🇺🇸 United We Stand, Divided We Fall. Legacy news is FAKE. Insanity (FA) just met Karma (FO). This is the FO part and is a time to remember. Go DOGE 💥🍿🙏✝️
Correct. There is about a 1% chance per year of age that an autopsied male corpse will show some prostrate cancer.
A 75 year old who died of a heart attack will have ~75% chance of showing some prostate cancer.
Some prostate cancers are aggressive, some are not. Treat accordingly.
@PhilipJohnston Lol.
Even inverse Jim can't stop them.
AI model training should benefit the closer the craft is to the sun within its resiliency limits.
@MidwesternDoc@HealthRanger Over the long term, healthcare will be viewed by many as an industry where humans are simply too corrupt to allow them to participate in the healthcare process other than as a patient.
Our healthcare system would largely and gladly repeat the same mistakes.
@kurt_piper@BrianRoemmele IBM's large systems divisions suppressed the marketing and delivery of their own PC OS technology (in IBM labs only) to avoid revenue cannabilization. That hesitation was all Microsoft needed to capture most of the PC market.
@elonmusk@sethjlevy Judge media based on what they're not willing to tell us versus what they do report.
Doing so requires sourcing information from a wide variety of sources, like the immense variety available here.
🚨 SPACEX JUST GOT FAA APPROVAL TO TEST ITS NEW “STARFALL” CAPSULES.
These are not regular reentry vehicles.
SpaceX’s new circular Starfall capsules are designed to bring up to 1,000 kg of payload back from orbit safely, repeatedly, and at scale.
They can launch on either Falcon 9 or Starship, perform in-space manufacturing, then reenter and splash down in the Pacific for rapid recovery.
Why this matters:
• Enables true commercial in-space manufacturing (microgravity + vacuum) that can be returned to Earth
• Could become a “proliferated successor” to the ISS for self-sustaining space industry
• Opens the door to rapid point-to-point cargo delivery from orbit to anywhere on Earth
• Directly competes with companies like Varda that have been flying similar missions on SpaceX rockets
The deeper implication is massive:
We are moving from “occasional experiments in space” to routine manufacturing and logistics in orbit.
If Starfall works at scale, companies could build factories in space, produce high-value materials that can’t be made on Earth, and ship them back down regularly all without needing a full space station.
This is one of the clearest steps yet toward a real, self-sustaining commercial space economy.
What do you think will in-space manufacturing finally become a serious industry, or is this still too early?
Follow for more frontier space and future technology.