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ceejayoz

94,703 karmajoined 16 jaar geleden
Mastodon: @[email protected]

Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/ceejayoz.io

Email: [email protected]

Submissions

FanDuel sent personal message from Phillies star to gambling addiction

inquirer.com
4 points·by ceejayoz·eergisteren·1 comments

Meta glasses wearers hit with paywall to use built-in feature

bbc.com
2 points·by ceejayoz·4 dagen geleden·1 comments

Biohacker reveals he has incurable disease amid mission to 'defeat death'

the-independent.com
7 points·by ceejayoz·5 dagen geleden·3 comments

NASA inspector general suggests Boeing's Starliner will now be a decade late

arstechnica.com
4 points·by ceejayoz·10 dagen geleden·2 comments

White House picks Avi Loeb with polarizing alien theories to lead UFO council

pbs.org
14 points·by ceejayoz·10 dagen geleden·2 comments

Supreme Court rules Trump cannot fire Fed member Lisa Cook

nbcnews.com
15 points·by ceejayoz·12 dagen geleden·1 comments

Meta Exposed Data Internally from Its Controversial Employee-Tracking Program

wired.com
37 points·by ceejayoz·18 dagen geleden·5 comments

Wildlife thrives in solar farm built on restored peatland

newscientist.com
7 points·by ceejayoz·19 dagen geleden·0 comments

Conservatives are dying at higher rates than liberals

fastcompany.com
12 points·by ceejayoz·19 dagen geleden·14 comments

Pentagon Official Admits Boat Strike May Have Killed Human Trafficking Victims

theintercept.com
8 points·by ceejayoz·vorige maand·3 comments

Judge Strikes Down $100k Fee for Skilled Foreign Worker Visas

nytimes.com
19 points·by ceejayoz·vorige maand·0 comments

AI costs how much? GitHub Copilot users react to new usage-based pricing system

arstechnica.com
3 points·by ceejayoz·vorige maand·1 comments

Lawmakers propose banning all U.S.-Chinese research collaborations

science.org
5 points·by ceejayoz·vorige maand·0 comments

The millionaires tax was pitched as a $2B revenue source. It's blown past that

bostonglobe.com
6 points·by ceejayoz·vorige maand·0 comments

No child deaths definitively linked to Covid shots, FDA says

nbcnews.com
40 points·by ceejayoz·2 maanden geleden·12 comments

U.S. researchers face new restrictions on publishing with foreign collaborators

science.org
420 points·by ceejayoz·2 maanden geleden·279 comments

ACLU Secures $485,000 Settlement for FWC Biologist Fired over Charlie Kirk Post

live-awp-florida.pantheonsite.io
21 points·by ceejayoz·2 maanden geleden·5 comments

Tennessee man jailed 37 days for Trump meme wins settlement after lawsuit

fire.org
768 points·by ceejayoz·2 maanden geleden·515 comments

Overworked AI Agents Turn Marxist, Researchers Find

wired.com
18 points·by ceejayoz·2 maanden geleden·4 comments

"Not Medically Necessary": Helping America's Health Insurers Deny Coverage

propublica.org
217 points·by ceejayoz·2 maanden geleden·210 comments

comments

ceejayoz
·6 uur geleden·discuss
Radiology is using AI extensively already. I was at a radiology conference in Boston recently; entire session tracks on it. Apparently 80% of FDA-approved AI medical devices are in radiology.
ceejayoz
·6 uur geleden·discuss
I’m not sure that “we don’t make satellites out of rock and ice” needs a cite, but here you go.

https://research.noaa.gov/noaa-scientists-link-exotic-metal-...

> Niobium and hafnium do not occur as free elements in nature, but are refined from mineral ores. They are used in semiconductors and superalloys.

> In addition to these two unusual elements, a significant number of particles contained copper, lithium and aluminum at concentrations far exceeding the abundance found in meteorics, or ‘space dust.’ “The combination of aluminum and copper, plus niobium and hafnium, which are used in heat-resistant, high-performance alloys, pointed us to the aerospace industry,’’ Murphy said.
ceejayoz
·10 uur geleden·discuss
> If you read it then you know you maliciously selectively quoted it then.

No. I quoted one part that was just deeply goofy logic.

The presence of a video on YouTube is, quite simply, not evidence of the behavior in it being legal. YouTube is full of illegal shit.
ceejayoz
·12 uur geleden·discuss
I did read what you said; that's why I quoted part of it.

