skyspydude1

joined 1 year ago
[–] skyspydude1@lemmy.world 14 points 19 hours ago

The fact this is literally the 2nd story this week of Nazi shitheads openly waving their flags around is a good indicator it's not going to take nearly that long.

[–] skyspydude1@lemmy.world 2 points 19 hours ago (1 children)

At least from my personal experience, they're all too believable, and I'm sure plenty of others here have similar stories.

A couple of nights after the election I spoke to my father, and he could tell I was quite upset. He told me how I shouldn't worry because Trump was going to make everything better since "Joe and the Ho" hadn't done anything. Not even one or two sentences later he was telling me about how he needed to get all of this medical work done by the end of the year (he is on Medicare), because his Medicare agent told him they expected a good majority of those benefits to be cut next year by the upcoming administration...

Between the many similar stories from other family members and friends, the increased searches for "Project 2025" and "change vote", I really don't think it's a stretch at all for most to accept these as true, because many people are experiencing it firsthand.

[–] skyspydude1@lemmy.world 7 points 19 hours ago

Oh, I can totally believe it. Ethiopian food is so damn filling, while not being insanely calorie dense like a lot of what we're used to in the US. Beans and veggies are filling but not calorie dense, so just adding more of those, even cheap canned ones to your diet can make it much easier to lose weight. I had a buddy that lost almost 30lbs in college literally just by replacing a meal with a can or two of green beans and hot sauce every day for a couple of months. He's managed to keep it off too, as it helped him realize just how much more his hunger was sated by a couple 60cal cans of beans vs some huge 800 calorie meal from Taco Bell, which was his preferred junk food of choice at the time. Fun fact, it also works extremely well on overweight dogs, minus the hot sauce.

[–] skyspydude1@lemmy.world 2 points 2 days ago

!Is Deadpool and Wolverine canon?!<

[–] skyspydude1@lemmy.world 10 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I'm 29 and this is already the case. A lot of the early 2000s internet is already getting hard to find, and even a lot of early YouTube feels like it's been scrubbed clean, or had stuff auto-muted/removed due to copyright that drastically affects the content. Not to mention all the flash animations and whatnot that might not have made it to somewhere as big as Newgrounds. There's a lot of stuff I remember watching that seems to be utterly lost

[–] skyspydude1@lemmy.world 4 points 2 days ago (3 children)

How much are we considering earlier Marvel as part of the MCU? Because even though it was before Iron Man/Hulk and the official "start" of the current MCU, a lot of people seem to forget that the Blade Trilogy existed...

[–] skyspydude1@lemmy.world 11 points 3 days ago (1 children)

As someone who recently came out, I was kinda hoping that this would be here. It is a pretty wild thought

[–] skyspydude1@lemmy.world 1 points 4 days ago

"Expensive" is the real issue for Tesla. That's a couple dollars that can go into Elon's pockets.

[–] skyspydude1@lemmy.world 5 points 5 days ago

Having seen how my buddy lives with his family being in the ~$100M net worth range and them overall being quite modest people, I'd 100% believe someone well above that and/or wanting to flaunt their wealth in a stupidly ostentatious manner would put a pool in their kid's room.

[–] skyspydude1@lemmy.world 8 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

From scratch it's obviously not feasible, but having been a former Soviet state I'd imagine a good majority of the resources needed are floating around.

The main challenges with nuclear weapons are 1. procurement of the fissile material, 2. yield efficiency, and 3. miniaturization. Once you have the first part done, as Ukraine very likely has the nuclear fuel processing facilities to do so, the second part is less important if you just want a bomb. Just look at the fact that they were so confident the Little Boy would work they didn't even bother with a prototype, even if its yield ratio was quite low. It needed about 60kg of uranium for its 15kT yield, while Fat Man managed 21kT with only about 5kg of plutonium.

So, it's a tradeoff where if nuclear material is hard to come by and you need to get the bomb somewhere far away, making something really efficient is pretty important. However, if you have sufficient material and just want a decently big boom in the middle of a field, it's quite literally something you could feasibly manage in a home workshop.

The one other note on the importance of efficiency is in regards to fallout. Anything that isn't used in the detonation is blasted every which-way, and isn't really something you want as a normal military, since a nuclear wasteland isn't strategically very useful. But, if you're just trying to fuck up someone else's day, then its less important and you can get into really "fun" stuff like dirty and cobalt bombs.

[–] skyspydude1@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago

Very, very broadly, I'd say a lot of my concerns boil down to them convincing the broader industry as a whole that cutting costs and delivering a shit product is okay, so long as you're doing it as a "technology company"

  • Pushing out buggy, half-baked SW because "we'll fix it with an OTA" and a recall has little to no direct financial impact, allowing for you to gamble lives on hopefully getting a SW update out before the bugs cause accidents or deaths, rather than spending the time/money to get it right from the start.

  • Removing stuff like important, standard hard controls (buttons/stalks/etc) to make everything a touch control, purely for cost cutting, but acting like it's because buttons are "old tech"

  • Pushing that 100% BEV is the only current solution, rather than pushing for a far cheaper mass improvement of fuel economy and scaling BEVs as HEVs grow too, especially in developing markets.

  • Using a proprietary charging standard for nearly a decade, solely as a sales tactic, and only cooperating with other OEMs once it allowed them to collect government subsidies

Those are just a few I can think of off the very top of my head, and the ones I've seen have the most impact on the broader industry. I can go into more detail on any of them as well.

[–] skyspydude1@lemmy.world 7 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (1 children)

Mood. It's a scary fucking time to have this realization, and I'm really not sure what I'm going to do either....

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