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03:23
black and white in 2021, really? /s
fish-eye projection with this low field of view?
@JohnDvorak cause spaaaaaccceeeeee
implying the bottom one is a shot of a terrestrial desert
 
1 hour later…
05:05
@Rob well, for their first attempt I would say kudos to them. The two camera's/lenses are not comparable. The lower one is from the Mastcam, the top one from what perseverance would call hazcam or navcam, I think. By the look at the map they are not close to any geological formations that stand-out so I wonder if we get tp see more exiting images then these.
Rob
Rob
05:21
Yes, they missed the volcano formation by a bit, and are on a particularly flat spot.
05:33
Do we know if they aimed for that spot? IIRC the mars rover drifted a bit too close to terrain that was deemed a hazard zone. On the other hand, Viking II landed also in a rather flat area. Maybe landing at all was their first priority.
 
2 hours later…
Rob
Rob
07:28
@rene Replying to your third sentence (will get to the other points when I get a break), the Utopia Planitia area (where the Viking II landed) looks different than where the Chinese landed:
Define "flat".
It is flat enough, for a certain distance...
The coastline paradox is the counterintuitive observation that the coastline of a landmass does not have a well-defined length. This results from the fractal curve-like properties of coastlines, i.e., the fact that a coastline typically has a fractal dimension (which in fact makes the notion of length inapplicable). The first recorded observation of this phenomenon was by Lewis Fry Richardson and it was expanded upon by Benoit Mandelbrot.The measured length of the coastline depends on the method used to measure it and the degree of cartographic generalization. Since a landmass has features at all...
@Rob Ah, I judged it based on the map: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tianwen-1#/media/… That looks indeed more "rocky"
Rob
Rob
08:07
@rene That Wikipedia article en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tianwen-1#Mission_planning says:
> "In July 2020, CNSA provided landing coordinates of 110.318° East longitude and 24.748° North latitude, within the southern portion of Utopia Planitia, as the specific primary landing site.".
While other reports from the Chinese space agency (now removed from their website) report their landing at google.com/search?q=109.9E%2C%2025.1N%20 109.9E, 25.1N, Utopia Planitia
We'll have to wait for HiRISE to grab a snapshot to know the exact location.
@MetaAndrewT. True, if it were ant sized it would be flat enough; like some parts of the Earth appear flat.
Confirmed: the Earth is flat (for ants)
Rob
Rob
and some humans.
08:35
A month later.
Apr 29 at 12:11, by SPArcheon
Quick question - does anyone know if stupid Edge has a way to disable hiding the "HTTP://" on not-https sites?
still didn't found a way to stop this annoying behavior.
 
1 hour later…
Rob
Rob
09:47
@rene 4th: Landing in one piece is probably a first priority. 2nd: Difficult to determine the size of rocks from a relatively low resolution aerial view, one pixel can be a few hundred meters; the Spy Satellites on other planets (where there's no people) aren't as high a resolution as the one over your head. 1st: Here's the aiming and landing areas:
10:15
@Rob nice. I guess it takes a few orbits before Hires will capture images: mars.nasa.gov/imgs/mro/whereismro/MROdisplay.png ?
did they intentionally stay away from any recognizable terrain features?
probably safer for landing I'd guess
Rob
Rob
10:30
@rene Nice image, yes a few orbits or less should be enough for a flyover; then a few days to analyze and post the photo - it will be a few pixels, after image enhancement.
@JohnDvorak Apparently it's a combination of low risk and high scientific value, heavily weighted towards one of those objectives: e6r3ayc2dqk5m6vt5vlyq7cmzi-ac5fdsxevxq4s5y-spaceflightfans-cn.t… space.com/china-mars-rover-tianwen-1-landing-site
@Rob I expect something like this: mars.nasa.gov/resources/25634/… ?
oh, nice, I was briefly wondering if they did that so that they could fake a successful landing by taking pictures of a desert :P
Rob
Rob
Yup
urgh! Is that a delayed email nag? :fire:
autoplay videos on hover? :rage:
10:48
:tableflip:
Rob
Rob
^^^^ That remains to be seen:
ooh, nice find!
 
1 hour later…
SO is just a SpaceX advertisement at this point :(
The reception to the SpaceX stuff has apparently been pretty good, which is why they're pushing it so hard.
I do like SpaceX, but IMO this is a bit much
lol
Or its a way to get material, in a theme, for a period of time
Writing fresh stuff is hard
12:13
Also I need to read that series at some point :D
It just feels like
Oh, it was all careers ads once.
59
Q: StackOverflow.Blog isn't that great

Journeyman GeekI've been here a while, and done a few rodeos and, the quality of blog posts feels like its hit rock bottom at times. I admit there's some great ones but considering Stack Overflow as a company is in a wee bit of a transition, it might be a good time to go "maybe you guys should revisit it". I d...