I think "I make explosives for YouTube revenue" falls squarely within the business territory.

https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/27/555.161

See also: https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/27/555.11

> Licensed manufacturer. A manufacturer licensed under this part to engage in the business of manufacturing explosive materials for purposes of sale or distribution or for his own use.
ceejayoz
·12 uur geleden·discuss
> His videos of making them were on YouTube for years, publicly.

So? That doesn't make something legal.
ceejayoz
·12 uur geleden·discuss
Well, that, and the making explosives bit, it seems.

https://www.justice.gov/usao-wdmo/pr/sweet-springs-missouri-...
ceejayoz
·12 uur geleden·discuss
There's lots of knowledge out there about stuff like this. Milennia of humans tinkering with things that go boom. Surfacing it more easily has value (in a manner of speaking; as the @dril tweet goes, "you do not, under any circumstances, 'gotta hand it to them'").
ceejayoz
·13 uur geleden·discuss
> Not in scientific edge domains.

That's JWST-style stuff, not SpaceX at this point.
ceejayoz
·13 uur geleden·discuss
Yeah, planes are noisy enough without making them into a call center cubicle farm.
ceejayoz
·14 uur geleden·discuss
But a significantly different makeup than plain old rock dust.
ceejayoz
·14 uur geleden·discuss
> How much do you want incumbent multi-decade culprits to pay?

https://www.space.com/space-exploration/launches-spacecraft/...

"Elon Musk's company has now lofted more spacecraft than the rest of humanity combined — and its lead is likely to grow over the coming months and years."

(And most of the other providers don't plan for theirs to burn up within a few years. Giant disposable LEO constellations are new.)
ceejayoz
·14 uur geleden·discuss
> Also, fuel is just part of the cost of a rocket.

Sure. But if you blew up a 747 at the end of every trip, it'd be a small part of the total cost, not a major part.

Starship's reusability makes it very clearly not like the other examples you cite, yeah? There are lots of scenarios where the US government would pay, say, $10M to deliver a payload somewhere fast, but not $250M.
ceejayoz
·15 uur geleden·discuss
> Economic viability is not the same goal.

They're close enough, functionally.
ceejayoz
·16 uur geleden·discuss
https://x.com/thesheetztweetz/status/1251155738421899273

Tory Bruno saying "no one has come anywhere near close to demonstrating these economic sustainability goals".

https://www.teslarati.com/spacex-critic-ula-ceo-reusable-roc...

> “We have not really changed our assessment over the last couple of years because we have yet to see the other forms of reusability—flyback or propulsive return to Earth—demonstrate economic sustainability on a recurring basis. It’s pretty darn hard to make that actually save money… We’ve seen nothing yet that changes our analysis on that,” the ULA CEO said.

> The ULA CEO’s points about the possible lack of savings on reusable rockets put him in stark contrast with other noteworthy leaders in the space industry. Apart from SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, fellow billionaire Jeff Bezos of Blue Origin is also intently focused on using reusable rockets. Even Rocket Lab CEO Peter Beck, whose company designs and launches small rockets, has embraced the idea of reusing previously-flown boosters.
ceejayoz
·20 uur geleden·discuss
There's an unavoidable physical cap here.

It's fueled with methane and oxygen, and its size is known.

It can't be, say, $50m/flight in fuel for the same reason a 747's flight can't be; there's not enough space for that much fuel.
ceejayoz
·gisteren·discuss
Yes, the MP, former MEP, and founder of a significant political party is closer to being “the establishment” than the comedy candidate dressed up as a rubbish bin.
ceejayoz
·gisteren·discuss
ULA was openly skeptical about the viability of landing at all. Then reuse. Then the goalposts moved to this, repeated reuse.
ceejayoz
·gisteren·discuss
> People doubt the timelines, not the claims.

People doubted the claims, too. Particularly landing and re-use.

Concrete example: https://spaceflightnow.com/2015/04/13/ula-plans-to-introduce...
ceejayoz
·gisteren·discuss
> I just don't see how the fuel costs of getting things up to space winning out unless production is located up there.

Starship's in theory targeting something like a million bucks in fuel for a launch. For a military that spends more than that on individual missiles, that's peanuts.
ceejayoz
·3 dagen geleden·discuss
Ah, there it is.