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Residents in Alaska's capital city prepare for possible glacial flooding



in reply to Midnitte

Signs you are in a normal, totally functional democracy...








Companies aiding Trump’s immigration crackdown see ‘extraordinary’ revenues


in reply to greenfire

Entirely predictable.

Every single time that a Republican administration purports to be cracking down on "wasteful spending," you can be sure of two things: that their definition of "wasteful spending" is "any spending that benefits anyone other than ourselves and our cronies and patrons," and that all they're really going to do is shift it so that it exclusively does benefit themselves and their cronies and patrons.

in reply to WatDabney

also beware when they propose to ‘reform’ social security, medicare, medicaid etc—the public always loses from the GOP’s efforts against such programs


A New Economy | Inside the Revolution You’re Not Hearing About


Inspirational documentary with ideas about how to become a part of your local economy


Canon Connections: SNW 3x04 - A Space Adventure Hour


in reply to USSBurritoTruck

@startrek The crew size of TOS Enterprise was 430. I’m not sure why they’ve halved that in SNW.
in reply to Michael Gemar

"They really packed them in on these old ships some of the time, but inconsistently and not always."


Jadzia Dax in Trials and Tribble-ations

in reply to Michael Gemar

203 was the crew count given in original pilot, “The Cage”, and the clip where it’s stated was repurposed for “The Menagerie”.

The 430 number was never stated on screen, until the Disco episode, “Brother” where, when Michael Burnham scans the ship she says there are 203 crew aboard, but the display graphic claims 430.

This entry was edited (1 day ago)
in reply to USSBurritoTruck

Huh. I have always heard the crew compliment as 430, even when TOS was the only Trek. It appeared on Star Trek.com, but there’s no actual reference there:

web.archive.org/web/2020042610…

in reply to Michael Gemar

Apparently the 430 figure is first uttered by Richard Daystrom in "The Ultimate Computer":

It takes 430 people to man a starship. With this, you don't need anyone. One machine can do all those things they send men out to do now.


This is the figure Roddenberry has settled on in the third edition of "The Star Trek Guide" series Bible, despite the earlier contradiction.

This entry was edited (1 day ago)
in reply to Value Subtracted

Thanks for clarifying that. It’s odd to me that SNW decided to go back to the earlier figure.


Mozilla under fire for Firefox AI "bloat" that blows up CPU and drains battery




New study shows how climate change is driving wildfire season to start earlier in California


in reply to Sunshine

The same is happening in Victoria, Australia. The scary part is they're starting to overlap at times, meaning fire-fighting resources can't be as effectively shared between the two like they have been in the past.
in reply to Sunshine

I mean, no shit. I lived in Southern Oregon -- as in extremely so, such that we may as well have been in NorCal -- 22 years ago (god, I feel old), and things were already starting to change. By my last summer in the Rogue Valley, we all had masks, and this was years before Covid.



EPA plans to end a program that makes solar power available to low-income Americans


The Trump Administration says it will end a $7 billion program to help low-income households and communities get access to affordable solar energy. The move is part of President Trump's effort to reverse former President Biden's climate agenda and boost fossil fuels instead.

The "Solar for All" program had aimed to help more than 900,000 low-income households reduce pollution, and utility bills. Solar for All funded efforts around the country to provide rooftop solar panels, community solar farms, and battery storage.

Now, the fate of the program is in question, the Trump administration argues, because of a massive spending and tax bill Republicans passed last month.

in reply to Catoblepas

To the surprise of no one.

The Republican party has only served the 1% (e.g. oil companies, etc) for fucking decades.


in reply to marsza

I'd prefer to drive my belongings out of this hellhole.
in reply to marsza

You quit your job, cancel your lease, and live on the streets in downtown NY. Do it. Show us all how easy it is to do.

When you do, come back and reply, and I'll give you the upvotes you deserve.

in reply to TehPers

Downtown NY? Why would anyone want to make that their destination? Also, why does one have to be on the street? They can get a job.

I think you assume it’s Texas or the Streets, which is just funny

in reply to marsza

Downtown NY? Why would anyone want to make that their destination? Also, why does one have to be on the street?


Well someone who can't afford a home out of state would presumably need somewhere to live until then, and there tend to be better resources in cities than in rural towns.

They can get a job.


Clearly you've never needed to search for one. Consider yourself lucky.

I think you assume it’s Texas or the Streets, which is just funny


I still don't see your attempt to prove this wrong. Lets see you make a cross-state move to somewhere better with almost nothing in the bank. Show us all how it's done. I'm the random internet stranger, and I'm now issuing you the same challenge you gave to them.

in reply to TehPers

But… why New York? That’s a shit hole!

The user said they were refusing to get a job to avoid having to pay their Debt. Perhaps refusing to get a job is the reason they do not have any money.

in reply to marsza

And go ... where? With no income lined up. Must be nice to have the financial stability to just do an interstate move on a whim.
in reply to Powderhorn

So you’re saying that you have no skills that can be used outside of Texas?

