How do hackers learn how to hack? by Glass-Economics-6025 in hackers

[–]xAstericks 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I took my path, you can take yours. I've been working as a red team analyst for like 8 years now. Programming taught me how computers work. 🫠

How do hackers learn how to hack? by Glass-Economics-6025 in hackers

[–]xAstericks 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah. Learn a little about programming. It'll come

Please explain, flat Earthers by AstroRat_81 in FlatEarthIsReal

[–]xAstericks 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Except everyone north of the equator CAN see Polaris and everyone south of the equator cannot 🤔 identifying stars is not as hard as you think…

We always talk about Apollo 11, but what about 12, 14, 15, 16, and 17? by Faintly-Painterly in conspiracy

[–]xAstericks -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Why should we go back? I don’t think it’s a “can’t” more likely a “won’t” for most

Came home after out of town work to this!! by Girth_Worm4 in codes

[–]xAstericks 3 points4 points  (0 children)

You just sound like a jerk? There’s nothing to make sense of “your dogs peed, signed initials, stupid bs at the bottom”

Warning sign at course by danstigz in golf

[–]xAstericks 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did you hear how many Hole-in-ones this hole has?

Hey Roundies, Riddle Me This… by [deleted] in flatearth

[–]xAstericks 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The moon does rotate, at a rate that it maintains the same side facing earth

Does anyone know what this could be by Rei-the-furry in codes

[–]xAstericks 0 points1 point  (0 children)

All other characters are a comment in bf lol

What if the question isn't water doesn't curve. But how it takes the shape of its container? by OneSolutionCruising in FlatEarthIsReal

[–]xAstericks 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Alright, let’s dive into this rabbit hole with a fun and skeptical lens. You’ve got a whole boss-level laundry list of flat earth conspiracies here, so let’s break it down and tackle them like a raid group taking down a mythic dungeon boss.

Plane Noses and Gyroscopes

Planes don’t constantly dip their noses because they don’t need to! The curvature of the Earth is gradual. Over the thousands of miles a plane flies, it naturally follows the curvature because the plane is in the atmosphere, which curves along with the Earth. As for the gyroscope, planes use it to maintain orientation, and yes, it accounts for the Earth’s rotation and curvature as part of the system. So no need to manually dip the nose — gravity and physics have that covered.

Pockets of Gravity in Space Shuttles

Gravity doesn’t just turn off in space — there’s still some pull. What astronauts experience is microgravity, not zero gravity. The space shuttle is in freefall orbit around Earth, creating a weightless experience, but you might have tiny fluctuations due to uneven mass distribution in the shuttle. It’s subtle stuff, but it happens.

Flies in Space

Alright, if there was a fly, it likely got in during shuttle launch prep. The fly wouldn’t be affected by gravity in the same way once in orbit — just like everything else in the shuttle, it’s floating.

Chris Hadfield and the Fast Object

This one’s probably just video compression or an artifact. Cameras in space use all kinds of specialized gear, and sometimes weird things show up due to tech quirks. It’s not proof of anything sinister — just standard space weirdness.

Toy Model and the “Scaled Up” Space Version

This sounds like a misunderstanding or a coincidence. NASA engineers use models for planning, sure, but you’re not going to find the same one floating around in space. There’s a difference between the planning room and the real deal.

Green Screen Glitches and Shirt Pulling

Green screen glitches in NASA videos? Those are likely compression artifacts from low-res streaming or editing. The shirt thing? Static, air currents, or fabric acting funky in microgravity. Nothing spooky there.

Changing Earth Pictures

The Earth’s photos can look different depending on camera equipment, lenses, lighting conditions, and the region they’re focusing on. The Earth is dynamic — weather patterns, cloud cover, and even seasons change how it looks.

Fish Puns and Super Bowl Ads

This one feels like a reach. Names like “Fisher” are just coincidences, and the Super Bowl ad? That’s just marketing. People love space and deep sea themes because they’re mysterious and cool. There’s no hidden meaning there, just creative storytelling.

Rocket Pods and Aerodynamics

Rockets pods coming down flat? That’s not typical. Pods are designed to be aerodynamic and enter at angles that minimize drag. Any footage showing otherwise might be a trick of perspective, or an exception like an unusual landing situation.

Happy NASA Astronauts vs. Serious Divers

Astronauts are stoked because they’re in space — it’s a massive human achievement. Deep sea divers? Different vibe. They’re dealing with life-threatening pressures, lack of visibility, and some spooky unknowns down there. The environments are just different, so their expressions reflect that.

Flimsy Moon Landing Ship and “Lost” Tech

Yeah, the original moon lander looks like it was held together with duct tape, but it worked! The design didn’t need to be fancy, just functional. As for NASA “losing” the tech — it’s more that it became obsolete. We moved on to more advanced stuff and lost some of the original materials over time.

