Monday, April 07
Daily News Stuff 7 April 2025
Or A Water Pistol
Or A Water Pistol
Top Story
- Turning your spacecraft off and on again and hoping for the best: The real story of Orion. (Ars Technica)
Turns out more things failed on that test flight last year than they let on.
At one point they were uncertain whether they could dock with the ISS or return to Earth. Not which one was safer, but whether either one was possible.
Tech News
- Could fusion-powered spaceships cut the trip to Mars by half? Maybe. (CNN)
We don't have practical fusion power on Earth because it requires a hard vacuum and it leaks.
But a fusion-powered spaceship is traveling through hard vacuum and the engine is supposed to leak. That's how it would generate thrust.
So all you need to solve is all the other problems.
- On a slightly more stable topic Gizmodo spoke to the Voyager project's mission scientist, who has been on the job for 48 years. (Gizmodo)
I started working on Voyager in 1977, it was my first job out of college, and I had a choice between the Viking extended mission or the Voyager mission. I, of course, hadn’t heard of Voyager. So I said, where’s Voyager going? And they said, well, Jupiter and Saturn and onto Uranus and Neptune with Voyager 2 if all goes well. And I thought, oh my goodness - I remember in third grade, I got a little telescope I used to use to look at the Moon and look at Jupiter and Saturn, and look for little moons around Jupiter and see if I could spot the rings around Saturn. So the thought of a chance to go visit these worlds that were really only tiny dots in my little telescope, I said, "sign me up."
It's cool and worth reading.
- The insanity of being a software engineer. (0x1.pt)
It's like being a bricklayer. Except the bricks are constantly changing, and you're expected to be an electrician and a plumber should the need arise, and you're just supposed to know what the plans for the building are, and oh the client asked if you could make the bricks invisible. By tomorrow.
- The Minecraft movie... Didn't flop, probably. (Variety)
Despite a pretty bad initial trailer. It only cost $150 million and made $300 million globally in its first weekend. So it's not entirely out of the cubical woods yet, but doing a lot better than some recent Hollywood efforts we won't mention.
- The laptop version of Nvidia's RTX 5090 is only slightly faster than the desktop 5070. (Notebook Check)
I mean, the desktop 5090 draws 575W and is infamous for melting its power connector, so there's no chance of fitting it into a laptop, but still.
Musical Interlude
Disclaimer: Black Bo Peep had a lamb, it was made of ham.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at
06:16 PM
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So I was reading about the nuclear engineering PE exam yesterday (I am neither a PE nor a nuclear engineer), and I have gone skeptic on fusion energy. I know I do not understand what the long term radiation effects on the magnets would be, and how often the magnets would need replacement. As for software engineering, it gets worse than that essay. Software to make helicopters work seems like it would be an entirely different world, and that vibe coding such could be hilarious.
Posted by: PatBuckman at Tuesday, April 08 2025 01:40 AM (rcPLc)
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Software fun-and-games...company is run by someone too important to know about the weeds. Hears about software package XYZ and how COOL it is. Tells company we are switching over to it. Scramble to get it in place. Only when it is in production are the customers informed. Customers say they were coming to us because they FLAMING RED HOT HATED package XYZ. Now scramble to remove XYZ. Result is a bad year so programmers don't get a bonus, but Mr. Important gets a big one.
Music...Ram Jam showing how it's done

Posted by: Frank at Tuesday, April 08 2025 02:27 AM (+i6Xr)
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The commentariat at Arse is still full of Elon-hate. I'm not sure how they square the circle of that and of Orion sucking so badly. I think they're wishcasting for a miracle.
Posted by: Rick C at Tuesday, April 08 2025 04:17 AM (DL/kw)
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It's not true the astronauts were stranded by not having any way to get back to Earth, because Nasa redefined Crew 9 to include them, thus firing half of the planned Crew 9 (from the crew, not from their jobs as astronauts, although I wonder if they'll ever actually get to orbit.) But Arse won't tell you that, or that NPR wrote at least four articles that used the word stranded in the headline.
Posted by: Rick C at Tuesday, April 08 2025 04:20 AM (DL/kw)
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