I never said whim… but, keep making excuses not to leave Texas…. Like I’ve been saying.

in reply to marsza

I don't know why you're presuming to know a fucking thing about my situation. I have skills, but they're in journalism and coding, which aren't exactly growth fields at the moment. I also need contract work instead of full-time to avoid severe garnishment from Covid debt. And my van gets 6 mpg.

If you want to wire me $5,000, I can easily get out of Texas and park somewhere else for a few months, but your starting point is so far from reality that it appears your only interest is in victim blaming.

I have $19 to my name. That's my fucking excuse.

in reply to Powderhorn

it does not take $5000 in gasoline to exit Texas. In fact, you could probably make it to Portland Oregon on a third of that. I realize that is significantly more than $19, But since you live in your home, you can do it a step at a time
in reply to marsza

Getting to Portland would run about $2,000 in diesel. I didn't look it up just now, but that's been on the list for a while, as my college roommate lives with his dad across the river. That's scarcely the only cost, and then the job search still relies on networking, so it's tuna and bologna sandwiches (separately, of course). I'd not look forward to I-5 in this anyway.

You're being patronizing and unnecessarily contrarian, so I'm going to disengage.

in reply to Powderhorn

Your college roommate and his father live in Vancouver? So, you would not be entirely alone in a new city? That sounds like a good solution.

Perhaps you should get a job, let them garnish The maximum 25% by federal law and save up $2000. Ironically it seems like Texas might have laws in place preventing anyone from garnishing you.

in reply to marsza

You're spending an awful lot of time coming up with as many excuses as possible for why someone's direct experience must be wrong and therefore ignored. This is incredibly selfish. All in defense of being an antagonistic asshole to people based wholly on their geographic location, at that.

Maybe you ought to spend some time looking at yourself instead. Would do the world a lot more good than your current strategy of being condescending to homeless people.

in reply to LukeZaz

I’m condescending to everyone, don’t get excited.
in reply to marsza

So the gloves are off. Come back in a week in a better mood.


Watch This Documentary About 'Star Trek: Phase II' and See What Could've Been


A fascinating look back at the potential 'Star Trek' sequel TV show includes some incredible imaginings of what the new USS 'Enterprise' may have looked like.

The existence of Star Trek: Phase II—the plans for a Star Trek continuation series in the mid-1970s that eventually gave way to Star Trek: The Motion Picture—has been known for a very long time at this point. We’ve seen concept art, we’ve seen story ideas, and we’ve seen it for long enough to see how those nuggets have gone on to influence the Star Trek that we would go on to get for another 50 years. And yet, there’s still plenty to enjoy in this new documentary about the bumpy road Star Trek almost made on the journey home back to our screens.
in reply to Michael Gemar

I've always thought the same thing. Thought provoking stories are the main reason I watch, and learning about the world and characters is another major reason. Movies just don't usually have the time to fit much of the second part in!
This entry was edited (2 days ago)


Deploying Nextcloud on AWS ECS with Pulumi


This entry was edited (2 days ago)
in reply to Abimelech B. 🐧🇩🇪| wörk ™️

It depends. There are providers that use custom versions of Nextcloud or run just very outdated versions. In both cases a migration elsewhere might become more complex.
in reply to Clemens

That's right, but a migration should be possible nevertheless; or "more possible" and much easier than migrating away from microsoft365…


Stubsack: Stubsack: weekly thread for sneers not worth an entire post, week ending 10th August 2025


in reply to BlueMonday1984

Sorry to talk about this couple again, but people are discovering the eugenicists are also big time racists


What Are Your Thoughts On Tolstoy's Thoughts On Truth And Free Will? (Part Two)



in reply to FiveMacs

I would say no since the cops in that stunning display of brutality were all white.


What Are Your Thoughts On Tolstoy's Thoughts On Truth And Free Will? (Part Two)





Proton is vibe coding some of its apps.


in reply to truthfultemporarily

The blind AI hate does not help. LLMs can be useful.


I agree. Unfortunately, they’re being forced on us by the same companies which are enshittifying things as much as they can, and respond with hostility when anyone suggests that users deserve privacy, or fair compensation for their work. I can’t really blame people who respond with skepticism and distrust.

in reply to magnetosphere

Indeed. It's informed and nuanced hate with a material analysis

"but what if there are USE CASES for the radioactive anthrax bomb"

what indeed



Today is the 37th anniversary of Myanmar's 8888 Uprising


8888 movement was a massive moment in Burma's democracy movement. Fed up with the poverty and austerity of life under a quixotic and idiotic military dictatorship and undoubtedly inspired by pro-democracy movements elsewhere in Asia, Burmese people threw the yoke of fear and rose up against the military dictatorship. This NPR article succinctly gives the timeline of events and a vivid backgrounder to the heartbreak and bitterness Burmese people feel to this day that their willful expression and voice has not been recognized nor heard.
This entry was edited (3 days ago)




Several people arrested at anti-Ice protest outside NYC immigration court


in reply to Powderhorn

Is it me, or is "disorderly conduct" just code for "we wanted an excuse to arrest you" 95% of the time it's used?
This entry was edited (2 days ago)
in reply to Powderhorn

Sure, Congress isn't stripping people of these rights, but it isn't really a functioning branch at this point


I'd say that there isn't a properly functioning branch on the tree. The Supreme Court, Congress, Executive are so twisted the branches are strangling the trunk.





