fu

joined 2 years ago
[–] fu@libranet.de -5 points 7 hours ago (1 children)

Sovereignty is a boloney idea to begin with

[–] fu@libranet.de 0 points 7 hours ago

Well that's just the way it is when you're America's hat. 😛

 

As a libertarian I'd rather citizenship not be a thing and governments just treat everyone the same regardless of who their parents are or where they happen to have been born. In lieu of realities birth right citizenship is the only remotely equitable choice. cbsnews.com/news/supreme-court…

 

I'm a simple man

[–] fu@libranet.de 2 points 1 week ago (1 children)

@ThatGuyNamedZeus @cm0002 if you told me 20 years ago I would trust Microsoft more than I trust Google I would have carried you a liar.

[–] fu@libranet.de 2 points 1 week ago

You are an underapreciated literary genius.

[–] fu@libranet.de 1 points 1 week ago

@possiblylinux127 @cm0002 that's how you can tell it's good

 

Omega Seiki Mobility Unveils India's First Autonomous Electric Cargo Three-Wheeler

auto.economictimes.indiatimes.…

 

New Macomb County facility is helping those in substance use crisis

detroitnews.com/story/news/loc…

[–] fu@libranet.de 13 points 2 weeks ago (7 children)

@Wubwub anti tattoo crowd? Like fundamentalist Baptists?

[–] fu@libranet.de 3 points 2 weeks ago
[–] fu@libranet.de 5 points 2 weeks ago

@i_dont_want_to I think part of me just died a little reading this.

 

Cat checking to see if I feel okay

@memes

[–] fu@libranet.de 3 points 2 weeks ago

This is not, by any definition, a meme.

 

People in Lisbon protest proposed labour reforms

@news

dailypioneer.com/2025/world/pe…

21
Congrats we made it! (video.nostr.build)
 

Euclid peers through a dark cloud’s dusty veil

This shimmering view of interstellar gas and dust was captured by the European Space Agency’s Euclid space telescope. The nebula is part of a so-called dark cloud, named LDN 1641. It sits at about 1300 light-years from Earth, within a sprawling complex of dusty gas clouds where stars are being formed, in the constellation of Orion.

In visible light this region of the sky appears mostly dark, with few stars dotting what seems to be a primarily empty background. But, by imaging the cloud with the infrared eyes of its NISP instrument, Euclid reveals a multitude of stars shining through a tapestry of dust and gas.

This is because dust grains block visible light from stars behind them very efficiently but are much less effective at dimming near-infrared light.

The nebula is teeming with very young stars. Some of the objects embedded in the dusty surroundings spew out material – a sign of stars being formed. The outflows appear as magenta-coloured spots and coils when zooming into the image.

In the upper left, obstruction by dust diminishes and the view opens toward the more distant Universe with many galaxies lurking beyond the stars of our own galaxy.

Euclid observed this region of the sky in September 2023 to fine-tune its pointing ability. For the guiding tests, the operations team required a field of view where only a few stars would be detectable in visible light; this portion of LDN 1641 proved to be the most suitable area of the sky accessible to Euclid at the time.

The tests were successful and helped ensure that Euclid could point reliably and very precisely in the desired direction. This ability is key to delivering extremely sharp astronomical images of large patches of sky, at a fast pace. The data for this image, which is about 0.64 square degrees in size – or more than three times the area of the full Moon on the sky  were collected in just under five hours of observations.

Euclid is surveying the sky to create the most extensive 3D map of the extragalactic Universe ever made. Its main objective is to enable scientists to pin down the mysterious nature of dark matter and dark energy.

Yet the mission will also deliver a trove of observations of interesting regions in our galaxy, like this one, as well as countless detailed images of other galaxies, offering new avenues of investigation in many different fields of astronomy.

[Technical details : The colour image was created from NISP observations in the Y-, J- and H-bands, rendered blue, green and red, respectively. The size of the image is 11 232 x 12 576 pixels. The jagged boundary is due to the gaps in the array of NISP’s sixteen detectors, and the way the observations were taken with small spatial offsets and rotations to create the whole image. This is a common effect in astronomical wide-field images.]

[Image description: The focus of the image is a portion of LDN 1641, an interstellar nebula in the constellation of Orion. In this view, a deep-black background is sprinkled with a multitude of dots (stars) of different sizes and shades of bright white. Across the sea of stars, a web of fuzzy tendrils and ribbons in varying shades of orange and brown rises from the bottom of the image towards the top-right like thin coils of smoke.]

♻️ @esa

 

Holy shit! How I have not heard of this?

In Nepal, the government was dissolved and a new one was proposed after a public vote on Discord.

@technology Memes and Flames: The Aesthetics of the Gen Z Uprising

 

The jewel heist at the Louvre proves what I’ve long felt, that going to an art museum induces stupor and you don’t notice what’s right in front of you clearer than day.

Americans under 65 are too young to remember Watergate, how a piddly little break-in at Democratic headquarters, the theft of some papers, led to the resignation of President Richard Nixon at the urging of his fellow Republicans. The country has come to accept insults twenty times more gigantic than ever before. Watergate was a slap in the face and the past nine months have been a dozen truckloads of horse manure dumped on your front yard. But after the second truckload, you don’t really notice. You pull your shades and use a lot of air freshener and go out the back door and hope for a good heavy rainstorm.

@usa How many truckloads does it take? - Garrison Keillor

-1
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by fu@libranet.de to c/automotive@discuss.tchncs.de
 

I've been reading more about how awesome Chinese EVs are that are basically impossible to get even as one offs in the states between import duties and tariffs. That rabbit hiole got me to this article that mentions how much better their touchscreens are too.

Chinese cars are fast being recognized for offering a level of digital integration that is far ahead of the connected cars on sale in the US. “Aside from the responsiveness of screens… I feel like people hate screens here because they’re not done very well,” said Kevin Williams, an automotive journalist who has spent time getting to know the latest in Chinese vehicles.

Having worked on them for most of the last 15 years I agree they are shit. What no one seems to note, however is that one of the reasons why they suck, in addition to horrible American business practices regarding exclusive contracts that require us to re invent the wheel for every new customer and supplier OEM relationships that lead to every single part needing to be profitable to be manufactured, is how much North American safety regulations affect us and in my opinion nearly always make drivers less safe, particularly with how drivers utilize touchscreens. While the ones we sell in Europe are slightly better as they have far fewer driver distraction laws, the software still sucks because the design is baked in with US regulations in mind. While we can turn them off the overall sluggishness in the system is still present because we are still waiting for time outs and observing your speed, etc. @automotive

view more: next ›