@pemensik thanks, that seems to have the options I need. I'll have to plan this out to minimise the risk of knocking myself off the internet and the disruption/downtime of the change and possible outage.
Anyone know if it's possible to generate #DNS64 entries locally on #OpenWRT? The service I use (at 2606:4700:4700::64) seems to be misbehaving, but DNS is reported to be fully functional on the Cloudflare status page. It seems like #dnsmasq ought to have all the information it needs to generate an AAAA record corresponding to the A record, so I could just use standard #DNS upstream, but I can't figure out how to do it.
@mitch huh. I thought I knew about the Web of Trust, but the thing I remembered was completely different and mostly related to PGP keys.
@mitch Here's an ACK from qoto.org at 2111 UTC. At time of writing it says the post was 35 minutes old. I voted a couple minutes ago.
@mitch I remember "dancing" to this at maybe five years old - essentially just flailing around as fast as I could to keep up with the extremely rapid pace of the syllables.
@mitch NASA does lots of stuff that isn't STEM, though. They have their own logistics guys (super guppy), their own detectives and auditors (inspector general's dep't), enough management/HR staff to sink a battleship, ...
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En cada episodio de la serie 'Nimkat', escuchamos la narración de una bahá'í de sus estudios, junto con las observaciones de una persona no bahá'í de sus amigos bahá'ís. Narraciones de esperanza en el colmo de la desesperación y determinación a pesar de la injusticia duradera.
#news #Bahai #Mexicali #UABC #FelizSábado #NuestraHistoriaEsUna
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@dgar There used to be a huge statue of Jesus nearby, made of some kind of foam moulded onto a steel frame. Its appearance led to the moniker "Big Butter Jesus" as well as [a song of the same name](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XWF8_rZnwLA). But it's "used to be" because it turns out that flammable foam on a sixty-foot piece of metal doesn't play well with thunderstorms.
The insurance company classified its demise as an "act of God."
@mitch pretty much every other genre has humans as the first/only sapient species (or at best in fantasy they share the role with short-humans, or pointy-eared-humans, etc. that's a totally different race honest we swear). Let sci-fi go against the grain! ;)
@freemo in cooking, oils are generally triglycerides - we aren't really adapted to consume raw hydrocarbons. And even a low molecular weight species like triformin already has a boiling point over 250C.
@freemo If you're not set on a paint, you might try a wood dye. It sits in the sweet spot between fully opaque paints and natural-tone stains, in that it soaks into the wood and leaves the grain visible but comes in vivid colours. The wear resistance comes from the fact that in penetrates the wood to a certain depth, so you'd have to physically abrade the wood down by a millimetre or so before you start seeing the undyed part.
See rockler.com/transtint-dyes for an idea of the kind of colours you could get. Reminds me of shopping for fountain pen ink!
@freemo a bridge? I'm not sure I understand the description correctly but I'm picturing a bunch of "pilings" placed side by side and a "deck" that lies across the top of all of them.
Iranian Authorities Level Dozens of Baha'i Graves
Authorities in the Islamic Republic have demolished over 30 graves belonging to the Baha'i religious minority at a cemetery in Tehran.A ...
@freemo use a fluid. Water has a remarkably high specific heat and conductivity doesn't matter so much in a fluid because you can use forced convection to transport heat to the sink.
@mitch your bank sends you a vague apology email tomorrow, but six months later a news story reveals that their online banking server retrieves account balances from the database over facebook messenger and today's outage cost the bank tens of millions in failed transactions
@freemo it's only laterally symmetric, but longitudinally it can still provide stability. Suppose the legs are enough ballast to keep it from rolling - the barrel shape just has to provide enough resistance to pitching to counteract the weight of the head and stop the animal from tipping forward.
Also airplane fuselages are just cylindrical because that's the easiest shape to design a pressure vessel in. It would certainly be convenient to have a rectangular cross section from the perspective of volumetric efficiency, but it'd have to be far stiffer and thus heavier. Planes that place a higher premium on aerodynamic efficiency - fighter jets, aerobatic planes, gliders - don't generally bear much as resemblance to a barrel.
@freemo stability while afloat is a function of shape. Being less dense than water is no good to the poor capybara if it has to spend tons of energy trying to avoid rolling to a nose-down position. Hippos are similarly barrel-shaped.