Home Page | https://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb/ |
Pronouns | He/Him |
Photography-only account | @urbandinosaurs |
License | All of my photos available via a Creative Commons BY-NC license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ |
Home Page | https://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb/ |
Pronouns | He/Him |
Photography-only account | @urbandinosaurs |
License | All of my photos available via a Creative Commons BY-NC license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ |
@SteveBellovin Let’s not leave our friends on the west side of NYC out. This is also allows for travel to/from Orange and Rockland counties in New York as well via Secaucus Junction, NJ.
This is how I usually go to the ancestral home, although I usually use AMTRAK for the bulk of the DC to NJ run.
If you're the kind of person who follows me, you may know about the Kessler Syndrome.
That's when collisions between satellites and space junk create enough debris to cause *more* collisions, leading to a runaway chain reaction. This could render certain regions of near-Earth space unusable!
It's one of nature's ways of containing stupid civilizations, sort of like how inflammation contains infections. So don't be surprised:
A new study by Lewis and Kessler argues that we've hit the "runaway threshold" - the point where a chain reaction is expected - at nearly all altitudes between 520 and 1000 kilometers.
Below that, or above that, space could remain usable. So we could still get out and ruin other layers of space - or go to other planets and mess up those. Luckily, planned deployments of large satellite constellations like Starlink, Amazon's Project Kuiper, etc. will reduce the risk of such a breakout.
Yes, I'm joking - we can differ on whether the expansion of stupidity into the cosmos would be a good or bad thing compared to a mostly dead cosmos, and I don't really have an opinion on that. But the study is for real, and worth checking out:
• Hugh G. Lewis and Donald J. Kessler, Critical number of spacecraft in low Earth orbit: a new assessment of the stability of the orbital debris environment, https://conference.sdo.esoc.esa.int/proceedings/sdc9/paper/305/SDC9-paper305.pdf
Thanks to @michael_w_busch for pointing this out.
(1/2)
New owners of a home in Melbourne discover an extensive model train set-up under the floor when they move in.
"'I'm sure that Texas et al. will decide that that anything they don't like (1984? Fahrenheit 451? Dreams From My Father?) is adult-only and will require this hard-to-get credential."
And here is the crux of the matter
All the #AgeVerification #AdultOnly moral panic is merely to establish a precedent for a control mechanism
Once the control mechanism is in place, nationally, what is specifically to *be* controlled will be established at a later date
The Dig Director handed me this after I signed on the line and I was…so, so disappointed. Like really the only point of me being here is to move some dirt around?
OTD 1913: Birthday of Maurice Wilkes, computing pioneer.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maurice_Wilkes
Among his many firsts: authorship of the first book about software.