techno156

joined 2 years ago
[–] techno156@kbin.social 12 points 1 year ago

My father was once falsely accused of being a bak'targ. Calling Gowron Law helped restore honour to my house. 35/9 great service.

[–] techno156@kbin.social 2 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

Can't you chuck it back into a reactor and reuse it that way, to help reduce the radioactivity, and get more power back out of it?

[–] techno156@kbin.social 13 points 2 years ago

This is Kirk and Riker slander.

Kirk doesn't deserve that kind of reputation, whereas Riker does.

[–] techno156@kbin.social 22 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (1 children)

Slight shame that the contractors didn't start from the end. It could have been funnier if they had taken off the "er" instead.

[–] techno156@kbin.social 45 points 2 years ago

Or shut them down, given the recent debacle with Amazon shutting down someone's account, disabling their devices in the process.

[–] techno156@kbin.social 5 points 2 years ago

Kbin has a report function, although I don't know if reports Federate. They might not.

Lemmy does do reporting, although it's not clear whether it's just moderators, or whether the admins will also receive them.

[–] techno156@kbin.social 2 points 2 years ago

Especially since doing that will let you Federate through compromised comments, and possibly affect other instances using the Federation network, unless they're updated.

[–] techno156@kbin.social 1 points 2 years ago

Yes. They got hacked. An admin account got compromised, and the hackers exploited a bug in Lemmy-UI (the web site) that let them do things like redirect users to another site that let them run Javscript. It seems to have let them collect some user tokens from accounts, and access an admin account that way.

[–] techno156@kbin.social 1 points 2 years ago

Others did get hacked, or are vulnerable to it, but aren't big enough targets?

Beehaw is closed, so they would have had to have an existing account to exploit the same bug (or go through something like Kbin), and Lemmy.world is the biggest Lemmy instance.

[–] techno156@kbin.social 6 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Even TOS had a blatant anti-racism episode where the conclusion was very much explicitly "if we don't get along, we'll be left extinct on an empty, dead husk of a planet".

 

I saw this rant/complaint over on Reddit, and it got me thinking a bit.

We know that at least on paper, Federation starships are insanely fast and agile. Data has stated that the Galaxy-class Enterprise was able to achieve Warp 9 from , and some ships, like the Nebula class, don't seem to use impulse engines at all, favouring the warp engine for sublight speed usage at all.

Despite that, we also know that impulse engines aren't simple thrusters, and are able to move the ship in a way not directly in line with the output thrust (Relics), and from the same episode, we also know that smaller ships, like the Jenolan, will still run rings around ships like the Enterprise, even though it is nearly a full century out of date.

However, from what the show itself portrays, the ships tend to be fairly slow and sluggish when in combat, sedately drifting along the battlefield, while weapons fire goes every which way. The most recent and active thing we've seen a big starship do is maybe the fighter run in Picard.

In my opinion, by trying to keep to the slow and seemingly logical expectations for starships to be slow, hulking metal structures that slowly fly around shooting each other, Star Trek ends up underselling what Federation starships are able to do. They would be more realistically portrayed flitting about the battlefield like dragonflies, instead of being like "real boats" today, that have more of a sense of mass.

It seems wildly unintuitive, but it would also help show Federation propulsion technology being more advanced than what they are now. Starships can instantly stop and reverse course, or move in ways that would be impossible with modern technology, and the show not showing ships capable of doing just that might be to its detriment.

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by techno156@kbin.social to c/kbinMeta@kbin.social
 

If you go onto your user profile page, and scroll all the way to the right, there is a section called "reputation".

What is it, and how does it work?

Is it like the "karma" system that Reddit uses?

 

Is there a way to see what magazines/communities we're subscribed to? I know there's /sub, but that just shows the posts, rather than the communities themselves.

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