Post 9hqPBGCTkDdVOirf8K by cdmnky@shigusegubu.club
(DIR) More posts by cdmnky@shigusegubu.club
(DIR) Post #9hqHUEHqHeNvKduKJc by cdmnky@shigusegubu.club
2019-04-15T20:13:46.999914Z
0 likes, 1 repeats
#LateStageCapitalismusing satellites to broadcast a pepsi logo perpetually in the fucking skythis shit should be illegalhttps://futurism.com/pepsi-orbital-billboard-night-sky
(DIR) Post #9hqKk8QW8fIheYF0ls by xmanmonk@mastodon.sdf.org
2019-04-15T20:42:53Z
1 likes, 0 repeats
@cdmnky Absolutely awful.
(DIR) Post #9hqObTgu6oTyoV27yy by varx@infosec.exchange
2019-04-15T21:27:42Z
1 likes, 1 repeats
@cdmnky Coincidentally, I'm suddenly interested in starting a uhmodel rocketry clublet's call it that.
(DIR) Post #9hqP7yEu4AMWpAQiae by Ayior@mastodon.art
2019-04-15T21:37:52Z
1 likes, 0 repeats
@cdmnkyI dont want to live in the world thats being proposed here
(DIR) Post #9hqP8eVKvSSluIRR2G by enigmatico@misskey.io
2019-04-15T21:37:16.068Z
1 likes, 0 repeats
@cdmnky@shigusegubu.club I heard that while in space, there is nothing that makes friction or causes resistance to whatever moves there. So even a small rock of the size of your fingers could cause potential damage in the hull of any structure in space at the right speed.
(DIR) Post #9hqPBGCTkDdVOirf8K by cdmnky@shigusegubu.club
2019-04-15T21:39:59.709054Z
0 likes, 0 repeats
@enigmatico yeahdust strikes kill deep solarsystem probes all the time
(DIR) Post #9hqSixu2a0qEMF0HbM by Kyresti@vulpine.club
2019-04-15T22:18:20Z
1 likes, 0 repeats
@cdmnky So... deliberate space junk.Lovely. So what'll take to knock these pieces of scrap metal into the ocean?
(DIR) Post #9hqSlt6Mt3FWKtABRg by cdmnky@shigusegubu.club
2019-04-15T22:20:13.793799Z
0 likes, 0 repeats
@Kyresti probably a missle that'll also knock out satellite infrastructure for navigation and tv
(DIR) Post #9hqTN4ujvo8HgbSSTQ by enigmatico@misskey.io
2019-04-15T22:26:35.646Z
1 likes, 0 repeats
@cdmnky@shigusegubu.club It should be possible then to attack them in such a way nobody can predict nor track down where the attack came from by using small particles against the cubes.