• progress_activity cloud_sync

    Reconnection to the server…

    Movim cannot talk with the server, please try again later


    • Public subscriptions

    • chevron_right

      coopr8

    • chevron_right

      gabagoo

    • chevron_right

      kenu_demon

    • chevron_right

      coopr8

    • chevron_right

      gabagoo

    • chevron_right

      kenu_demon

    • chevron_right

      coopr8

    • chevron_right

      gabagoo

    • chevron_right

      kenu_demon

  • Register Login

    Movim

    movim.chatterboxtown.us


  • group_work rss_feed
    add Follow

    ArsTechnica

    • Ar chevron_right

      Rocket Report: Space Force to pick three; Pythom strikes back

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 21 July 2023 • 1 minute

    Falcon 9 launches 54  Starlink satellites from SLC-40 in Florida on Saturday.

    Enlarge / Falcon 9 launches 54 Starlink satellites from SLC-40 in Florida on Saturday. (credit: SpaceX)

    Welcome to Edition 6.03 of the Rocket Report! Today marks the 54th anniversary of the Apollo 11 landing on the Moon. For decades this has meant a time to reflect on the glories of the past. But finally, with the Artemis Program, we can also look forward with hope about what is coming. That is something I am thankful for.

    As always, we welcome reader submissions , and if you don't want to miss an issue, please subscribe using the box below (the form will not appear on AMP-enabled versions of the site). Each report will include information on small-, medium-, and heavy-lift rockets as well as a quick look ahead at the next three launches on the calendar.

    smalll.png

    Rocket Lab recovers another booster . The launch company's Electron rocket boosted seven satellites for NASA, Space Flight Laboratory, and Spire Global on Tuesday. This was Rocket Lab's 39th launch overall, and after the primary mission Electron's first stage completed a successful ocean splashdown. Rocket Lab’s recovery team rendezvoused with the stage on the water, successfully bringing it onto a vessel using a specially designed capture cradle, the company said .

    Read 20 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagspace tagspace tagspace tagrocket report tagrocket report tagrocket report tagscience tagscience tagscience tagspace tagspace tagspace tagrocket report tagrocket report tagrocket report tagscience tagscience tagscience tagspace tagspace tagspace tagrocket report tagrocket report tagrocket report

    • Ar chevron_right

      Rocket Report: Space Force to pick three; Pythom strikes back

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 21 July 2023 • 1 minute

    Falcon 9 launches 54  Starlink satellites from SLC-40 in Florida on Saturday.

    Enlarge / Falcon 9 launches 54 Starlink satellites from SLC-40 in Florida on Saturday. (credit: SpaceX)

    Welcome to Edition 6.03 of the Rocket Report! Today marks the 54th anniversary of the Apollo 11 landing on the Moon. For decades this has meant a time to reflect on the glories of the past. But finally, with the Artemis Program, we can also look forward with hope about what is coming. That is something I am thankful for.

    As always, we welcome reader submissions , and if you don't want to miss an issue, please subscribe using the box below (the form will not appear on AMP-enabled versions of the site). Each report will include information on small-, medium-, and heavy-lift rockets as well as a quick look ahead at the next three launches on the calendar.

    smalll.png

    Rocket Lab recovers another booster . The launch company's Electron rocket boosted seven satellites for NASA, Space Flight Laboratory, and Spire Global on Tuesday. This was Rocket Lab's 39th launch overall, and after the primary mission Electron's first stage completed a successful ocean splashdown. Rocket Lab’s recovery team rendezvoused with the stage on the water, successfully bringing it onto a vessel using a specially designed capture cradle, the company said .

    Read 20 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagspace tagspace tagspace tagrocket report tagrocket report tagrocket report tagscience tagscience tagscience tagspace tagspace tagspace tagrocket report tagrocket report tagrocket report tagscience tagscience tagscience tagspace tagspace tagspace tagrocket report tagrocket report tagrocket report

    • Ar chevron_right

      Rocket Report: Space Force to pick three; Pythom strikes back

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 21 July 2023 • 1 minute

    Falcon 9 launches 54  Starlink satellites from SLC-40 in Florida on Saturday.