Federal mRNA funding cut is ‘most dangerous public health decision’ ever, expert says


Many public health experts and scientists say they are stunned by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr’s decision to cancel nearly half a billion dollars in federal funding for future vaccine development. MRNA technology was central in the battle against COVID and can be developed more quickly than traditional vaccines. Geoff Bennett discussed the implications with Dr. Michael Osterholm.

The latest move comes after the Trump administration already withdrew a multimillion-dollar contract with the biotech company Moderna to develop a bird flu vaccine using what's known as mRNA technology; mRNA vaccines work by using a single strand of genetic code to create a fragment of a virus that sets off the body's immune response.

This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to greenfire

Living in the United States right now must feel like living in an Onion article.
in reply to Omega (she/her)

Its certainly hard to distinguish The Onion from actual news



US air force denies early retirement for transgender service members


The US air force is denying early retirement to all transgender service members with 15-18 years of military service, opting instead to force them out with no retirement benefits, according to a memo seen by Reuters.

These longer-serving transgender service members will have the same choice as more junior ones: quit or be forced out, with corresponding lump-sum payments as they walk out the door, the 4 August memo says.

The move is the latest escalation by Donald Trump’s administration as it seeks to bar transgender people from joining the US military and remove all who are serving. The Pentagon says transgender people are medically unfit, something civil rights activists say is untrue and constitutes illegal discrimination.

in reply to greenfire

Uh....so they're giving people years of weapons and hand to hand combat training and then fucking up their ability to retire in a quiet dignified way?

That is... Not how I would have handled that situation.

Edit: I'm just... processing that people can make stupider choices than I thought possible.

This feels like the "poking a sleeping bear for no clear reason" special kind of stupid.

This entry was edited (2 days ago)
in reply to greenfire

It’s really absurd on so many levels.

Beyond the obvious mentioned by others, a lot of these people are skilled in specific fields that are particularly hard to find replacements for. Like, the military has serious issues with retention of specialists (I mean the general term, not the rank) as of late, so to be intentionally kicking out a significant cohort of specialists on arbitrary grounds is just going to make the issue worse.

Not to mention that they’re setting an example that this could happen to any number of potentially targeted groups, who will probably avoid joining, or committing to a long term career if they do join, shrinking the pool of applicants for specialist positions even further.

It’s cutting off your nose to spite your face.




GOP's Texas map has Austin residents sharing district with rural Texans 300 miles away


As Texas Republicans try to muscle a rare mid-decade redistricting bill through the Legislature to help Republicans gain seats in Congress -- at President Donald Trump's request -- residents in Austin, the state capital, could find themselves sharing a district with rural Texans more than 300 miles away.

The proposed map chops up Central Texas' 37th Congressional District, which is currently represented by Democrat Rep. Lloyd Doggett, will be consumed by four neighboring districts, three of which Republicans now hold.

One of those portions of the Austin-area district was drawn to be part of the 11th District that Republican Rep. August Pfluger represents, which stretches into rural Ector County, about 20 miles away from the New Mexico border.

#news


StarFive VisionFive 2 Lite is a cheap(er) RISC-V single-board computer (crowdfunding)


The VisionFive 2 Lite is a credit card-sized single-board computer (SBC) that looks a lot like a Raspberry Pi. But it’s actually a smaller, cheaper, and less powerful version of the VisionFive 2 RISC-V SBC that launched a few years ago.

The new model has a slower version of the same processor and loses a few ports and connectors, but picks up optional support for onboard WiFi and Bluetooth. […]

#crowdfunding #riscV #sbc #sifive #starfive #starfiveVisionfive2Lite

Read more: liliputing.com/starfive-vision…



'Largest civilian flotilla in history' to set sail for Gaza


Activists from 44 countries plan to launch the largest civilian flotilla in history at the end of August in an effort to break Israel’s siege on Gaza and deliver humanitarian aid to the starving population of the enclave.

The Global Sumud Flotilla, along with three allied initiatives, will send dozens of boats from Spanish ports on 31 August and Tunisian ports on 4 September, aiming to establish a humanitarian corridor and confront what organizers call Israel’s genocide against Palestinians.

“This summer, dozens of boats, both large and small, will set sail from ports across the world, converging on Gaza in the largest civilian flotilla of its kind in history,” said organizer Haifa Mansouri at a press conference in Tunis hosted by the Joint Action Coordination for Palestine.

The mission brings together four groups: the Maghreb Sumud Flotilla, the Global Movement to Gaza, the Freedom Flotilla Coalition, and Sumud Nusantara.


Full Article



'Largest civilian flotilla in history' to set sail for Gaza




An Unexpected Path to Hold War Criminals Accountable (The Intercept, 2025-08-06)