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Wandering Adventure Party

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  3. Because a LOT of people are missing the point:

Because a LOT of people are missing the point:

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  • Nicole ParsonsN Nicole Parsons

    2/

    Musk's List of "Failure to Deliver" frauds:

    1. Man on Mars
    2. Hyperloop train
    3. Robotics
    4. xAI achieving AGI
    5. Flying cars
    6. DOGE 'efficiencies'
    7. Lunar tourism
    8. No covid
    9. Candy

    Attention Required! | Cloudflare

    favicon

    (qz.com)

    Link Preview Image
    Everything Elon Musk promised in 2025, but didn't deliver

    Elon Musk made many 2025 promises that he couldn't keep.

    favicon

    Mashable (mashable.com)

    Musk's actually delivered:
    1. The largest data breaches in US history
    2. Joined the military industrial complex
    3. A fossil fuel funded fascist alliance
    4. Kleptocracy
    5. Can foment far right riots with a single tweet
    6. Mass hate campaigns for Nazis

    Petr SkálaP This user is from outside of this forum
    Petr SkálaP This user is from outside of this forum
    Petr Skála
    wrote last edited by
    #109

    @Npars01 👍👍👍

    1 Reply Last reply
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    • D'Arcy Norman 🇨🇦D D'Arcy Norman 🇨🇦

      @bornach @bellegraylane @cstross just waiting for The Boring Company to pivot to AI…

      bellegraylaneB This user is from outside of this forum
      bellegraylaneB This user is from outside of this forum
      bellegraylane
      wrote last edited by
      #110

      @dnorman @bornach @cstross AI tunnels should be interesting. Hallucinating into bedrock sounds expensive.

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • Bruno NicolettiB Bruno Nicoletti

        @cstross It was obvious bollocks (just like hyperloop, the boring company etc…), just I didn’t know why he was boosting it as I didn’t realise he was planning an IPO this year. Tosser.

        David SP This user is from outside of this forum
        David SP This user is from outside of this forum
        David S
        wrote last edited by
        #111

        @bjn @cstross and despite being shown to repeatedly over promise and under delivery, the markets will no doubt lap it up anyway.

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • Cadbury MooseC Cadbury Moose

          @Uilebheist @cstross

          (Some) lawyers can (and will, if paid enough) argue against physics, but their chance of winning (other than the money you're paying them) is less than infinitesimal. (They're hoping they will be paid more than they get sanctioned for.)

          Arnd LayerI This user is from outside of this forum
          Arnd LayerI This user is from outside of this forum
          Arnd Layer
          wrote last edited by
          #112

          @Cadbury_Moose
          In my experience, those lawyers are called politicians 😉

          @Uilebheist @cstross

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • Charlie StrossC Charlie Stross

            Because a LOT of people are missing the point:

            No, Elon Musk is NOT serious about putting a million data centres into orbit. It can't work: laws of physics say "nope".

            But SpaceX is expected to go public this year.

            Elon is talking up his company's future prospects in front of gullible investors because he needs a growth narrative beyond Starlink, which is already priced in. Something to justify the Starship proram beyond NASA's lunar ambitions.

            So it's salesman's bullshit, lies for fools.

            DaveyD This user is from outside of this forum
            DaveyD This user is from outside of this forum
            Davey
            wrote last edited by
            #113

            @cstross this applies to every company that mentions data centres in space.

            Most tech "journalists" seem hesitant to ask basic questions about this shit because what if they start having to ask basic questions about everything. Sounds like a lot of work!

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • Charlie StrossC Charlie Stross

              Because a LOT of people are missing the point:

              No, Elon Musk is NOT serious about putting a million data centres into orbit. It can't work: laws of physics say "nope".

              But SpaceX is expected to go public this year.

              Elon is talking up his company's future prospects in front of gullible investors because he needs a growth narrative beyond Starlink, which is already priced in. Something to justify the Starship proram beyond NASA's lunar ambitions.

              So it's salesman's bullshit, lies for fools.