    Enlarge / Falcon 9 launches 54 Starlink satellites from SLC-40 in Florida on Saturday. (credit: SpaceX)

    Welcome to Edition 6.03 of the Rocket Report! Today marks the 54th anniversary of the Apollo 11 landing on the Moon. For decades this has meant a time to reflect on the glories of the past. But finally, with the Artemis Program, we can also look forward with hope about what is coming. That is something I am thankful for.

    As always, we welcome reader submissions , and if you don't want to miss an issue, please subscribe using the box below (the form will not appear on AMP-enabled versions of the site). Each report will include information on small-, medium-, and heavy-lift rockets as well as a quick look ahead at the next three launches on the calendar.

    smalll.png

    Rocket Lab recovers another booster . The launch company's Electron rocket boosted seven satellites for NASA, Space Flight Laboratory, and Spire Global on Tuesday. This was Rocket Lab's 39th launch overall, and after the primary mission Electron's first stage completed a successful ocean splashdown. Rocket Lab’s recovery team rendezvoused with the stage on the water, successfully bringing it onto a vessel using a specially designed capture cradle, the company said .

    Read 20 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagspace tagspace tagspace tagrocket report tagrocket report tagrocket report tagscience tagscience tagscience tagspace tagspace tagspace tagrocket report tagrocket report tagrocket report tagscience tagscience tagscience tagspace tagspace tagspace tagrocket report tagrocket report tagrocket report

    • Ar chevron_right

      Could there be upsides to being a psychopath?

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 21 July 2023 • 1 minute

    Could there be upsides to being a psychopath?

    Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson | Getty Images)

    Think of a psychopath and any number of Hollywood villains might come to mind, from charming killers like Hannibal Lecter to Anton Chigurh, portrayed with chilling menace by Javier Bardem in the film No Country for Old Men . But the traits and symptoms of psychopathy run along scales that range from weak to strong. So, someone may be mildly psychopathic or severely so. There could be a psychopath sitting next to you right now.

    Some psychologists argue that the focus on violent and criminal psychopathic behavior has marginalized the study of what they call “successful psychopaths”—people who have psychopathic tendencies but who can stay out of trouble, and perhaps even benefit from these traits in some way. Researchers haven’t yet reached a consensus on which traits distinguish successful psychopaths from serial killers, but they are working to clarify what they say is a misunderstood branch of human behavior. Some even want to reclaim and rehabilitate the concept of psychopathy itself.

    “Most of what people think about psychopaths is not what psychopathy actually is,” says Louise Wallace, a lecturer in forensic psychology at the University of Derby, in England. “It is not glamorous. It is not a spectacle.” Psychopathic traits exist in everyone to some degree and shouldn’t be glorified or stigmatized, she says.

    Read 25 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • taghealth taghealth taghealth tagscience tagscience tagscience tagpsychiatry tagpsychiatry tagpsychiatry tagpsychopathology tagpsychopathology tagpsychopathology taghealth taghealth taghealth tagscience tagscience tagscience tagpsychiatry tagpsychiatry tagpsychiatry tagpsychopathology tagpsychopathology tagpsychopathology taghealth taghealth taghealth tagscience tagscience tagscience tagpsychiatry tagpsychiatry tagpsychiatry tagpsychopathology tagpsychopathology tagpsychopathology

    • Ar chevron_right

      Could there be upsides to being a psychopath?

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 21 July 2023 • 1 minute

    Could there be upsides to being a psychopath?

    Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson | Getty Images)

    Think of a psychopath and any number of Hollywood villains might come to mind, from charming killers like Hannibal Lecter to Anton Chigurh, portrayed with chilling menace by Javier Bardem in the film No Country for Old Men . But the traits and symptoms of psychopathy run along scales that range from weak to strong. So, someone may be mildly psychopathic or severely so. There could be a psychopath sitting next to you right now.

    Some psychologists argue that the focus on violent and criminal psychopathic behavior has marginalized the study of what they call “successful psychopaths”—people who have psychopathic tendencies but who can stay out of trouble, and perhaps even benefit from these traits in some way. Researchers haven’t yet reached a consensus on which traits distinguish successful psychopaths from serial killers, but they are working to clarify what they say is a misunderstood branch of human behavior. Some even want to reclaim and rehabilitate the concept of psychopathy itself.

