yes, YouTube has shorter URL schemes, but given the scheme I was showing, the part after the ?
can’t be removed
It’s like reddit, but I don’t have to feel icky.
given up looking for replacements
r/anarchydnd
r/apolloapp
r/Condution
r/robotech
r/OSUOnlineCS
r/vintageobscura
r/ZeroCovidCommunitv
- 12 Posts
- 717 Comments
Zachariah@lemmy.worldto And Finally...@feddit.uk•Crocodile that terrorised town for three days turned out to be an inflatable toy11·22 hours agothere’s a word for that:
Wortfindungsfähigkeit
givesell
sudo make me a sandwich
Not a fanboy, but an iPhone user.
I’m very happy with the efforts to get Android phones to work without Google, but I don’t think it works well enough without Google services yet.
To me, Apple is the lesser of two evils.
I also like how the iPhone’s Live Photos work. I haven’t checked in a while. Maybe Android works the same now.
Maps was holding me back, but Organic Maps is good enough now.
What, is it going to stop momentarily when you reach mid life?
Zachariah@lemmy.worldto Space@mander.xyz•Trapped by moon dust: The physics error that fooled NASA for years111·2 days agoIt just goes to show you, you can have whole comment sections of Fediverse users on a post, but there’s still going to be some factor they didn’t think of when the rubber meets the road.
Zachariah@lemmy.worldto Space@mander.xyz•Trapped by moon dust: The physics error that fooled NASA for years23·2 days agoOn the moon, the gravitational pull is six times weaker than on Earth. For decades, researchers testing rovers have accounted for that difference in gravity by creating a prototype that is a sixth of the mass of the actual rover. They test these lightweight rovers in deserts, observing how it moves across sand to gain insights into how it would perform on the moon.
It turns out, however, that this standard testing approach overlooked a seemingly inconsequential detail: the pull of Earth’s gravity on the desert sand.
get an inkblot, so you can see it as whatever you’re in the mood to see it as
It’s so easy, you can do it one-handed.
Frees up that other hand for multitasking fun.
so did the cartographer