              Mark T. TomczakM This user is from outside of this forum
              Mark T. TomczakM This user is from outside of this forum
              Mark T. Tomczak
              wrote last edited by
              #114

              @cstross The most compelling argument I've heard for putting datacenters in space (in the "didn't immediately discount it as a stupid idea but took some time to engage with it" sense) was from Scott Manley, notorious fan of everything space-related, and even he concluded that it only makes sense as an end-run around terrestrial regulation (i.e. it's a stupid and expensive idea but in the grand scheme of markets it may be cheaper than "buying enough politicians to steal a community's water rights out from under them so you can get the permits to build on land").

              Which... Yeah, when that's the forcing function, maybe we tech folk should sit and have a think about the entire project.

              rk: could be an enumR ghost boomannB 2 Replies Last reply
              0
              • Mark T. TomczakM Mark T. Tomczak

                @cstross The most compelling argument I've heard for putting datacenters in space (in the "didn't immediately discount it as a stupid idea but took some time to engage with it" sense) was from Scott Manley, notorious fan of everything space-related, and even he concluded that it only makes sense as an end-run around terrestrial regulation (i.e. it's a stupid and expensive idea but in the grand scheme of markets it may be cheaper than "buying enough politicians to steal a community's water rights out from under them so you can get the permits to build on land").

                Which... Yeah, when that's the forcing function, maybe we tech folk should sit and have a think about the entire project.

                rk: could be an enumR This user is from outside of this forum
                rk: could be an enumR This user is from outside of this forum
                rk: could be an enum
                wrote last edited by
                #115

                @mark @cstross

                Like, we already have trouble keeping things cool in space and there’s also the whole “space is a deadly laser” radiation thing. I really can’t imagine how there’d be any benefit to putting a data center in space. Like, at all.

                Mark T. TomczakM 1 Reply Last reply
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                • rk: could be an enumR rk: could be an enum

                  @mark @cstross

                  Like, we already have trouble keeping things cool in space and there’s also the whole “space is a deadly laser” radiation thing. I really can’t imagine how there’d be any benefit to putting a data center in space. Like, at all.

                  Mark T. TomczakM This user is from outside of this forum
                  Mark T. TomczakM This user is from outside of this forum
                  Mark T. Tomczak
                  wrote last edited by
                  #116

                  @rk @cstross Exactly. It's literally a "This is a stupid idea and the only reason we do it is we were forbidden from putting it on Earth" kinda thing.

                  As I said at one point or other, to paraphrase myself, "Sure, there's no convenient cooling and radiation will scramble your data, but just think how much CSAM you can store out of reach of any terrestrial law... Until you try and download it and they bust your ass the moment it hits a radio dish!"

                  1 Reply Last reply
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                  • Charlie StrossC Charlie Stross

                    Because a LOT of people are missing the point:

                    No, Elon Musk is NOT serious about putting a million data centres into orbit. It can't work: laws of physics say "nope".

                    But SpaceX is expected to go public this year.

                    Elon is talking up his company's future prospects in front of gullible investors because he needs a growth narrative beyond Starlink, which is already priced in. Something to justify the Starship proram beyond NASA's lunar ambitions.

                    So it's salesman's bullshit, lies for fools.

                    retechR This user is from outside of this forum
                    retechR This user is from outside of this forum
                    retech
                    wrote last edited by
                    #117

                    @cstross I'm going to start a betting squares pool on the looming Kessler event. We've already got enough shit in orbit, it's time to bet on it crashing.

                    Side Note:

                    Do you remember when McDonald's and some start up company planned on putting a LEO 1 sq mile billboard up? It was an unfolding mylar advert that would degrade and burnup within 3 months. But during that time, everyone in the Northern Hemisphere would get the sun blotted out at least 1x day.

                    Batshit crazy, space, and billionaires just seem to gravitate together like blackholes.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • Mark T. TomczakM Mark T. Tomczak

                      @cstross The most compelling argument I've heard for putting datacenters in space (in the "didn't immediately discount it as a stupid idea but took some time to engage with it" sense) was from Scott Manley, notorious fan of everything space-related, and even he concluded that it only makes sense as an end-run around terrestrial regulation (i.e. it's a stupid and expensive idea but in the grand scheme of markets it may be cheaper than "buying enough politicians to steal a community's water rights out from under them so you can get the permits to build on land").

                      Which... Yeah, when that's the forcing function, maybe we tech folk should sit and have a think about the entire project.

                      ghost boomannB This user is from outside of this forum
                      ghost boomannB This user is from outside of this forum
                      ghost boomann
                      wrote last edited by
                      #118

                      @mark @cstross

                      Any idea where I can find the figure for how much radiator mass needs to be accelerated into orbit per 400W of tensor core resistance heater?

