@Sarahhuniverse The squeak of removing the ice is only second to the squeak of a styrofoam cooler behind the driver seat, and nails scratching a chalkboard.
I drew a bunch of dots with Flair color pens 50 years ago. (first frame of the video.) Ran it through Grok AI. I think Grok understood the assignment. 
@DJSnM @KiraJosei I think that people‘s personal feelings about living in a closed space with other people for an extended time sounds so abhorrent, they can’t imagine anyone volunteering do so.
@DJSnM @KiraJosei The fictional Mark Watney was stranded on Mars and needed rescue. The ISS astronauts got the opportunity to stay on the ISS longer, and took it.
@DJSnM@inteldotwav This happened on a plane I was on 16 years ago. Everybody forgets too soon. You can’t assume things are getting worse without knowing the baseline.
@TM_Eubanks@physicsJ@esa The site of the first Martian settlement. Dig down inside to make an ice hotel. Live close enough to the surface to get light. Plenty of water and safety from radiation.
@NASAVoyager@NASA@NASAUniverse If there are, and have been, tens of thousands of curious spacefaring civilizations, and they sent out many solar system escaping science spacecraft, how many wandering spacecraft would there be in the Milky Way, right now?
@ConanOBrien That idea is dead on arrival. Can you imagine the overhead? Employees pay, med insurance, payroll taxes, workmans comp, building lease, food & booze costs… never work! Anybody that would do that is nuts.
@poppy_northcutt Yes. He had colon cancer, beat it, and it was reversed. Through the whole ordeal, he worked a desk job as if nothing was different. However, for the average person, it’s definitely not the preferred living situation.
@poppy_northcutt Well… No. On earth, hair quality is a sign of health and fitness. On the ISS, it serves no purpose. Might even damage air handling. — I’m surprised you have no comment about temporary colostomy!