The Testing Chat III: The Time of Great Chatting
- weemadando
- Posts: 534
- Joined: Mon Sep 26, 2011 8:36 am
Re: The Testing Chat III: The Time of Great Chatting
Nice work guys. He almost escaped from all this internet drama bullshit and you fucking chase him down and drag him back.
Re: The Testing Chat III: The Time of Great Chatting
One of us. One of us.
- Agent Bert Macklin
- Posts: 1197
- Joined: Mon Sep 26, 2011 3:20 am
Re: The Testing Chat III: The Time of Great Chatting
Altobello, you fuck!
Re: The Testing Chat III: The Time of Great Chatting
Ok, I'm sitting in my apartment, hanging with my dad - who's in town for 48 hours - and we're watching Hogan's Heroes.
Is it wrong for me to point out how awesome this show is? I've always loved it, but it seems more awesome to enjoy it with my dad, because it takes him back to his childhood, the way MASH, TNG, and 80s cartoons do for me.
Is it wrong for me to point out how awesome this show is? I've always loved it, but it seems more awesome to enjoy it with my dad, because it takes him back to his childhood, the way MASH, TNG, and 80s cartoons do for me.
Re: The Testing Chat III: The Time of Great Chatting
Hogan's Heroes is one of those awesome time capsule shows. A sitcom, set in a Nazi German POW camp.
You'd be hard pressed to do that on broadcast TV today.
You'd be hard pressed to do that on broadcast TV today.
Re: The Testing Chat III: The Time of Great Chatting
It's a classic when even a character's face gets a laugh out of you
"also it really shits my mum so it's a good way of winding her up"
-thejester
-thejester
Re: The Testing Chat III: The Time of Great Chatting
Here it's called "Papa Schultz".
Strange how even the different names for a same show denote different point of view of the things.
In one : "heroes"
In the the other : "Papa"
In one the focus is on the prisoners being heroes fighting for their freedoms.
On the other the focus is on the people at the head of the Camp being incompetent and somewhat sympathetic.
Strange how even the different names for a same show denote different point of view of the things.
In one : "heroes"
In the the other : "Papa"
In one the focus is on the prisoners being heroes fighting for their freedoms.
On the other the focus is on the people at the head of the Camp being incompetent and somewhat sympathetic.
No.
Re: The Testing Chat III: The Time of Great Chatting
You probably could, but it would be a grimdark journey into pathos and drama rather than a comedy showGands wrote:Hogan's Heroes is one of those awesome time capsule shows. A sitcom, set in a Nazi German POW camp.
You'd be hard pressed to do that on broadcast TV today.
Re: The Testing Chat III: The Time of Great Chatting
I honestly can't say I would disagree with Thanas on that one.Oxymoron wrote:http://bbs.stardestroyer.net/viewtopic. ... 1&t=158000
If anything I'd say it should have been locked sooner.
That thread was pretty much "lol at the board" and mixed in a healthy dose of "lol at the board staff" so you know...
Re: The Testing Chat III: The Time of Great Chatting
Oh, I completely understand why he locked it. It's just the argument used to lock it that I found funny.
"I have no time to loose arguing X or Y"
Cool, then don't participate in the discussion, I guess ? It's not as if there was drama or something, just people making fun of the board they're frequenting, out in the open.
Gives a vibe of the German Oppressor squashing any perceived dissent.
"I have no time to loose arguing X or Y"
Cool, then don't participate in the discussion, I guess ? It's not as if there was drama or something, just people making fun of the board they're frequenting, out in the open.
Gives a vibe of the German Oppressor squashing any perceived dissent.
No.
Re: The Testing Chat III: The Time of Great Chatting
so for the longest time I envisioned a surface launch from a space habitat cylinder as being like running off the edge so I worried a little about colliding with other surface features
but I just realized that duh you aren't actually accelerating. you move forward and the cylinder is still rotating
so relative to your launch point, it'd be like you fell off / lifted off, straight up. I don't think there'd be risk of collision with anything at all. which fucking rocks. we can have a subway on the surface of the hull for intrahab transit and inertial thingies for interhab transit!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
but now I gotta re-render the launch video in my brain lol.
but I just realized that duh you aren't actually accelerating. you move forward and the cylinder is still rotating
so relative to your launch point, it'd be like you fell off / lifted off, straight up. I don't think there'd be risk of collision with anything at all. which fucking rocks. we can have a subway on the surface of the hull for intrahab transit and inertial thingies for interhab transit!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
but now I gotta re-render the launch video in my brain lol.
In the name of the moon, I will punish you!
Re: The Testing Chat III: The Time of Great Chatting
I think we can do this Adam. Want me to re-check your calcs?
