tanrgith
tanrgith t1_jcyxu0z wrote
It's hard to overstate how far ahead of anyone else SpaceX is. Honestly don't know if I can recall a similar situation in an industry
tanrgith t1_jct23do wrote
Reply to We've had public access to ChatGPT for 3 months now. Has anyone made any actual profitable business or quality thing with it? by eratonnn
I use it basically everyday for work. It just makes life a lot easier
tanrgith t1_jcr8eo7 wrote
Reply to comment by BranchLatter4294 in Rolls-Royce go-ahead to build a nuclear reactor on Moon - Scientists and engineers are working on the micro-reactor programme that will help humans to live and work on Earth's natural satellite by Gari_305
You're gonna need a whole lot of batteries to support 2 weeks of energy needs
tanrgith t1_jboyzgx wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Denmark will be first country to import, store other countries' captured CO2 | "Our subsoil contains a storage potential far larger than our own emissions," said Danish Climate Minister Lars Aagaard. by chrisdh79
Shipping is not carbon intensive relative to other methods of transport
tanrgith t1_jbolcgj wrote
Reply to comment by PresentAd3536 in War in space: U.S. officials debating rules for a conflict in orbit by Azurebluenomad
You know what is also making Russia feel the bite? All the western ammunition and equipment that Ukraine is using to defend itself from the Russian invaders that's been raping women, kidnapping children, and committing genocide for the last year
tanrgith t1_jblbcbc wrote
Reply to comment by PresentAd3536 in War in space: U.S. officials debating rules for a conflict in orbit by Azurebluenomad
Genuine question - are you trolling?
Like, how does someone write that post with a straight face while the war in Ukraine is happening
tanrgith t1_jb787so wrote
Reply to What are some good sources I can use when finding out why the rocket fuel and exhaust particles separate during launch in the upper atmosphere causing that bright "bulb" of light? by redditslayer95
Fairly sure it's just sunlight reflecting off the exhaust particles
tanrgith t1_jay03ea wrote
Reply to comment by Pigs_in_the_Porridge in Half of all active satellites are now from SpaceX. Here’s why that may be a problem by ye_olde_astronaut
Says the person who started whining about "Elon shills" when the thread had like 5 comments
tanrgith t1_jasp1qs wrote
Reply to comment by aProudCatDad614 in After flying four astronauts into orbit, SpaceX makes its 101st straight landing — ‘I just feel so lucky that I get to fly on this amazing machine.’ by marketrent
It's about as weird as the people who try to push the narratives that Musk must in no way be given any credit for anything good or impressive that the companies he's been in charge of for 2 decades do
tanrgith t1_j9w8w8y wrote
Reply to comment by Anderopolis in After Vulcan comes online, ULA plans to dramatically increase launch cadence by OutlandishnessOk2452
Fair point
I still doubt they're gonna have the ability to pump out 2 rockets a month in less than 3 years
tanrgith t1_j9v9smx wrote
Reply to comment by Adeldor in After Vulcan comes online, ULA plans to dramatically increase launch cadence by OutlandishnessOk2452
The idea that the ULA would be able to pump out 2 full new rockets consistently each month and have enough demand for it in a world where SpaceX can profitable launch mass to orbit for far less seems wildly unrealistic
tanrgith t1_j90tjuw wrote
Reply to comment by Hrmbee in I Watched Elon Musk Kill Twitter’s Culture From the Inside | This bizarre episode in social-media history proves that it’s well past time for meaningful tech oversight by Hrmbee
Progressive ex twitter employee posts article on progressive newsite the atlantic, expressing feelings of not being a fan of Elon Musk's changes to Twitter, more news at 11
As if Twitter wasn't already a toxic hellscape long before Musk took it over
tanrgith t1_j80ajt8 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Blue Origin awarded NASA launch contract for Mars mission (Studying magnetic field) by kuroimakina
Oh there are similarities when you describe the two cases at a surface level. But any kind of deeper look at the two scenarios should make it super obvious that it's not really things that are comparable
The contracts that SpaceX won very early on when they were basically a very young startup with no proven track record. Those contracts are comparable to this contract that BO has been awarded
tanrgith t1_j802ein wrote
Reply to comment by starhoppers in Blue Origin awarded NASA launch contract for Mars mission (Studying magnetic field) by kuroimakina
So SpaceX won't be able to have a starship based lander ready in time....but some other aerospace company will? As far as jokes go that's a pretty good one
tanrgith t1_j80229c wrote
Reply to comment by Ukulele_Maestro in Blue Origin awarded NASA launch contract for Mars mission (Studying magnetic field) by kuroimakina
I don't really have a much of a problem with BO getting this contract
However trying to argue that BO getting this is in any way comparable to SpaceX getting their HLS contract is pretty silly and doesn't hold up to much scrutiny
tanrgith t1_j7wjavv wrote
All these tests being successful is so awesome, but at the same time I'm just over here going "can it be launch day yet already!?"
The wait for the first launch attempt has been and continues to be brutal lol
tanrgith t1_j77u4n8 wrote
Reply to comment by Blue_water_dreams in Musk found not guilty of fraud over Tesla tweet by civicode
3 + 3 is 4?
tanrgith t1_j77tnwf wrote
Reply to comment by Blue_water_dreams in Musk found not guilty of fraud over Tesla tweet by civicode
How so? Felt my post was pretty clear in it's intend.
Though I do appreciate that you think that little ol' me not overlooking the thread cancels out thousands of absent upvotes and comments that Musk/Tesla related threads usually get on this sub
tanrgith t1_j77qce6 wrote
Reply to comment by Blue_water_dreams in Musk found not guilty of fraud over Tesla tweet by civicode
No I was quite aware that I made a post in here, but thank you for pointing out the obvious nonetheless
tanrgith t1_j77om2n wrote
Reply to comment by Blue_water_dreams in Musk found not guilty of fraud over Tesla tweet by civicode
An astute observation
tanrgith t1_j764pez wrote
For a sub that loves to upvotes every minor thing related to Musk or Tesla, this sure has been oddly overlooked lol
tanrgith t1_j6kats6 wrote
Reply to Robotaxi by RolfEjerskov
Many people are probably gonna point to companies like Waymo who already operate robotaxi's. And that is true, and they will continue to operate for several years to come at minimum
However Waymo isn't close to profitable, and their tech isn't really designed in a scalable way (cars are too expensive, not able to be mass produced, and the software basically needs a ton of hardcoding to work in any given area), which is why they're still only operating in a few small parts of cities like Phoenix and San Francisco
tanrgith t1_j4ka0zw wrote
Reply to comment by FeatheryBallOfFluff in Will AI Lead To Lost Of Jobs by therealsam44
How many people that paint physical paintings actually make a living from it though. Like its all well and good that some things are harder to do for ai than others, but it doesnt really matter unless its a high demand thing.
tanrgith t1_j4907bx wrote
It continues to be hilarious that so many people, including "experts", thought this transition would take decades
tanrgith t1_jdjhfbj wrote
Reply to First crewed Starliner launch slips again by Afrin_Drip
Boeing plz
Thing is never gonna launch at this rate