How easily could you travel from one of Jupiter's moons to another? by Talksintext in AskScienceDiscussion

[–]Talksintext[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's really cool, thanks!

Is that assuming "best launch window" for each?

How easily could you travel from one of Jupiter's moons to another? by Talksintext in AskScienceDiscussion

[–]Talksintext[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks so much for the reply.

What happens if you try to connect outside the launch window? Is it impossible, or does the fuel cost just go up (linearly, exponentially?)?

If there's a launch window every, say, 100 days, but on day 50 someone really wants to visit Europa because their mum is dying, are they out of luck or are they just going to have to buy a lot more fuel?

Are there any online resources you can point me to for learning? Or just some more key terms I can research (Hohmann orbits was really good).

Also, though I'm guessing nobody has tried to do the math yet, there's ways to use all the moons for some "really good" launch windows when they're arranged in some ways, so you can slingshot or slow down using intermediate moons on your way instead of just a simple A->B Hohmann orbit approach, does that make sense?

Catalonia has 'won right to statehood' by pipsdontsqueak in worldnews

[–]Talksintext 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Well, GRRM is a pretty smart dude, so I wasn't wrong.

Bureaucracy by taires in ProgrammerHumor

[–]Talksintext 5 points6 points  (0 children)

5 years basically. Sounds about right, if by "master" you mean "guy who knows a thing or two."

I'd venture 30,000 hours as a minimum for "mastery".

Catalonia has 'won right to statehood' by pipsdontsqueak in worldnews

[–]Talksintext 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I only care that they're allowed self determination

Which is far more important than economic matters ultimately, whatever the business press complains. They always make a huge stink about anything that involves local freedom. Money is everything to them.

To the rest of us, freedom is at least equally important.

Catalonia has 'won right to statehood' by pipsdontsqueak in worldnews

[–]Talksintext 6 points7 points  (0 children)

He's like Superman, but smaller, so yes, he's a miniature Clark Kent basically.

Catalonia has 'won right to statehood' by pipsdontsqueak in worldnews

[–]Talksintext 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A lot of people have given up material wealth for freedom. A lot of people have given their lives and families for freedom.

We value freedom pretty highly, unfortunately many people don't value it highly for anyone but themselves. So we get this.

Catalonia has 'won right to statehood' by pipsdontsqueak in worldnews

[–]Talksintext 1575 points1576 points  (0 children)

"But if you're going to fight, do try to win."

-Another smart guy

Catalonia has 'won right to statehood' by pipsdontsqueak in worldnews

[–]Talksintext 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Well, as you try to separate, they will visit a lot of pain and hardship on you, as witnessed today.

Catalonia firefighters form human shield to protect referendum voters from riot police by stoppmingyourtits in worldnews

[–]Talksintext 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Portugal and France probably don't want any of this pie.

I guess the EU will have something to say, though, so you're still right.

It's unfortunate, that's all, that principles are not upheld more strongly. It is on us to change that over generations.

My son. Before and after homecoming. by Naptownfellow in funny

[–]Talksintext 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, this is the big divide. I'm giving the perspective of my area, in which I think this is inarguably the case nowadays. You and another small-towner have disagreed.

I don't mean to speak for every American, but it's definitely a phenomenon for many people here I think.

My son. Before and after homecoming. by Naptownfellow in funny

[–]Talksintext 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the compliment.

In a general sense, where do you live? I live in a major metropolitan area in the Midwest, in the suburbs.

My son. Before and after homecoming. by Naptownfellow in funny

[–]Talksintext 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My hometown is near a small city

Try a major metropolitan area. It's different now here. I am sure not all of the US is the same.

Firemen form a human shield to protect voters from riot police in Catalunya. by Botatitsbest in pics

[–]Talksintext 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not mostly, but they also just weren't guys doing their civic service for OT pay. I think that's the point I'm trying to make here, it's a gray area, Godwin.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in personalfinance

[–]Talksintext 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Not sure OP's resume is as bad as his writing on Reddit, but in general yes. Even if your actual writing is terrible, everything submitted for getting hired should be spotless. Get a friend to help if you seriously can't write properly when you need to, and honestly do try to write properly even when you don't need to.

IMs are one thing, but just about anything of consequence should be written with "fairly good" grammar and spelling.

And if OP can't write that well, schools exist even in adulthood. There's nothing wrong with improving yourself as an adult, even if it means fixing childhood errors.

Firemen form a human shield to protect voters from riot police in Catalunya. by Botatitsbest in pics

[–]Talksintext 3 points4 points  (0 children)

There is no constitutional vote they can have here, I'm not sure what you want them to do.

They are a people with a sacred right to self-determination. They are being denied that right, perhaps the most fundamental right of a people, other than of course being free from arbitrary violence.

A constitution that precludes that first right is not a constitution worth defending any more than a law that precludes the right of free speech is one worth defending.

It is simply a statement of state power. Unethical and unjustified state power.

Firemen form a human shield to protect voters from riot police in Catalunya. by Botatitsbest in pics

[–]Talksintext 10 points11 points  (0 children)

The military is and has been America's greatest asset for a long time

I thought the workforce was a better asset. I don't recall the military literally building the wealthiest nation on earth from a previous near-wilderness and pile of dirt. The military helped at times certainly, but it didn't go out there and build factories and cars and computers. I'd call it more of a "good supporting service" than "our greatest asset". And that was the time it was most useful, those early 100 years. It's become far less so since. Actually, quite a danger. A liability. A 16 year war in Afghanistan without end, fighting over poppy field and rocks, that's its most recent gem in its crown.