"also it really shits my mum so it's a good way of winding her up"
-thejester
-thejester
Re: The Testing Chat III: The Time of Great Chatting
Ha ha, I love that PirateBay moving to North Korea statement.
Because providing a convenient website to share torrents for commerical music, TV shows, movies, video games and porn is all about "freedom of expression". Right.
I mean, I suppose there is some legitimate stuff that gets shared on there, too. Even some stuff that you could ascribe those high-minded ideals to. But let's not kid ourselves about why most people go to TPB.
Because providing a convenient website to share torrents for commerical music, TV shows, movies, video games and porn is all about "freedom of expression". Right.
I mean, I suppose there is some legitimate stuff that gets shared on there, too. Even some stuff that you could ascribe those high-minded ideals to. But let's not kid ourselves about why most people go to TPB.
- weemadando
- Posts: 534
- Joined: Mon Sep 26, 2011 8:36 am
Re: The Testing Chat III: The Time of Great Chatting
It's (one of the reasons) why I can't bring myself to support the pirate party. Seeing them bitch and moan in Aus about "innocent people being prosecuted for no crime". Hey dipshits, it might be the world's most ignored crime and have turned the entire population of internet users into scofflaws, but it is still a crime on most nations books. And if you can't grasp that, then maybe you shouldn't be trying to get public office.
Re: The Testing Chat III: The Time of Great Chatting
I haven't actually done calcs but make a big circle with one hand and a straight line with your other hand as it lets go... I really think it will work just fine. The biggest risks of impact with the the habitat itself would come from the mirrors, and maybe any other large protrusions on the hull, but not in a straight line. It'd be cuz of the Coriolis effect. But given the huge size here the protrusions would have to be big too... so yeah the mirrors are a maybe but I don't think hull hugging trains would, nor other spacecraft launching off the side.timmy wrote:Want me to re-check your calcs?
The mirrors are in a very predictable location, of course, and so is the trajectory of any tangential launch, so preventing that, if needed, is as simple as doing the math and finding the launch (and attachment, for going the other way) points that are dangerous and prohibiting their use. Tangential launches are great for inter-hab transit - it is reasonably fast (within about an hour, you can get from anywhere to anywhere in a cluster that houses one billion people, in about an hour.... and if aligned right, you might get to other similarly large clusters in the same time!), reasonably safe and very cheap. You let go of one rotating cylinder. You have speed from this in a straight line. If you keep the others aligned right - which does take a little station keeping as the years go by but you're probably doing that anyway - you just grab on to the destination when you arrive. When you get there, just like you were parked on the launching hull... you'll be parked on the destination hull. Just hook on and done.
But yeah, in the space habitat cluster, transportation can be cheap and fast.
What about inside the habitat though? Since there's ground, water, and air, it is more like earth - transportation is going to be different. Here's the cool thing though: space *is* there, right under your feet. That's how we get to hull hugging subways.
Here's an interesting fact though: with the lower speeds and increased numbers of stops, going 20 miles to the other side of the habitat might take just as long as going 1000 miles to the other side of the cluster. That could be some fun to think about.
Anyway though, you'd go into subway stations and board a train. We could do all kinds of layouts here, but the way I like it is to have rings and lines on the habitat.
The rings have six stops, two for each of the three populated strips (and skipping over the three unpopulated strips - the windows / lakes) along the circumference of the cylinder. This means any place along this ring is like 5-10 minutes walk from a station. Or they could have three stops, if there isn't enough demand to justify more.
The lines go lengthwise and are really more like a loop. The number of stops would be demand again, but I'd kinda like to have a potential access point about once a mile - these access points would be useful for maintenance too, and perhaps the train need not stop if nobody is actually waiting/going there.
We can have a few trains doing each line if there's enough traffic to keep wait times low.
Anyway the way these work is they hang off the bottom of the hull. There's like abovehead rails to which the trains are attached and can use space wheels and safety connection cables, so if something breaks, you just hang on there. (Worst case scenario btw, everything breaks and the trains falls out into space... no big deal because there'll be rescue ships on standby anyway for all the other free civilian traffic, so they can just go out and tow it back. I'm going for redundancy rather than reliability: keep the trains and space cars simple and cheap, knowing that things can go wrong and it is OK cuz a rescue ship will be there if you can sit tight for 20 mins.)
I think a good speed here would be between 30 and 50 mph. About the same speed you might drive a car today. The distances aren't that long. They could be powered by a third rail or a small solar panel right on the train - one side will be pointing straight at the sun, 24/7, so that is reliable. The only energy needed is acceleration and making up for loss of friction on the wheel, and of course the people's convenience inside, so it isn't really much. I wouldn't even bother with stuff like life support, though it is technically a spacecraft, just because every few minutes it will make a stop and open the doors anyway. Just want enough reserve for accidents.
