SpaceX admits that the concrete launch pad deck was damaged during the liftoff, spreading some debris and dust.
SpaceX admits that the concrete launch pad deck was damaged during the liftoff, spreading some debris and dust.
And here’s how to say goodbye to your privacy forever!
Funny, because it works pretty much just like Twitter right now. At least it does at mastodon.social.
You know things change over years, right? It’s not clunky or cumbersome and if it’s a ghost town, you wouldn’t have people like George Takei or Mark Ruffalo using it.
I didn’t orgasm, sorry.
There’s always Mastodon. And it’s terrific IMO.
Mastodon is still going. And a ton of people went to it over the weekend thanks to what Musk did with Twitter. Hopefully some of them will stay.
After what he did with Twitter over the weekend, maybe his opinion on technology should also be ignored?
How about giving citizens the same test we give immigrants who want to be citizens? Seems fair if we expect it of them.
I mean... look at her...
David Bowie’s son was named Zowie Bowie. He’s now calling himself Duncan Jones and is a movie director. Don’t give your child a stupid name.
Instead it’s run by a guy who loves conspiracy theorist RFK, Jr.
I will not rest until the Snoopy Sno-Cone Maker gets the epic trilogy it deserves.
Great, now how do I cope with the anxiety about every other way billionaire techbros are going to ruin everything?
The robot’s designers may give it a prior “belief” about what it will find, along with an indication of how much “confidence” it should have in that belief. The degree of confidence is as important as the belief, because it is a measure of what the robot doesn’t know.
But it’s hilarious that they gave it up for Modelo, which is made by the same company.
What’s really amusing is that there’s a blocker specifically for YouTube ads and it’s in the Chrome store.
Honestly, if YouTube wasn’t so saturated with ads, I’d be okay with it. A single ad before a 10-minute video? Cool. Three unskippable ads before watching a 1-minute video? Really, Google?
I have always liked Alan Arkin in anything I’ve seen him in, even if the movie is terrible. I think the film of Catch-22 is one of the worst adaptations of a novel (which shouldn’t have been filmed in the first place), but he’s terrific in it.
At least in this case, when the giant tech company is beta testing on its customers, it’s only customers stupid enough to spend a huge amount of money on the beta test.