Maybe I can try the laser keyboard later, but I had a
rollable waterproof rubber keyboard
which was around $15 or so.
Mine came in a plastic cylinder however, and was rolled up.
Hard to type, and a bit slower, but it worked, and was waterproof.
It broke from stress though, it would help to keep external pressure away from it to avoid damaging the system and wiring.
It was a USB wire connection keyboard.
Isn’t that similar to the German case, with his trusty friend selling his account for service upgrade fee.?. The 15 years old could have gotten the money from the same similar source.
And now… beddy time. Yeah, as usual. Nighties lovelies!
Also: not what I was expecting…
Our solar system’s ecliptic is SO tilted compared to the galaxy disk! One thing is knowing how stars and planetary systems form, but this shows that stars just are born in whatever angle based on the local conditions.
Definitely not.
Over the next billion years , the sun will circle the Galaxy about 4 times.
That is also the reason Alpha Centauri is not going to be the closest system to earth (or the sun) in the next
when will alpha centauri not be the closest system ?
which second closest system will be closer to earth than alpha centauri ?
which star will be the closest to the sun in the future ?
In 1.3 million years, however, that will all change. Studies by the European Space Agency’s Gaia satellite show that a star called Gliese 710 will drop in on our solar system for a brief visit around that time.
That’ll put it 90 light days, or 1.4 trillion miles, away from us, 16,000 times farther from Earth than the sun. But that’s close enough to have an impact. At that time, Gliese 710 will shine three times brighter than Mars. More importantly, its gravity could shoot comets and frozen planet into our solar system, putting them on a potential collision course with Earth.
https://www.centauri-dreams.org/2015/01/02/stars-passing-close-to-the-sun/
Barnard Star
If we were a species with a longer lifetime, we could wait about eight thousand years, at which time Barnard’s Star would close to less than four light years. No star shows a larger proper motion relative to the Solar System than this one, which is approaching at about 140 kilometers per second.
Yep, the filaments tend to replace themselves and then some.
I’ve run nearly 1000 sites myself, before and now during the event (400+ t1s, 400+ t2s, and 100+ t3s) with Gila and Sacrilege both at all levels, all 5 types. I’ve gotten 4 Leshak, 6 Vedmak, and 8 Damavik BPCs, built 3 of each ship for my 3 toons… built some Leshak ammo to try triple armor RR Leshak L4 missioning with… the ships overall take a bit more isogen than ZPCs. The ammo takes more ZPCs than isogen. :::shrugs:::
Oh, and gotten at least 6-10 of each of the 6 t1 skillbooks (ships and weapons)… sadly, only 1 small t2 spec and 1 medium t2 spec skillbooks so far. Would love to try the t2 superlasers out but I’m gonna need 3 small, 3 medium, and 3 large books at least. ;D
And I actually made it more after I though that I will probably get some good loot eventually, like in exploration, and quess what? Unstable large armor repairer mutaplasmid dropped that gives me price evaluation 500 M ISK. Now only to find someone who would buy it for such ISK.
Also nearly died to Karybdis Tyrannos myself in tier 3 gamma filament. Spawned with some 6 cruisers that were nosing and delivering really big DPS. Probably only to the fact I decided to go after Karybdis and not cruisers that DPS was eliminated in time to not lose the Gila. But I lived. Barely on a few bars of shield, after it would fail, I would get few blows and then die inevitably.
…they drill holes on spaceships on the ground so they aren’t holed up in space.
Yeah, very professional, you drill a hole you shouldn’t, then just stick some glue into it and the darned thing decides to blow away while in orbit. What. Could. Go. Wrong.