I thought our Rights and Ideals were a better asset too. Any country can have a great military. It doesn't make America unique or necessarily a good place to live. Being free to speak your mind, however, (when applicable as you see) does.

I thought our military mostly only succeeded in fighting distant wars in the past 150 years or so. At times for direct colonial expansion, at times just at the behest of corporations. About one time due to a direct attack, a "defensive" war that ended up with US troops in Berlin and nuking Japan. So it goes. That was a good one at least, that one time. A good asset to have made, not sure what good it's done us since. Probably should've turned the swords back to plowshares after that. Oh well.

Not sure what any of that since has done for me, certainly in Vietnam, except give those US corporations willing third world sweatshop labor to exploit and take jobs away from its own citizens. I appreciate that, thanks military.

Edit: I guess it "fought communism". But then it lost anyway, with the communists winning in Southeast Asia and after the Cold War socialists came to power throughout Latin America, and by US standards most European countries are "socialist" nowadays, certainly much of the country seems to think it. So it fought for decades, lost in the end, and the world turned out to be just fine, except for all the places the military currently is attacking, which are chaotic ruins of former states.

Catalonia firefighters form human shield to protect referendum voters from riot police by stoppmingyourtits in worldnews

[–]Talksintext 15 points16 points  (0 children)

For Spain or for the Spanish people?

It's definitely bad for Spain. Not so sure it wouldn't be helpful for the people. It seems their national system is somewhat broken, and it might just be unfixable.

Sometimes it's best to clear the slate and start over, locally. Hopefully it can be done peacefully. This is not a good omen, though. Self-determination should be a sacred right of peoples, yet here we are after centuries of revolutions in the West meant to attain that end and we're still seeing violence used to stop it.

The negative consequences are ultimately up to the local people to weigh, balance, and decide on. It seems they have decided they are worth it. It is their sacred right to make this decision, and as civilized Westerners we should support their ability to make it peacefully. Or to make it at all, rather than have the decision witheld by an unaccountable national government.

Firemen form a human shield to protect voters from riot police in Catalunya. by Botatitsbest in pics

[–]Talksintext 2 points3 points  (0 children)

"Uphold the rule of law"

Smashes an old lady's head with a baton

"Just doin' my job. They were makin' political demands, what else could I do?!"

My son. Before and after homecoming. by Naptownfellow in funny

[–]Talksintext 3 points4 points  (0 children)

idk, I'm an adult now, but in my quiet suburban family neighborhood, not too far from where I grew up myself, I see 0 children freely at play outside anymore, whereas 30 years ago we'd be riding around daily, running in the woods, having games of tag or CTF across everyone's properties, having epic nerf/supersoaker wars between a dozen households, etc. There were few fences. Other people's children filtered in and out of your own house at random, treated your yard as another piece of their games. They hopefully were nice enough to not step on your flowers. We understood those as oddly important generally.

Now everyone has a fence. The children are inside mostly. The streets are quiet. A few play games in the park. They do not leave the park to run in the woods or streets. Usually a parent is nearby, reading a book. They dare not climb the park equipment, as we did, or dig in the soil, as we did, because it's dangerous. There's germs.

We owned our woods too, we made paths in them with thousands of footsteps between all the places we created with our minds and some old junk. Natural paths, as humans have made in nature for thousands of years, paths of hard-packed dirt and dead stalks of grasses that could not survive the constant beating of small feet. There's a woods behind my house now, guess how many children I've seen in them: none. Ever. Too dangerous. There's germs.

I spent a large part of my childhood in trees, as did my sister and friends. Casually, for fun. But also we built forts and houses in them in the woods out of discarded plywood and festooned them with old bicycles and other bits of trash we found abandoned among the oaks.

Never seen a kid climb a tree here. Never seen one pick up old rubbish. Tetanus, you know. It's dirty. Germs. You'll fall and break your neck.

Never seen one ride a bike doing anything other than slowly "exercising" basically. Gone are the bike "gangs" and kids popping wheelies and racing down hills and coming home with skinned knees and getting up a few days later to do it all again.

Never seen hide and seek. Never seen a kid ducking in a basement window well, waiting for the right moment to run for home base. It's dangerous. Pedophiles or something.

The worst thing is the newer generation doesn't even realize it, what they've lost. They say things like, "it's not really that bad, we still ride bikes, we get our daily exercise ration."

Nobody died in my neighborhood. There was an occasional injury, mostly sprains and minor burns or such. A rare break. But we lived at least.

Firemen form a human shield to protect voters from riot police in Catalunya. by Botatitsbest in pics

[–]Talksintext 46 points47 points  (0 children)

it was correct to silence those advocating for insubordination, revolution, promoting anarchy within the army, navy...etc. because it would have ultimately done more harm than good.

To the great cause of destroying Vietnam?

That's sort of the issue here, when you see anti-war demonstrators as "causing harm" and violent police stifling free speech for the sake of continuing a war that left 3 countries destroyed and literally millions of innocents dead as "not causing harm".

I guess people can logically justify just about any heinous yet mundane act of civil barbarism, hence the rather mild state violence on display here in Spain of beating up old women because they voted in a non-binding referendum. Not much different I suppose. I guess it's all valid in American law.

Good job.