    “Most of what people think about psychopaths is not what psychopathy actually is,” says Louise Wallace, a lecturer in forensic psychology at the University of Derby, in England. “It is not glamorous. It is not a spectacle.” Psychopathic traits exist in everyone to some degree and shouldn’t be glorified or stigmatized, she says.

    Read 25 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • taghealth taghealth taghealth tagscience tagscience tagscience tagpsychiatry tagpsychiatry tagpsychiatry tagpsychopathology tagpsychopathology tagpsychopathology taghealth taghealth taghealth tagscience tagscience tagscience tagpsychiatry tagpsychiatry tagpsychiatry tagpsychopathology tagpsychopathology tagpsychopathology taghealth taghealth taghealth tagscience tagscience tagscience tagpsychiatry tagpsychiatry tagpsychiatry tagpsychopathology tagpsychopathology tagpsychopathology

    • Ar chevron_right

      Could there be upsides to being a psychopath?

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 21 July 2023 • 1 minute

    Could there be upsides to being a psychopath?

    Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson | Getty Images)

    Think of a psychopath and any number of Hollywood villains might come to mind, from charming killers like Hannibal Lecter to Anton Chigurh, portrayed with chilling menace by Javier Bardem in the film No Country for Old Men . But the traits and symptoms of psychopathy run along scales that range from weak to strong. So, someone may be mildly psychopathic or severely so. There could be a psychopath sitting next to you right now.

    Some psychologists argue that the focus on violent and criminal psychopathic behavior has marginalized the study of what they call “successful psychopaths”—people who have psychopathic tendencies but who can stay out of trouble, and perhaps even benefit from these traits in some way. Researchers haven’t yet reached a consensus on which traits distinguish successful psychopaths from serial killers, but they are working to clarify what they say is a misunderstood branch of human behavior. Some even want to reclaim and rehabilitate the concept of psychopathy itself.

    “Most of what people think about psychopaths is not what psychopathy actually is,” says Louise Wallace, a lecturer in forensic psychology at the University of Derby, in England. “It is not glamorous. It is not a spectacle.” Psychopathic traits exist in everyone to some degree and shouldn’t be glorified or stigmatized, she says.

    Read 25 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • taghealth taghealth taghealth tagscience tagscience tagscience tagpsychiatry tagpsychiatry tagpsychiatry tagpsychopathology tagpsychopathology tagpsychopathology taghealth taghealth taghealth tagscience tagscience tagscience tagpsychiatry tagpsychiatry tagpsychiatry tagpsychopathology tagpsychopathology tagpsychopathology taghealth taghealth taghealth tagscience tagscience tagscience tagpsychiatry tagpsychiatry tagpsychiatry tagpsychopathology tagpsychopathology tagpsychopathology

    • Ar chevron_right

      No apologies as Reddit halfheartedly tries to repair ties with moderators

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 July 2023 • 1 minute

    close-up of olive branch on tree

    Enlarge (credit: Getty )

    Reddit is publicly extending an olive branch to the moderator community that it largely enraged over recent weeks. In a post on Wednesday, a Reddit employee detailed outreach efforts from the company, including new weekly feedback sessions, that it hopes can help repair ties with the social media platform and over 50,000 volunteer mods that it relies on. But as you might expect, mods remain skeptical.

    Extending an olive branch

    A Reddit admin going by Go_JasonWaterfalls on the site and claiming the title of Reddit VP of community (Ars attempted to confirm the identity of /u/Go_JasonWaterfalls, but Reddit spokesperson Tim Rathschmidt declined to confirm the employee's identity by name) acknowledged the shattered relationship between mods—who spend thousands of hours providing free labor and have recently engaged in variously disruptive forms of protest over API pricing on the site—and Reddit—which has responded to said protests by ousting some protesting moderators from their posts. The company has also offered contentious interviews with CEO Steve Huffman. Reddit also reportedly forced some subreddits that moderators labeled "not safe for work" as a form of protest (claiming to have taken member polls beforehand) to revert back to "safe for work" and threatened to forcibly reopen subreddits that had gone private in protest.

    "So, we’ve all had a... time on Reddit lately," Go_JasonWaterfalls wrote. "And I’m here to recognize it, acknowledge that our relationship has been tested, and begin the 'now what?' conversation."

