CSNbbs

Full Version: let's get this tread to a million!
You're currently viewing a stripped down version of our content. View the full version with proper formatting.
while it wasn't my intention, i do believe i found the loophole to render my thread archive proof
(12-10-2020 11:58 AM)Lush Wrote: [ -> ]while it wasn't my intention, i do believe i found the loophole to render my thread archive proof

[Image: tenor.gif?itemid=7666830]


(12-11-2020 08:18 AM)mikeinoki Wrote: [ -> ]
(12-10-2020 11:58 AM)Lush Wrote: [ -> ]while it wasn't my intention, i do believe i found the loophole to render my thread archive proof

[Image: tenor.gif?itemid=7666830]

how you gonna get to a million genius?




Real man threads have over 90 million views: https://csnbbs.com/thread-594754.html
(12-13-2020 07:37 PM)georgia_tech_swagger Wrote: [ -> ]Real man threads have over 90 million views: https://csnbbs.com/thread-594754.html

but they started without the intention of getting to a million




(12-18-2020 10:22 PM)UCGrad1992 Wrote: [ -> ]


Interesting subject. I listened to a podcast about this a few weeks ago from Stuff You Missed in History Class. It details several similar incidents.

The Demon Core and Other Criticality Accidents
BURAN: HOW THE SOVIETS STOLE THE SPACE SHUTTLE

An unmanned version actually flew once and successfully returned.

Quote:America’s National Aeronautics and Space Administration, or NASA, was a civilian agency that was clearly delineated from America’s military. While this separation may have been more about aesthetics than function (nearly every space effort had military implications), NASA did not treat its shuttle program like it was the development of a weapon system at all. As a result, documentation and even plans for the shuttle were all considered unclassified–and readily available to the public. In fact, much of the material the Soviet Union needed was hosted on commercial databases, making the effort to gather these documents one of the first (if not the first) case of digital espionage.

[Image: STS-Buran-grand-616x750.jpg.webp]
Messed around with a 1970s 60mm Sears telescope and a handheld cheap cell phone. I thought the pictures came out okay.
[Image: mTe6waM.png]
[Image: oe7oPhF.jpg]
[Image: pkeh0OY.png]








[Image: f7c3fdb1a439ee71027c333ddaf441c36080059d...0fea5f.jpg]


Reference URL's