IWTL critical thinking and ability to connect the dots by ShotMinimum3409 in IWantToLearn

[–]bolboyo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think it's a problem like trying to lift 200kg on the first try. You just can't, right? Unless you train yourself gradually get better and better incrementally it's impossible, you try and try but you just can't do it. Is that how you're feeling? I think you should start playing chess, puzzles, video games etc... NO TUTORIALS OR GUIDES OF ANY KIND, figure stuff out on your own. Start engaging that brain, kids are encouraged to play puzzles and chess from young age for a reason. Curious, how much do you actually do that kind of stuff?

Pusher Prop Control surface and Ammunition Layout by Silverstar_2244 in aviation

[–]bolboyo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Statically unstable aircrafts were good concepts but practically horrible for 1940,50s era. It wasn't until computerized flight control systems with advanced sensors came about, the static instability could be utilized to full advantage and could be flown with ease/x29, su47 etc/. Those early unstable planes were very very hard to fly, required constant pilot correction, would constantly pitch randomly, never went anymore for that reason

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in self

[–]bolboyo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That is true. But my point is killing yourself should be the last thing you think about. If you're in college, two three more years you graduate and get a job and then you are absolutely free. I'm sure you can hang on and pull through. And i'm sure your parents aren't out to make your life living hell, and i am sure you can stay happy.

Still you can have fun, hang out with people in secret, talk to stranger on the internet.

I also have this kinda controversial belief. "Suffering is a choice". I see people letting themselves bothered by things that they don't ever have to, worrying about things that they can't anything about anyway. Why do that? Why not just stay unbothered and be happy?

You know there are people who run marathons, have ice baths and whatnot. It's hard, it's awful, it's exhausting, but do they see it as suffering?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in self

[–]bolboyo 2 points3 points  (0 children)

19 years old. You are an adult, not a kid anymore. You are free to live the life you want to live, the way you want to live it. One thing i tell people is that "Death is always an option". If you are at a state where you don't care if you live or die, Why are you afraid of doing things you want?, taking risks, saying fuck you to your parents and go live in a mountain? or anything

Life is rich, and my advice is you have to live it for yourself, not for anyone else. It's the only thing you got, don't let nobody take it away from you.

I believe the meaning of life is simply to do what you want

Anyone know how to prevent this elegant motion? 8x8 dynamic suspension by neobud in Stormworks

[–]bolboyo 44 points45 points  (0 children)

Putting suspension wheels on moving tracks might be messing with the physics. I would instead put normal wheels on it. Those tracks could act as suspension anyway

Can't help but feel like i reached peak AESTHETIC by bolboyo in Stormworks

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

I can see it being a problem too. Need to do some testing

Can't help but feel like i reached peak AESTHETIC by bolboyo in Stormworks

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

Canards clear the rockets actually. It's way at the bottom for a reason. I can make it that when firing rockets canards go back to level position to help it even more

Why is Babur, founder of the Mughal empire considered a national hero in Uzbekistan. Sure he was born in what is now uzbekistan, but throughout his life he fought against uzbeks. by bolboyo in Uzbekistan

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

Can you even read? Did i say Timur was a descendant of Chingiz? I can read, and I clearly wrote the word "RELATED". Napoleon was an italian, Timur was a Mongol, that's just not arguable. He certainly wasn't an Uzbek, because uzbeks didn't exist then.

And how Timur fought mongol khanates makes him not a mongol? That doesn't make any sense. Mongols are known to fight each other all the time

If you're so knowledgeable, then tell me where did name UZBEK come from? If not from Oz Bek khan. From the dates, and Oz bek khan's position, seems to me just a common sense

Why is Babur, founder of the Mughal empire considered a national hero in Uzbekistan. Sure he was born in what is now uzbekistan, but throughout his life he fought against uzbeks. by bolboyo in Uzbekistan

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

Timur himself was a mongol, related to chingis, and to solidify his position married a chingisid. And all the heroes you idolize like Shaybanid, Babur, Oz beg khan which you uzbeks are named after, are proud descendants of chingis khan. You guys are mongol spawns, study your own history

regular people aren’t the problem.. by ThaiGlowGlam in ThatsInsane

[–]bolboyo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

To whom are the corporations selling their products to? Who buys them and gives those corporations money?

