J.B. Pinkle
Somewhere on this timeline I’m the Pirate King. No, the Wizard King. No, a published author. I’ll let you know when I get there.
As a child of the 70s, the Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 probes have been a part of my earliest understanding of space and our exploration of it. I learned about them (multiple times) in school, and was excited (spoiler alert) years later with how central the fictional Voyager 6 was to the plot of the first Trek movie.
Every single time I have read that they are still sending data back I’m excited to hear it, though from what Wikipedia says there is really no likelihood either will be doing so later than 2025/2026 respectively.
This headline gave me a little “oh no” moment until I read the article. 😀
Before you all fall for the shamless clickbait,
I used to start and end my day at Ars Technica. For years.
Has really never been the same since Conde Nast took over. I usually only end up there now when someone links an article from there. Thanks for saving me a click, and I’ll pour one out for what once was…
Just created my account here in the past day. I know it probably can’t last, but I don’t think I’ve had that “cozy” feeling right away in a forum or other online community like this in decades, and I’d say it was somewhat rare even “back in the day.”
So far folks seem to live up to the stated goals of the place and I think that’s pretty great.
Even the same state.
In the article I linked about that prior incident , note that the driver who was PIT’d did exactly what the arkansas drivers manual said to do. (If challenged I can try digging up the pdf of the manual again, but I assure you it’s there.)
I have stronger opinions on this topic than I’m really going to get into here. Suffice to say, we need a change, and there needs to be more of an impact on police than a settlement a year later paid by taxpayers.
what an amateurish logo, looks like what a tiny business puts up on their wordpress when they have no designers & are only making a logo
To me it looks legitimately confusingly like the xorg logo, which ironically you usually see on a Linux system only when the config to display the correct logo for something is missing or invalid.
They don’t want to feel bad about what their ancestors did.
I don’t think you need to feel bad about it to acknowledge it. That’s part of what makes it so infuriating. They throw around white guilt like it’s something progressives suffer from, but it’s very clearly something they cower and hide from.
My family hasn’t been here long enough to have been slave owners, but my grandfather was a little bit racist by today’s standards (and I acknowledge he may have been more racist than I realized). My dad is a boomer who always taught us to treat people equally, but he says things now (and did back then) that would be really offensive to a modern ear. I never heard the N-word from anyone in my immediate family nor grandparents, but I’m not sure it was never said out of ear shot, and I definitely heard it from a great-uncle or two.
It’s a little uncomfortable for me to say that out loud, but so what? It’s nonetheless true. It reflects on them, not me, and it would be no different if I could go back a couple more generations and find a slave owner in my family. Awful, uncomfortable, but something that does not reflect on today’s generation beyond their reluctance to admit it and what it meant and what it did and continues to do with regard to impacts on the community and the people who are descended from enslaved ancestors.
They should be feel bad about their own cowardice about admitting what happened in the past, not for the details of those past events.
If your great great grandparents did bad shit, don’t make it worse by trying to lie and whitewash it, make it better by encouraging those truths to see the light of day so society is bettered for it, or at the very least stop trying to prevent others from doing so.
Least destructive decision he’s made since acquiring it.