Why not have the tracks inside? We could, but benefits here are keeping the sound out (some will be heard from underground but I don't think it would be much if anything noticiable through the meters of ground), keeping the ground clear for other use, nobody will get hit by a train when it is outside, and speed could potentially be higher.
Besides tracks on the ground are sooooo 19th century. Well, ok, tracks inside are a good decision too and we can do it either way but this is cool.
So now we have a mass transit infrastructure that can get us from anywhere, to anywhere, remember this is a huge area too, with over one billion people living here and potentially over 100 climates etc.... in a travel time of two or three hours, at MOST, including stops and some delays. And virtually energy free in simple, low cost vehicles.
You live in NYC and want to visit LA? No problem, take a tangential shuttle over. One hour travel time at a small cost, it could very well be free, and you're there. You can make it a day trip.
Many of the benefits I've previously written about the Star Trek transporter here... but all hard science tech. Nothing we couldn't build today (if we were in space). Note btw: it need not be all mass transit, a private vehicle could do a tangential launch too, simple enough to be affordable and safe enough to be lightly regulated. (Not much different than private cars in the real world.)
How cool.
Now, let's go inside the habitat. If the mass transit system is as successful as I hope, we might not need so much of a road network. Roads are very useful, so I'd still want them, but we might be looking at a lot of single or double lane country style roads, with three or four lane roads being fairly rare. Just not that much traffic. The roads may even be shared, with cars and pedestrians together. If the residents opt in to snow, clearing can be simpler just because there's less that needs to be done! Also remember a ground car is going to be intra-hab only, but you could perhaps drive it into a ferry to go to another hab. That'd be interesting.
I love quiet roads. And green cars - if the max range you need is 50 miles, and max speed like 50 mph, that's to and from anywhere, round trip, in the hab, you can do electric without expensive batteries and super motors.
Here's some interesting implications of all this:
1) the space society might be kinda low tech. By simplifying the problems, we've simplified the required solutions, like with our simpler green car and these dumb spacecraft instead of advanced propulsion. Higher tech might just not get developed due to lack of demand.
2) with commuting being so easy, we might see a lot of economic specialization (contrary to the typical space bias of every little bit being 100% self-sufficient)
3) with all this traffic and access ports, illegal migration, smuggling, invasions, etc. can be more difficult to prevent than, again, the typical space bias makes you think. I guess they could close their borders and move away from the cluster if they really want to be isolated, but that comes at a cost. And, as I've actually written about before, criminals could try to get rid of evidence by just shoving it out one of the various airlocks...
I used to think of a commando raid on a space hab as involving them attaching and cutting their own hole to enter. But instead, they might just use an existing train station port. Of course, cutting your own hole has advantages too, but either way is fun. You could take a space fighter in through an automobile ferry port too. Imagine the surprise!
Oh well, I'd better stop rambling eventually. But bottom line: artificial habitats change the transportation landscape so much. Obviously for interhab transit, but it does for inside the habitat too, and the fun just never stops coming.
In the name of the moon, I will punish you!
- RyanThunder
- Knows Best
- Posts: 725
- Joined: Mon Oct 03, 2011 12:18 pm
Re: The Testing Chat III: The Time of Great Chatting
I have Stronger, Poker Face, and that other stupid pop song about fireworks stuck in my head, all at once.
oh god why me?
oh god why me?
Re: The Testing Chat III: The Time of Great Chatting
Do you know what day it is?RyanThunder wrote:I have Stronger, Poker Face, and that other stupid pop song about fireworks stuck in my head, all at once.
oh god why me?
http://youtube.com/watch?v=kfVsfOSbJY0
Re: The Testing Chat III: The Time of Great Chatting
U2 sucks.
Yeah, I said it. Come at me, bro
Yeah, I said it. Come at me, bro
Re: The Testing Chat III: The Time of Great Chatting
I'm not going to dispute that one.
Genesis is better anyway.
Genesis is better anyway.
No.
Re: The Testing Chat III: The Time of Great Chatting
I can honestly say I never heard of them before.
But just to indulge you, I looked them up. Wikipedia tells me Phill Collins was/is a member. Interesting.
Doesn't make me care enough to YouTube 'em though. I did start playing "In The Air Tonight" because I saw Collins' name, however. It's almost Pavlovian.
doo-doom doo-doom doo-doom
But just to indulge you, I looked them up. Wikipedia tells me Phill Collins was/is a member. Interesting.
Doesn't make me care enough to YouTube 'em though. I did start playing "In The Air Tonight" because I saw Collins' name, however. It's almost Pavlovian.
doo-doom doo-doom doo-doom