@heyhey hey, hey! I’ve been on and off using hey for a while, and the one thing that’s holding me back is the ability to sort emails into the feed/paper trail via keywords instead of email addresses. Do you know if that’s planned in the future?
@Patrick_Graves@vikramTBD @Uno824 @dbrand And even it if it is what you’re saying; that would make aftermarket hoods illegal on cars. Which definitely isn’t true
@LazorVideos@farrellallan1 @Uno824 @dbrand Sony threatened legal action because it was a small company that Sony knew wouldn’t have fought back. It wouldn’t have actually gone farther
@thefooleryoftom Also you blocked me because you clearly hate the fact that I’m right so just fuck off. You’re wrong. And you’re a moron who can’t read.
@thefooleryoftom It is for another dragon. But the initial approach is the EXACT same. I’ve said that multiple time, learn to read. Fuck you’re a moron.
@thefooleryoftom I literally posted on my comment that this one continues upwards to the top dock but the approach is still the same idea. Can you read? Again, thanks for trying. Idiot.
@thefooleryoftom https://t.co/5vd5uQRolV this is how crew dragon approached, this dragon did the exact same thing except it continued upwards to the dock on top of the station. So yes, I do know exactly how orbits work and how crew dragon docks. Thanks for trying
@thefooleryoftom That’s because it moves up and over it. It actually approaches from below, and then rotates over it. My screenshot is not at all misleading. It’s accurate for its location at the time.
@thefooleryoftom@OurBusinessHero@SpaceX@Space_Station That’s not true. You can see from the video they are on the same orbit. The dragon fires its engines up and back, and moves towards the top of the ISS. It’s constantly fires it’s engines to match speed of iss as it moves in.