Though, its a little dark that the response I got is "We fired everyone involved"
( Think there's been one major (the loop) and one, minorly major (meta being used for feedback) change at least since that was posted)
In which part of Taryns answer did they say that everybody involved was fired?
Not Taryn's answer
12:22
Taryn's an old CM and SRE
See Rachel's answer
> The editorial staff who managed stackoverflow.blog for the past year or so are no longer with the company. With this change, we are revisiting our blog strategy entirely and starting fresh.
Well that's concerning.
Well... Was concerning.
@Spevacus Well - a lot of internal stuff is less visible
At most, I dimly keep track of community team and some SRE stuff (and they're not as visible as they used to be)
I'm not really going to know what's going to happen on the content/media side of things
Oh I'm sure it wasn't a case of "We think you did a horrible job, pack your things" and there was a whole lot more to that decision, or they left (they did say "No longer with the company" not "Were let go")
@JourneymanGeek wow
thats a high standard to hold your bloggers too
Community doesn’t like it? Fired!
Actually no
12:26
?
I posted it after the layoffs
Figured anyone involved would be safe
I really hate criticizing people in public :D
So generally if it happens, I'm angry or tried to time it :D
(but also - apparently marketing had it bad, but I didn't know at the time. I was more worried about the network facing folks)
12:32
Got it, thank you for taking the time to explain this :)
@JourneymanGeek I was pretty sharp on an answer there ...
@rene That's... unclear
:D
That part of the company basically dosen't contribute directly to Q&A and vice versa :D
true
Indirectly maaaybe
14:04
So that's the first time I've seen a spam answer to a question I migrated to another site :) ^^^
Rob
Rob
14:48
@Spevacus Inability to consistently onebox their blog posts in chat.
@EkadhSingh better than it only being for self promotion
@KevinB I disagree, on stack exchange I respect them to advertise stack exchange. I do not expect them to advertise SpaceX
15:03
Rockets are cool, so I don't mind
I would expect them to advertise blog posts that are relevant to their audience
these are
How are rockets relevant to the SE audience?
Exempt for space exploration beta
They're presenting the development/coding side of it.
directly relevant to SO
@MadScientist before the engines are fired ....
15:06
"all our users are nerds and nerds like rockets"
well, the liquid oxygen and the RP-1 in the tanks do stay cool even while the engines are fired ;-)
it does get a bit hot below the rocket, yes
@MadScientist how would you know, have you been there? :troll:
@MadScientist lol
Now I wonder about inside the rocket.... do people notice any temperature change there?
@EkadhSingh they tend to abort launches if random people run around the rocket before it is supposed to launch
15:10
@MadScientist XD
@Tinkeringbell yes, but that is more due to the raised heartbeat and blood pressure ...
@EkadhSingh there's a lot of software in spaceX's capsules
and they're a very 'different' way of doing things than what the old american spacecraft were
Is spaceX a teams client? :D
@rene Ah. Boring.
@JourneymanGeek I wouldn't expect that. I'd assume that SaaS solutions are a problem when you deal with ITAR
@MadScientist Well or enterprise. Though - since both are US based...
15:18
I don't know the rules exactly, but I could imagine that it's an issue if there is even just one sysadmin with SE that has potential access to Teams data who isn't a US citizen
@MadScientist I wouldn't think that's true of spaceX itself, but ITAR's not something I've stayed up at night thinking about 😂
@JourneymanGeek got it, thank you :)
In the end Elon Musk has his own fleet of ICBMs, you just need to put something other than a satellite in the rockets.
More or less
And the starship's cheap, and probably has bigger throw weight....
 
1 hour later…
16:26
@JourneymanGeek “cheap”
@EkadhSingh compared to an ICBM? Actually... Yes.
if you throw it away after launching, it's probably not that cheap. I think there's about 30 Raptors on one, those alone cost a bunch
16:43
Good to know
Rob
Rob
17:12
@EkadhSingh We know that the engine is cool because it's covered in a thick layer of ice while it's in operation:
17:29
Interesting
Can someone please edit the review audit FAQ, section What happens if I fail?, with a screenshot of the new review UI's audit failure message?
No need to. The first person to ask about it on meta gets a free unban because they're definitely paying attention.
18:16
 
3 hours later…
20:57
@EkadhSingh I prefer SpaceX subtracts
21:42
@SonictheAnonymousHedgehog You might have better luck asking over in SOCVR, probably more people there running face-first into audits of occasionally questionable quality.

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