    Read 18 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapi tagapi tagapi tagreddit tagreddit tagreddit tagsocial media tagsocial media tagsocial media tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapi tagapi tagapi tagreddit tagreddit tagreddit tagsocial media tagsocial media tagsocial media tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapi tagapi tagapi tagreddit tagreddit tagreddit tagsocial media tagsocial media tagsocial media

    • Ar chevron_right

      No apologies as Reddit halfheartedly tries to repair ties with moderators

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 July 2023 • 1 minute

    close-up of olive branch on tree

    Enlarge (credit: Getty )

    Reddit is publicly extending an olive branch to the moderator community that it largely enraged over recent weeks. In a post on Wednesday, a Reddit employee detailed outreach efforts from the company, including new weekly feedback sessions, that it hopes can help repair ties with the social media platform and over 50,000 volunteer mods that it relies on. But as you might expect, mods remain skeptical.

    Extending an olive branch

    A Reddit admin going by Go_JasonWaterfalls on the site and claiming the title of Reddit VP of community (Ars attempted to confirm the identity of /u/Go_JasonWaterfalls, but Reddit spokesperson Tim Rathschmidt declined to confirm the employee's identity by name) acknowledged the shattered relationship between mods—who spend thousands of hours providing free labor and have recently engaged in variously disruptive forms of protest over API pricing on the site—and Reddit—which has responded to said protests by ousting some protesting moderators from their posts. The company has also offered contentious interviews with CEO Steve Huffman. Reddit also reportedly forced some subreddits that moderators labeled "not safe for work" as a form of protest (claiming to have taken member polls beforehand) to revert back to "safe for work" and threatened to forcibly reopen subreddits that had gone private in protest.

    "So, we’ve all had a... time on Reddit lately," Go_JasonWaterfalls wrote. "And I’m here to recognize it, acknowledge that our relationship has been tested, and begin the 'now what?' conversation."

    Read 18 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapi tagapi tagapi tagreddit tagreddit tagreddit tagsocial media tagsocial media tagsocial media tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapi tagapi tagapi tagreddit tagreddit tagreddit tagsocial media tagsocial media tagsocial media tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapi tagapi tagapi tagreddit tagreddit tagreddit tagsocial media tagsocial media tagsocial media

    • Ar chevron_right

      No apologies as Reddit halfheartedly tries to repair ties with moderators

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 July 2023 • 1 minute

    close-up of olive branch on tree

    Enlarge (credit: Getty )

    Reddit is publicly extending an olive branch to the moderator community that it largely enraged over recent weeks. In a post on Wednesday, a Reddit employee detailed outreach efforts from the company, including new weekly feedback sessions, that it hopes can help repair ties with the social media platform and over 50,000 volunteer mods that it relies on. But as you might expect, mods remain skeptical.

    Extending an olive branch

    A Reddit admin going by Go_JasonWaterfalls on the site and claiming the title of Reddit VP of community (Ars attempted to confirm the identity of /u/Go_JasonWaterfalls, but Reddit spokesperson Tim Rathschmidt declined to confirm the employee's identity by name) acknowledged the shattered relationship between mods—who spend thousands of hours providing free labor and have recently engaged in variously disruptive forms of protest over API pricing on the site—and Reddit—which has responded to said protests by ousting some protesting moderators from their posts. The company has also offered contentious interviews with CEO Steve Huffman. Reddit also reportedly forced some subreddits that moderators labeled "not safe for work" as a form of protest (claiming to have taken member polls beforehand) to revert back to "safe for work" and threatened to forcibly reopen subreddits that had gone private in protest.

    "So, we’ve all had a... time on Reddit lately," Go_JasonWaterfalls wrote. "And I’m here to recognize it, acknowledge that our relationship has been tested, and begin the 'now what?' conversation."

    Read 18 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapi tagapi tagapi tagreddit tagreddit tagreddit tagsocial media tagsocial media tagsocial media tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapi tagapi tagapi tagreddit tagreddit tagreddit tagsocial media tagsocial media tagsocial media tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapi tagapi tagapi tagreddit tagreddit tagreddit tagsocial media tagsocial media tagsocial media

  • history

    Get older posts

  • cloud_queue

    Powered by Movim