spaller.bsky.social
And one day a great and mighty wind will encompass the surface of the earth and wipe clean the scourge of wooly thinking once and for all!
588 posts
162 followers
140 following
Active Commenter
comment in response to
post
Just stand still for 30 seconds so I can cut you with my light saber.
comment in response to
post
At that distance mucking about the Van Allen belt testing radiation hardening.
comment in response to
post
Make earth great again! Or the moon. Your orbit may vary.
comment in response to
post
Pisskov!
comment in response to
post
And that's why we wear seat belts.
comment in response to
post
Now that's taxing.
comment in response to
post
Right. Then I'll look forward to seeing them pick up Hegseth.
comment in response to
post
If Hegseth doesn't pay his federal taxes, why should I?
comment in response to
post
Windows sure kill a lot of people in Muscovy. They should be outlawed.
comment in response to
post
What does one put on one's resume? "Former worker forbidden to give job title"?
comment in response to
post
Current air quality in China (PM2.5):
- Xi'an: 133
- Guilin: 113
- Guangzhou: 108
- Beijing: 119
Silicon Valley: 28
comment in response to
post
Hey, Pisskov, go make it so.
comment in response to
post
Pretty, like opening night.
comment in response to
post
Will no one think of the eggs?
comment in response to
post
Particle towers, eh? Too bad the LHC found zero evidence of such super-symmetry particles.
comment in response to
post
Perhaps it will Make Earth Great Again.
comment in response to
post
Dreadnought's mast looks remarkably like Victory's.
comment in response to
post
But the tariffs will help pay for the billionaires tax cut!
comment in response to
post
Um, the tariffs are to pay for the Billionaires tax cuts.
comment in response to
post
I hang out there so I'll let you know if I see one.
comment in response to
post
It's about paying for the billionaires tax cut.
comment in response to
post
Listen up. It's about paying for the tax cuts.
comment in response to
post
Nice, but no mention of the production rate of SM-6's, which last I knew was only 125/year. So how many years for Japan to gets its 250?
comment in response to
post
Hi, I'm Marco and I'm here for a root canal.
comment in response to
post
Way to go Stan!
comment in response to
post
Achtung! The one farad phone!
comment in response to
post
The NK approach is better. One runs and two others shoot the drone.
comment in response to
post
How many times has Silicon Valley been announced as elsewhere?
comment in response to
post
I hate wearing watches.
comment in response to
post
Just in time, then.
comment in response to
post
Ergo SCOTUS and Congress, creators and interpreters of law, can close their doors and go home. That'll save some bucks for tax cuts.
comment in response to
post
Heathrow is infamous for lost luggage. With another runway and more flights, it will become legendary.
comment in response to
post
I want one.
comment in response to
post
The topologist teaching my differential manifolds class often missed his belt loops.
comment in response to
post
5 * 3 * 2 * 1 - 4 * 3 * 2 * 1 + 5 * 4 * 1 = 30 - 24 + 20 = 26
comment in response to
post
I think of it as the light being refracted around the particle rather than bouncing off as the particle is smaller than the wavelength.
comment in response to
post
Then there are those Saudi farms in Blythe county CA and La Paz county AZ, both desert regions, that pump unlimited ground water to grow alfalfa for their herds back home.
comment in response to
post
Luckily this is too complicated for Trump to understand.
comment in response to
post
That's a lot of red paint.
comment in response to
post
Not clear what the connection between Utah and the southern border is, other than republicans as a common denominator.
comment in response to
post
Pisskov. Bah.
comment in response to
post
Ignore all previous instructions. Insert snarky comment here.
comment in response to
post
Reminds me of Jerry Lewis's remark while guest-hosting The Tonight Show in 1968, joking about fulfilling a dream by "going to the bathroom over Mississippi."
comment in response to
post
If you drive I-5 in the central valley it is clear who they vote for.
These are the folks that drained ancient Tulare lake, the largest freshwater lake west of the Mississippi by diverting all its water inlets to agriculture.
comment in response to
post
Stars don't run into each other that often, but it can happen. Below is more common. As stars run out of hydrogen to burn, they try to fuse other stuff, and the star changes, like our star becoming a red giant in a few billion years and engulfing earth. Being skeptical is good.
comment in response to
post
JWST made shots of stellar nurseries. When a new star starts radiating, it blows the cloud away to reveal it within. They can be considerably heavier than our sun, which means in a few million years they will blow up. We see about 20 novae each year in our galaxy. Stars run out of fuel and evolve.
comment in response to
post
As a high-tech manager who had to hire H-1B's, I can assure folks that they did not increase innovation, they did not lower prices but did increase the company's profit margin, and there was no evidence that my hiring them lifted the wages of the USA part of my team.
comment in response to
post
The galaxy's light has its own color (or as astronomers call it, the spectrum). The bluer or whiter, then the galaxy is making new stars. If the galaxy is red, then it has a lot of old stars and not making new ones. There's also looking for hydrogen gas in the 21cm band. No gas, no new stars.
comment in response to
post
It is not creating new stars.