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • Charlie StrossC Charlie Stross

                        Because a LOT of people are missing the point:

                        No, Elon Musk is NOT serious about putting a million data centres into orbit. It can't work: laws of physics say "nope".

                        But SpaceX is expected to go public this year.

                        Elon is talking up his company's future prospects in front of gullible investors because he needs a growth narrative beyond Starlink, which is already priced in. Something to justify the Starship proram beyond NASA's lunar ambitions.

                        So it's salesman's bullshit, lies for fools.

                        VHG 🇪🇺🇺🇦V This user is from outside of this forum
                        VHG 🇪🇺🇺🇦V This user is from outside of this forum
                        VHG 🇪🇺🇺🇦
                        wrote last edited by
                        #119

                        @cstross Markets eat all his sf shit without hesitation. No checking of facts or realism. They are driven by one thought, and one thought only: what if he knows more than we and he actually pull it off - and we have not invested!!

                        1 Reply Last reply
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                        • Charlie StrossC Charlie Stross

                          @ApostateEnglishman You ask about failed SpaceX launches: turns out Falcon 9 has launched 606 times with 603 mission successes. 3 launch failures total, none in the past 11 years. It's *ridiculously* reliable compared to any of its rivals.

                          (Falcon 1—discontinued—was a buggy prototype; Starship is trying to get past that.)

                          (Tesla is not going to give us humanoid robots, not beyond showroom rigged demos targeting the investors' wallets. And I'm NOT having one of those brain implants, no way!)

                          Jack William BellJ This user is from outside of this forum
                          Jack William BellJ This user is from outside of this forum
                          Jack William Bell
                          wrote last edited by
                          #120

                          @cstross @ApostateEnglishman

                          My rules for brain implants:

                          1. I will not alpha or beta test; in fact I think waiting for v3.25 is probably for the best

                          2. Must run Open Source software *not using any dependencies requiring a Package Manager*

                          3. Must not require *any* kind of 'cloud' to operate, must work fine without a network connection, and must be locally configurable

                          4. You know what? Even if it meets rules 1 to 3 I'm still not too hot on the idea…

                          Jack William BellJ Emma Loves ☕️E Lazarou Monkey Terror 🚀💙🌈L JohnJ frogF 9 Replies Last reply
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                          0
                          • Jack William BellJ Jack William Bell

                            @cstross @ApostateEnglishman

                            My rules for brain implants:

                            1. I will not alpha or beta test; in fact I think waiting for v3.25 is probably for the best

                            2. Must run Open Source software *not using any dependencies requiring a Package Manager*

                            3. Must not require *any* kind of 'cloud' to operate, must work fine without a network connection, and must be locally configurable

                            4. You know what? Even if it meets rules 1 to 3 I'm still not too hot on the idea…

                            Jack William BellJ This user is from outside of this forum
                            Jack William BellJ This user is from outside of this forum
                            Jack William Bell
                            wrote last edited by
                            #121

                            @cstross @ApostateEnglishman

                            NOTE: Those rules used to be much simpler. More along the lines of, "Not anything using Microsoft or Oracle software."

                            ETA: Insert joke about, "Blue Screen of Death."

                            TubemeisterT 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • Charlie StrossC Charlie Stross

                              Because a LOT of people are missing the point:

                              No, Elon Musk is NOT serious about putting a million data centres into orbit. It can't work: laws of physics say "nope".

                              But SpaceX is expected to go public this year.

                              Elon is talking up his company's future prospects in front of gullible investors because he needs a growth narrative beyond Starlink, which is already priced in. Something to justify the Starship proram beyond NASA's lunar ambitions.

                              So it's salesman's bullshit, lies for fools.

                              Erik BosmanB This user is from outside of this forum
                              Erik BosmanB This user is from outside of this forum
                              Erik Bosman
                              wrote last edited by
                              #122

                              @cstross When Kessler syndrome happens, do I get fractional shares?

