trophycloset33
trophycloset33 t1_jdpb4f7 wrote
Can you overlay it with a map of major roads and population heat map?
I suspect that over 95% of the population can be served in less than 20 minutes.
trophycloset33 t1_jdoyr22 wrote
Reply to comment by Square_Tea4916 in [OC] Retro Activities People Currently Still Do bucketed by Age by Square_Tea4916
Bar graph would be just fine.
Or change the independent axis to show continuous data.
https://whatagraph.com/blog/articles/discrete-vs-continuous-data/#toc_3
trophycloset33 t1_jdmfdi6 wrote
A line chart shouldn’t be used for this
trophycloset33 t1_j8sk7ms wrote
Reply to comment by Pornelius_McSucc in Terraforming a magnetosphere possible? by Pornelius_McSucc
Cresting false moons or trying to restart a planets tectonic convection process is feasible in this scenario?
If we have this ability than near to light travel or building mega structures absolutely is possible. In addition to elevating to we have likely evolved to a level 2 civilization
trophycloset33 t1_j8rf3vu wrote
If we ever reach this status we might as well evolve into a level 3 species and create our own artificial planet or travel to one that fits our needs. We are harnessing power of entire solar systems and near by suns, we wouldn’t need the protection of a magnetic field or planetary warmth anymore.
trophycloset33 t1_j6b6wl5 wrote
Reply to comment by habanero_sauce in Ex-Wagner commander witnessed comrades shot for fleeing, says his Norwegian lawyer by PjeterPannos
It is a physiological blow to Russia if their troops sees a former commander publicly denounce the war. It will encourage them to not fight as hard if not throw down their weapons.
trophycloset33 t1_j6b6s6g wrote
Reply to comment by OffManWall in Ex-Wagner commander witnessed comrades shot for fleeing, says his Norwegian lawyer by PjeterPannos
Don’t forget pillaging, chemicals weapons, targeting civilian centers and hospitals, kidnapping and false flag operations.
trophycloset33 t1_j5i2kle wrote
Reply to comment by frogger4625 in Seattle-based Jetoptera is developing a vertical takeoff aircraft that can travel at almost 1,000 km/h with a radically simplified new type of engine. With almost no moving parts, it uses super-compressed air to create vortexes for thrust. by lughnasadh
Because it is!
You have an internal fan that pushes the wind up into the ring that blows it out the sides and forms a “tunnel” of low pressure that pulls air long with it. There is a link in the article to the inventor of dyson fan who explains it.
trophycloset33 t1_j5fvnv6 wrote
Reply to Seattle-based Jetoptera is developing a vertical takeoff aircraft that can travel at almost 1,000 km/h with a radically simplified new type of engine. With almost no moving parts, it uses super-compressed air to create vortexes for thrust. by lughnasadh
This sounds like a great comparable to scram but you still need a shit ton of power to accelerate up Mach 3 before this engine is operational
trophycloset33 t1_jdpe2qs wrote
Reply to comment by wcedmisten in [OC] Map of Hospital Accessibility by Car in Virginia by wcedmisten
Aa way to visualize it may be dots. Lighter red for less densely packed, darker red for more densely packed and size of the dot represents area of the city centered around the center of population. Not sure what software you are using or how difficult it would be to show this though….
But cool math. Less than I thought or would hope for. Probably poor access to high ways is the main driver to this.