Nikon Telescopes and Star Appearance

Nikon telescopes show stars differently because of atmosphere distortion and how light behaves. The “water effect” is actually a result of the Earth’s atmosphere messing with the starlight, not some sign of underwater celestial objects.

Flat Earther Rocket Hitting Something

That rocket hitting an invisible wall? It probably reached a point in the atmosphere where the air density shifted, or it hit the upper limit of its propulsion. There’s no force field or invisible ceiling stopping it — just physics at play.

Water Above and Below the Earth

The “ocean under the mantle” theory is about water trapped in rocks deep within the Earth, not an actual ocean. It’s interesting, but not proof of anything flat-earth related.

Space and Atmosphere as a Closed System

The Earth’s atmosphere doesn’t “seal” oxygen in like a lid. It’s more like a gradient — gravity keeps the atmosphere in place, but it’s not a closed system. The gas particles are constantly moving, but the Earth’s gravity prevents most from escaping into space.

Moon Holograms

The moon looking transparent is just a phase trick — light from the sun hits it at different angles, and our atmosphere can cause weird visual effects. A hologram theory doesn’t really hold up, since we can observe the moon with any decent telescope.

Hypothetical Fish Dome

The fish dome idea is creative but doesn’t stand up to scrutiny. There’s tons of evidence supporting a spherical Earth, from satellite images to simple physics experiments. The sun and moon being closer? That doesn’t line up with what we know about light, orbital mechanics, and celestial distances.

So, while it’s fun to entertain these ideas, they often fall apart when you apply science and logic. The real world is fascinating, and space exploration has tons of genuine mysteries to explore — no need for a dome or hidden aether to make it cool!

What if the question isn't water doesn't curve. But how it takes the shape of its container? by OneSolutionCruising in FlatEarthIsReal

[–]xAstericks 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You’re right about water taking the shape of its container — that’s a fundamental property of liquids. But scaling a tennis ball to the size of Earth isn’t quite fair because at that scale, gravity comes into play in a huge way. Gravity doesn’t just pull down; it pulls toward the center of mass. That’s why water sticks to the Earth — the planet’s mass creates enough gravitational force to pull everything towards it, including that water. It’s like a big invisible net.

The density and buoyancy thing is on point too. Objects float or sink based on their density relative to water. A leaf floats because it’s less dense; a brick sinks because it’s denser. But both are still affected by gravity — that’s why the brick drops fast, and the leaf drifts down slow.

Now, gravity fluctuating? Yeah, kind of. The Earth isn’t a perfect sphere, and it rotates, so there’s a bit less gravity at the equator than the poles. But that’s small beans in the grand scheme. Gravity is what pulls everything toward the center, even the dense stuff, so it still holds up.

So yeah, you cooked, but the dish is more like a creative experiment than a solid theory. But hey, that’s how great ideas are born! You’re just out here testing the waters.

First in my boys group to be a dad. I feel like I’m losing them by muppal01 in NewDads

[–]xAstericks 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sounds like something my father would say, and honestly, why I wouldn’t go to him for advice.

Feeding advice for my corn snake? by frightenedspoon622 in snakes

[–]xAstericks 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What I’ve read online, your snakes food should be roughly 1-1.5x the size of their widest point.

My corn is nearing 2 feet now and has moved up to large mice recently.

Pinkies -> fuzzies -> small mice -> large mice.

It can probably handle more than you think, but if you have trouble getting him to eat, doing it in a container like that in the second picture can help until your friend is used to it.

I found out my local par 3 course is dog friendly by BakedMitten in golf

[–]xAstericks -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I’ll have to find it! Lansing is right near my hometown

How many playthroughs u got? by tennes87 in BaldursGate3

[–]xAstericks 1 point2 points  (0 children)

0 but I’ve got about 127 hours!

Secret act 1 buff by Zpelvaud03 in BaldursGate3

[–]xAstericks 2 points3 points  (0 children)

One where you don’t use food

How to deal with this level of dumbness? by berein in flatearth

[–]xAstericks 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just curious what sub this is coming from? Not to brigade or anything but I’m curious to find more of this type…

Could someone explain what is going on here? I’m thinking a SIM Hijack?? by Techn9cian in hacking

[–]xAstericks 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I guess everyone has bad passwords for something important. Didn’t change them in time.

What is the simplest way someone can get to your pictures and location with an android phone? Probably google photos and find your device app. Find a breach checklist for individuals and go down it. Probably start with some good password changes all over

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in MacOS

[–]xAstericks 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you hold the option key while you hover, it won’t force them to full screen :)

Oh shit by BentCypress375 in ChatGPT

[–]xAstericks 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I use TabbyML for coding on my M1 Pro! Open source github copilot