[-] techno156@kbin.social 11 points 10 months ago

My father was once falsely accused of being a bak'targ. Calling Gowron Law helped restore honour to my house. 35/9 great service.

[-] techno156@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Can't you chuck it back into a reactor and reuse it that way, to help reduce the radioactivity, and get more power back out of it?

[-] techno156@kbin.social 14 points 1 year ago

This is Kirk and Riker slander.

Kirk doesn't deserve that kind of reputation, whereas Riker does.

[-] techno156@kbin.social 27 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Slight shame that the contractors didn't start from the end. It could have been funnier if they had taken off the "er" instead.

[-] techno156@kbin.social 44 points 1 year ago

Or shut them down, given the recent debacle with Amazon shutting down someone's account, disabling their devices in the process.

[-] techno156@kbin.social 3 points 1 year ago

no headphone jack means you may need to purchase wireless headphones or earbuds and wireless earbuds don’t always have replaceable batteries

They're also more expensive, even if fairphone does offer their own headphones.

A cheap set of decent wired earphones is $10. $30 if you want something nice, like an IEM.

Bluetooth headphones don't tend to be quite as cheap, and are usually a good deal more.

[-] techno156@kbin.social 14 points 1 year ago

Even TOS had a blatant anti-racism episode where the conclusion was very much explicitly "if we don't get along, we'll be left extinct on an empty, dead husk of a planet".

[-] techno156@kbin.social 8 points 1 year ago

That sounds like a horrid decision. Imagine having to troubleshoot a relative's computer, which isn't working because their internet is down, or is too slow to support streaming Windows like that.

It just sounds like a nightmare all-round, both from a Microsoft Standpoint, since they would have to build all the hardware to support it, people who would have to troubleshoot an issue that might show up on either the local or networked version of Windows, but not both, and from a security standpoint, since it seems like it would make it a lot easier to just hijack the whole computer using that kind of mechanism, with the user being none the wiser, for the most part.

3

I saw this rant/complaint over on Reddit, and it got me thinking a bit.

We know that at least on paper, Federation starships are insanely fast and agile. Data has stated that the Galaxy-class Enterprise was able to achieve Warp 9 from , and some ships, like the Nebula class, don't seem to use impulse engines at all, favouring the warp engine for sublight speed usage at all.

Despite that, we also know that impulse engines aren't simple thrusters, and are able to move the ship in a way not directly in line with the output thrust (Relics), and from the same episode, we also know that smaller ships, like the Jenolan, will still run rings around ships like the Enterprise, even though it is nearly a full century out of date.

However, from what the show itself portrays, the ships tend to be fairly slow and sluggish when in combat, sedately drifting along the battlefield, while weapons fire goes every which way. The most recent and active thing we've seen a big starship do is maybe the fighter run in Picard.

In my opinion, by trying to keep to the slow and seemingly logical expectations for starships to be slow, hulking metal structures that slowly fly around shooting each other, Star Trek ends up underselling what Federation starships are able to do. They would be more realistically portrayed flitting about the battlefield like dragonflies, instead of being like "real boats" today, that have more of a sense of mass.

It seems wildly unintuitive, but it would also help show Federation propulsion technology being more advanced than what they are now. Starships can instantly stop and reverse course, or move in ways that would be impossible with modern technology, and the show not showing ships capable of doing just that might be to its detriment.

[-] techno156@kbin.social 3 points 1 year ago

Throwing my own 2 slips in, I think that Enterprise went the complete wrong way with it, by trying to "logically" explain the visual differences in Klingons, like DS9 trying to logically extrapolate the mirror universe (Enterprise also didn't help there).

No explanation was needed (although it might have been funny to put Worf in the classic Klingon makeup), and adding one just made things a bit worse.

[-] techno156@kbin.social 4 points 1 year ago

And a Russian and Japanese crew member at the height of the Cold War. Not just as background, but as one of the main crew.

[-] techno156@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

Because the stupid thing is the only thing that you remember. You don't remember what you were doing 5 years ago, except the stupid thing.

Now if you did a stupid thing yesterday, you would probably remember that, but not anything else.

[-] techno156@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

"Metaverse" is mostly dead, anyway. It's basically turned into VR Bitcoin, and a worse version of the already existing VR.

A.I. seems to be the new shiny thing investors are moving into, and I'd be surprised if Facebook didn't just silently remove references to the metaverse eventually.

Fediverse, for the slightly cringey "verse" name, does seem to at least be trying something new. Federating multiple completely different sites like Mastodon, Kbin, or Lemmy isn't really something that was done before (that I can remember, feel free to correct if I'm wrong). You had some integrations with things like RSS and APIs before, but you couldn't just go on Twitter and post/reply/read a Reddit thread from within twitter, or you'd have to do it with a complicated network of bots.

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techno156

joined 1 year ago