Protip:
To make your day more dramatic, post a random news story with the title, “It begins.“
ngl this is really cool
Relativity's Terran 1 Rocket is mostly 3D-printed. It burns a cryogenic rocket fuel composed of liquid methane and liquid oxygen (methalox). In this close-up of a Terran 1 launch on the night of March 22 from Cape Canaveral, icy chunks fall through the stunning frame as intense blue exhaust streams from its nine Aeon 1 engines. In a largely successful flight the inovative rocket achieved main engine cutoff and stage separation but fell short of orbit after an anomaly at the beginning of its second stage flight. Of course this Terran 1 rocket was never intended to travel to Mars. Still, the methane and liquid oxygen components of its methalox fuel can be made solely from materials found on the Red Planet. Methalox manufactured on Mars could be used as fuel for rockets returning to planet Earth.
it's alive… kinda
Cats make about 100 different sounds. Dogs make only about 10.
there is no cute cat ;-;. As an extra, here's a cute lil cat ^-^
okie dokie I now own radi8.dev and sparkshell.dev, $26
it just shows the status of my bots (@catfacts, @dogfacts, @breakingbot, and @astronomy)
catfats is dead because aws.random.cat/meow keeps timing out… I do not know why.
people tell me to catch the error that @catfacts keeps timing out it’s request to get the cat image but I really don’t want to…
vi my beloved
first everyone had their own cli text editor, now everyone has their own social media, what’s next? everyone has their own operating system? i should start work right away
It was noticed hundreds of years ago by stargazers who could not understand its unusual shape. It looked like a ring on the sky. Except for the rings of Saturn, the Ring Nebula (M57) may be the most famous celestial circle. We now know what it is, and that its iconic shape is due to our lucky perspective. The recent mapping of the expanding nebula's 3-D structure, based in part on this clear Hubble image,indicates that the nebula is a relatively dense, donut-like ring wrapped around the middle of an (American) football-shaped cloud of glowing gas. Our view from planet Earth looks down the long axis of the football, face-on to the ring. Of course, in this well-studied example of a planetary nebula, the glowing material does not come from planets. Instead, the gaseous shroud represents outer layers expelled from the dying, once sun-like star, now a tiny pinprick of light seen at the nebula's center. Intense ultraviolet light from the hot central star ionizes atoms in the gas. The Ring Nebula is about one light-year across and 2,500 light-years away.