To each their own. I think it’s absolutely stunning. Zoom in and look closely. There is so much detail depicted in the structure of the galaxies. It’s astounding.
To each their own. I think it’s absolutely stunning. Zoom in and look closely. There is so much detail depicted in the structure of the galaxies. It’s astounding.
It doesn’t present it punitively though, its presented as kindness.
Paul Wesley didn’t read as Kirk to me. I didn’t dislike him. He just felt like generic Starfleet captain of the week. Part of the issue was that Anson Mount as Pike is awesome and the episode was telling Pike’s story. Since we haven’t had time to get to know Wesley as Kirk, the episode didn’t feel like a meeting of…
I’m tempted to chalk it up to coincidence that both Strange New Worlds and The Orville relied on the time travel/alternate timeline plot device last week. As you suggested, time travel is frequently used in science fiction, and often to detrimental effect.
That being said, Twice in a Lifetime felt a lot like a nod to…
Right.
And why do we waste time studying interstellar gas clouds anyway? The results are always... nebulous.
I think Ed is on to something. On Wednesdays, Gizmodo should become Catmodo.
Hey... has anyone else noticed a problem with the comments hyperlink on the main G/O pages? They don’t do anything anymore.
The comments link at the top of this article, for example, links to:
https://gizmodo.com/astronaut-bone-loss-in-space-1849129241#replies
Any projections on long term losses/recovery from continued occupation of low-gravity environments such as the Moon or Mars? I guess what I’m asking (without looking at the source) is if they expect the rate of bone loss to scale linearly with the reduction in gravity? That result would have significant implications…
Yeah, but who’s going to tell? The asteroid?
Hard to be a snitch when you’ve gone and gotten yourself nuked.
The ghoulish argument that segregation strengthens diversity by limiting homogeneity pops up in some right-wing circles from time to time.
To be fair to Isaac, perhaps he meant that Europa is the most narrow-minded of the Jovian satellites. And there might be some truth to that. I heard from Callisto who said that Amalthea said that Europa hasn’t spoken to Ganymede even since Ganymede admitted that he and Jupiter were more than just friends. I mean, even …
Did you mention the spelling?
At the risk of being a pedant, Europa is the smallest of the four Galilean moons of Jupiter, not the smallest of Jupiter’s moons. There are scores of smaller moons within the Jovian system.
I don’t visit Foxnews.com. But after reading this piece, I was curious. So I entered a dark place.
I disabled my ad blockers, clicked refresh, and sure enough... ads for Hyundai, HBO Max, Amazon, some crematory service (?), all materialized.
Then my eyes drifted towards the banner. The four central topics featured at…
I’m not certain I understand your argument here. While there is certainly validity in comparing mortality rates among service members stationed on military bases to the general population, leaving the analysis there would be misleading. Military bases are homes to a very specific population and operate in a manner…
I’d vote to put him in the captain’s chair!
Doomsday cultists... Recording Industry Execs...
It look like the flag of some radical militant agrarian accelerationist movement that uses child soldiers and calls itself something like Swords of the Setting Sun.