7 comments

  • 1vuio0pswjnm7 7 hours ago ago

    Text-only, no Javascript:

    https://assets.msn.com/content/view/v2/Detail/en-in/AA26Fe1f

       firefox view-source:https://assets.msn.com/content/view/v2/Detail/en-in/AA26Fe1f
    
       curl https://assets.msn.com/content/view/v2/Detail/en-in/AA26Fe1f \
       |grep -o "<p>.*</p>" \
       |tr -d '\134' \
       |sed '1s/^/<meta charset=utf-8>/' > 1.htm
       firefox ./1.htm
    
       links 1.htm
  • NullHypothesist 13 hours ago ago
  • nmstoker 14 hours ago ago

    Unable to read the article but the basic maths of putting suitable structures in space obviously doesn't add up, even if you don't account for maintenance difficulties, accelerated damage and poor upgrade options

    • brudevel 14 hours ago ago

      Isn't it the same idea as satellites? They're used and work pretty well.

  • remopulcini 14 hours ago ago

    Perche' non sarebbe il suo settore

  • Zigurd 13 hours ago ago

    The subtext is the most interesting part. If Masa Son thinks it's bullshit, there's probably a lot more bullshit to it than just the orbital data centers. We've gone from flooding zone with stuff that makes it seem any bullshit is possible, to the vibe that maybe someone has thrown a $2 trillion turd into the punch bowl.

    It's sad that people can't be satisfied with the most reliable medium lift rocket that can be launched at an amazing cadence, and a working satellite Internet connection, albeit one that can't really compete with terrestrial wireless. But no, you've got to build a cult, back fascist politicians, vandalize the government services that make things run smoothly and support science, and make the normies suspicious of tech if they don't outright hate it. Feh.

  • 1vuio0pswjnm7 14 hours ago ago

    "Let’s not call Son pragmatic just yet."