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • Jack William BellJ Jack William Bell

                                @cstross @ApostateEnglishman

                                My rules for brain implants:

                                1. I will not alpha or beta test; in fact I think waiting for v3.25 is probably for the best

                                2. Must run Open Source software *not using any dependencies requiring a Package Manager*

                                3. Must not require *any* kind of 'cloud' to operate, must work fine without a network connection, and must be locally configurable

                                4. You know what? Even if it meets rules 1 to 3 I'm still not too hot on the idea…

                                Emma Loves ☕️E This user is from outside of this forum
                                Emma Loves ☕️E This user is from outside of this forum
                                Emma Loves ☕️
                                wrote last edited by
                                #123

                                @jackwilliambell @cstross @ApostateEnglishman

                                A few years back, Bruce Sterling was doing his thing on stage and talking about how fucked anyone with an implant would be under the DMCA and planned obsolescence.

                                Jack William BellJ 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • Charlie StrossC Charlie Stross

                                  Because a LOT of people are missing the point:

                                  No, Elon Musk is NOT serious about putting a million data centres into orbit. It can't work: laws of physics say "nope".

                                  But SpaceX is expected to go public this year.

                                  Elon is talking up his company's future prospects in front of gullible investors because he needs a growth narrative beyond Starlink, which is already priced in. Something to justify the Starship proram beyond NASA's lunar ambitions.

                                  So it's salesman's bullshit, lies for fools.

                                  MartinM This user is from outside of this forum
                                  MartinM This user is from outside of this forum
                                  Martin
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #124

                                  @cstross Data centers in orbit are the new "Solar roadways" scam.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • Emma Loves ☕️E Emma Loves ☕️

                                    @jackwilliambell @cstross @ApostateEnglishman

                                    A few years back, Bruce Sterling was doing his thing on stage and talking about how fucked anyone with an implant would be under the DMCA and planned obsolescence.

                                    Jack William BellJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                    Jack William BellJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                    Jack William Bell
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #125

                                    @emma @cstross @ApostateEnglishman

                                    And now we have proof of that on the ground with audio implants and heart defibrillators stopping working because the company went out of business.

                                    Really? DRM should be banned from *anything* medical related for incredibly obvious reasons; although banning DRM altogether isn't a bad idea either.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • Jack William BellJ Jack William Bell

                                      @cstross @ApostateEnglishman

                                      My rules for brain implants:

                                      1. I will not alpha or beta test; in fact I think waiting for v3.25 is probably for the best

                                      2. Must run Open Source software *not using any dependencies requiring a Package Manager*

                                      3. Must not require *any* kind of 'cloud' to operate, must work fine without a network connection, and must be locally configurable

                                      4. You know what? Even if it meets rules 1 to 3 I'm still not too hot on the idea…

                                      Lazarou Monkey Terror 🚀💙🌈L This user is from outside of this forum
                                      Lazarou Monkey Terror 🚀💙🌈L This user is from outside of this forum
                                      Lazarou Monkey Terror 🚀💙🌈
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #126

                                      @jackwilliambell @cstross @ApostateEnglishman I like technology you can take off when it goes wrong.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • Jack William BellJ Jack William Bell

                                        @cstross @ApostateEnglishman

                                        My rules for brain implants:

                                        1. I will not alpha or beta test; in fact I think waiting for v3.25 is probably for the best

                                        2. Must run Open Source software *not using any dependencies requiring a Package Manager*

                                        3. Must not require *any* kind of 'cloud' to operate, must work fine without a network connection, and must be locally configurable

                                        4. You know what? Even if it meets rules 1 to 3 I'm still not too hot on the idea…

                                        JohnJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                        JohnJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                        John
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #127

                                        @jackwilliambell @cstross @ApostateEnglishman

                                        We know so little about the brain's real mechanics that brain implants can't be any more sophisticated than plugging a phone into a potato.

                                        Brain implants today are like using a railgun to crochet lace.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • polypunkP polypunk

                                          @gbargoud
                                          The hell, I toolk this as a plot element in @bitterkarella 's latest gag?
                                          Argh. I'm gonna hide under a rock...
                                          @cstross @tony

                                          Chip UnicornC This user is from outside of this forum
                                          Chip UnicornC This user is from outside of this forum
                                          Chip Unicorn
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #128

                                          @polypunk

                                          @bitterkarella just transcribes what's happening. Reality has lapped satire.

                                          1 Reply Last reply
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