the low low price of 15,000 USD, my car would drive itself (one day soon, definitely, like next year probably, if inky we didn't have all those pesky government regulators) , and just like people, all it needs are some cameras, and none of the lidar, radar, ultrasonic crap being used by dinosaur "legacy" auto!
rtb001 t1_j29a3fz wrote
Reply to comment by Paethgoat in Christmas Day dust up at Waffle House ends in arrests by d1yb
The reason is because it was AWESOME
rtb001 t1_iwqyrm4 wrote
Reply to comment by phixionalbear in Andrew Forrest commits $740m to global investment fund to rebuild Ukraine | Volodymyr Zelenskiy says ‘communist-era rubbish Russian infrastructure’ will be replaced by latest technology and fund will accelerate country’s economy by AsslessBaboon
I've no clue if he is actually a crook or not, but I'm pretty certain most of that money is going to end up in somebody's offshore accounts rather than spent on actual rebuilding.
rtb001 t1_iwnwpji wrote
Reply to comment by Harvey-Danger1917 in Woman caught wearing sex toy with boyfriend's ashes inside at airport security by Dr___Krieger
But it is his favorite place!
rtb001 t1_iwgov0f wrote
Reply to comment by frostnxn in AMD Now Powers 101 of the World's Fastest Supercomputers by Avieshek
Also I think in hindsight, AMD spinning off global foundries was a really good move. Maybe at the time it was because AMD didn't have to money to keep and maintain their own fab, so they had to become a contract manufacturer. However in later years we would see that not having their own fab meant AMD could be agile about the design of their next gen PC and server chips. So long as TSMC or Samsung could make it, then AMD can design it. But Intel was forced to only make chip designs that can be made to a good yield in their own fabs.
rtb001 t1_iwgntj1 wrote
Reply to comment by Mowensworld in AMD Now Powers 101 of the World's Fastest Supercomputers by Avieshek
It is super impressive that Intel is a much bigger company that until recently only did CPUs, and nVidia is a much bigger company that mostly does GPUs, while AMD does BOTH yet has survived all this time.
rtb001 t1_itpyez3 wrote
Reply to comment by Dr_Vanc_Zosyn in If each side of our body is controlled by the opposite brain hemisphere, how do we blink in sync? by killians1978
Many signals cross the midline all over the brain.
The corpus callosum is literally the largest fiber tract in the nervous system, and its job is to link the two cerebral hermitage hemispheres so they can communicate with each other.
But as the fascinating split brain experiments have shown, even if you completely sever the callosum in a fully developed adult brain, it still requires specific conditions to show that the hemispheres are acting much more independently than normal.
rtb001 t1_jdoe61v wrote
Reply to comment by blackchoas in Various statements by Zhu Yuanzhang the Emperor Hongwu, founder of the Ming Dynasty, about the Yuan Dynasty. by zhuquanzhong
Well by the nature of this concept of a "mandate from heaven", he kind of have to take this position. If the founder of the Ming dynasty claims he now has the legitimate devine right to rule China by taking this mandate from the preceding Yuan dynasty, then by definition the Yuan dynasty must have been at one point legitimate. After all, if they were never legitimate, and then you took the mandate to rule from them, that would mean your own mandate is also illegitimate.
Therefore the official stance of EVERY major Chinese dynasty has to be that the previous dynasty gained the mandate of heaven legitimately, but then lost said mandate due to poor rule, thereby allowing the new dynasty to claim the mandate and begin the cycle anew.
Interesting side note about the mandate is that there was once a physical symbol of it in the form of a massive jade seal made by the first emperor of China around 220 BCE, which survived multiple pronged periods of interdynastic chaos, until eventually the Heirloom Seal of the Realm was finally lost to history somewhere around the Song to Yuan dynasties. Zhu's forces looked very hard for the seal as they took over the country from the retreating Mongol five, but came up empty.