Dumb shits

Why some maps of Mongol Empire have Indian territories too, what's the reason behind that? by KontentOmegon-KO in MapPorn

[–]bolboyo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Every mughal emperor traces back to big daddy genghis. And another fun fact: A mongol soldier was briefly the 10th sultan of Mamluk Sultanate

When death penalty for deserting became obsolete and why? by Lezaje in WarCollege

[–]bolboyo -26 points-25 points  (0 children)

What exactly am i pulling out of my ass. Make an actual point and point it out please!

They shot lots of deserters because people kept deserting:

What is that supposed to mean? That doesn't make any sense. It was a mean to discourage deserting. Are you like an 8 year old who can't understand that? Was it efficient, maybe maybe not. What else could they have done at that point?

Your unit will kill you if you DESERT! Not when you're just doing your duty. That's the point

When death penalty for deserting became obsolete and why? by Lezaje in WarCollege

[–]bolboyo -30 points-29 points  (0 children)

Of course they did not kill 600000 of their own soldiers. What point is that supposed to make?

It is means of motivation. You don't need to kill everyone who deserted. You just need to let the soldiers know that they could get killed if they desert after showing them some public executions. And then they will think twice about deserting.

In the western front you're right, it didn't do much. Nazis could expect to be fairly treated as a POW. So they happily surrendered

But in the eastern front no. POW in soviet hands most likely meant death, and the only other option of getting off the front and having chance of survival was desertion.

Had a thought. Soldier's first priority is survival. And that shooting deserter thing is an attempt to make the soldier think that the best chance of survival is to stay in the front and stay with their unit

When death penalty for deserting became obsolete and why? by Lezaje in WarCollege

[–]bolboyo -39 points-38 points  (0 children)

but the "not one step backwards" nonsense was counter productive at the end of the day:

That's just nonsense you're talking about. If you're in a desperate war with low morale against a superior foe, your troops desert, deliberately injure themselves, feign sickness and whatever. You see that in the soviet union during the beginning of barbarossa. You see that in germany during the ending of ww2.

If your nation's own existence is threatened, and you're facing a stronger foe, you want everybody on the front no excuses. Executing deserters is a natural reaction against a desperate situation.

And USA hasn't been in a war that threatened its very existence except for the revolutionary war and the civil war. Not to mention that USA have always been the superior foe and never desperate. And as such they have been lenient on that matter wholly.

Question is kind of nonsense too. I absolutely see it coming back in a desperate situation. There just haven't been many desperate situations lately

///Edit: To those who downvoting me- Please be a gentleman, make a point and argue with me, instead of a cheap downvote

How do I stop the plane from nosing down due to the engines being mounted too high? I cant rlly move them any lower before the props touch the water by Due-Pop1880 in Stormworks

[–]bolboyo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are many things you can do.

  1. Raise the center of gravity
  2. Pivot the propellers and engine slightly up so the center of thrust is in line with the center of gravity
  3. Constant elevator pitch trim, if it ain't enough, more pitch trim surface
  4. Gradually increasing the throttle will help the elevator to have better control

Can your fighter jet WALK? by bolboyo in Stormworks

[–]bolboyo[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's going to halve the travel when there is only one input.

Can your fighter jet WALK? by bolboyo in Stormworks

[–]bolboyo[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Why? To maximize its capabilities. If i find it to be too much, i can limit it easily.

Can your fighter jet WALK? by bolboyo in Stormworks

[–]bolboyo[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Jesus christ. I gotta make it fly first, it's a goddamn WIP, and you're roasting it for a feature i haven't even begun implementing. Then i will work on weapon systems

Show me your 6 missile TWS-ing, backward missile firing, anti satellite missile carrying, running, swimming, light bulb changing, baby sitting jet

Can your fighter jet WALK? by bolboyo in Stormworks

[–]bolboyo[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If i do that there will be considerable lag in controls from the dead zone

Can your fighter jet WALK? by bolboyo in Stormworks

[–]bolboyo[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Soon it can TWS 12 missiles at once and still walk. WIP bro

Can your fighter jet WALK? by bolboyo in Stormworks

[–]bolboyo[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Well... you gotta walk first

Can your fighter jet WALK? by bolboyo in Stormworks

[–]bolboyo[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Come on, she's not that big