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This is really sad but this sentence bothered me. Wu left no apparent suicide note and there was no sign of an intrusion or struggle. Officers also ruled out death from COVID as he tested negative for the virus.

If he would have tested positive would this have be3n registered as a Covid death.


> If he would have tested positive would this have be3n registered as a Covid death.

Absolutely not. Falling from a balcony is never recorded as a Covid death.

Also, you act like there's no more evidence in the article. It says he:

- fell from a balcony when he was alone

- complained to relatives that he was depressed due to losing money in the Terra scam

- had no other known illnesses

So it's pretty safe to conclude that he committed suicide due to depression, and the depression was caused by gambling and losing on Terra.


The licence even though looks satirical says the whole story. Most if not all web3 projects have a proper open source commercial reuse license.


Facepalm


The menu seems to be broken in mobile.


Thanks! Stephen, co-founder here. We will address that!


Why is John Mcafee being treated differently and is currently in jail? Pumping and dumping altcoins.




Basically shutting up DHH on Twitter from the looks of it.




Why are people today so sceptical of anything that looks like good intentions?


A person who has good intentions for the environment doesn't generally attempt to become the Henry Ford of kerosene-powered spaceflight.


I'm going to assume you aren't trying to be disingenuous.

First off, the kerosene rockets are going to be replaced with methane ones so that will greatly reduce the carbon output.

Secondly, he has stated many times that once they're flying regularly they'll be creating methane fuel themselves from carbon capture.

Additionally, you have to expel mass to build a rocket. That's a requirement. You can do it with no carbon with hydrogen-oxygen rockets, but hydrogen has a lot of issues with it. Also much as people like to talk about hydrogen being green, the vast majority of all current Hydrogen is from methane steam reforming and has quite the carbon footprint.


> I'm going to assume you aren't trying to be disingenuous.

If you truly make that assumption, why start by casting aspersions on my sincerity?

> First off, the kerosene rockets are going to be replaced with methane ones so that will greatly reduce the carbon output.

Mr. Musk envisions hundreds of flights of methane-powered rockets with immense payload capacity in the thousands of tons. Methane combustion produces CO2. A Starship flight will put more CO2 into the air than a Falcon Heavy flight. Its advantages are likely to be less NOx and less soot.

> Secondly, he has stated many times that once they're flying regularly they'll be creating methane fuel themselves from carbon capture.

This barely exists in a laboratory yet, let alone at the scale needed for retail spaceflight. Ask yourself, where do we get methane these days? Answer: Largely from fracking and as a byproduct to other fossil fuel harvesting/processing.

> Additionally, you have to expel mass to build a rocket. That's a requirement. You can do it with no carbon with hydrogen-oxygen rockets, but hydrogen has a lot of issues with it. Also much as people like to talk about hydrogen being green, the vast majority of all current Hydrogen is from methane steam reforming and has quite the carbon footprint.

Now you're starting to see my point. Someone who is focused only on creating green technologies wouldn't put his solvency on the line to build and grow a fossil-fuel-based space propulsion company. Space flight is critical to the future of mankind, but we have to be clear-eyed about its ramifications and avoid greenwashing it for the benefit of corporations. $100m sounds like a lot of money until you compare it to Mr. Musk's net worth.


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Replace people with people in general, and reread - maybe you don't qualify, maybe you do - people's self-awareness and ability to orient is pretty bad in general too when it comes to health. However you've done nothing to prove your point other than taking what I said literally and taking offense to it, instead of arguing the point as to if my point has merit or not.

You're making assumptions that I don't see there will be environmental impact - it can however be offset and I believe rockets to get things into space is an area where we'll have to accept and compromise - at least until if a space elevator becomes possible.


> Replace people with people in general, and reread - maybe you don't qualify, maybe you do - people's self-awareness and ability to orient is pretty bad in general too when it comes to health. However you've done nothing to prove your point other than taking what I said literally and taking offense to it, instead of arguing the point as to if my point has merit or not.

A) You're clearly not writing nor addressing anything in this thread that is germane to carbon capture, spaceflight, Mr. Musk, or any other aspect of the article.

B) The simple fact that you're talking about me and my relationship to my peers and family is evidence that you have focused the conversation on the qualities of a speaker rather than the merits of his speech. Please re-evaluate the thread and see how you arrived at this juncture.


Jack Dorsey is a big advocate for decentralization and bitcoin enthusiast. Maybe he thinks he has made is money and is more thinking of his legacy.


It doesn’t seem like such a far off idea to act in the interest of “one’s grandchildren,” so to speak. There is room to invest in areas that will create good messages from the grand children. I’ve contributed to open source since I was a pre-teen, and often imaged a “future me” stumbling on my repositories as I have many before me, and do my best to work to standards that have benefited myself. Bravo to anyone who can spare a little to plant, moreso if they can assemble a group of people who are aligned and do so.


It doesn’t seem like such a far off idea to act in the interest of “one’s grandchildren,” so to speak. There is room to invest in areas that will create good messages from the grand children. I’ve contributed to open source since I was a pre-teen, and often imaged a “future me” stumbling on my repositories as I have many before me, and do my best to work to standards that have benefited myself. Bravo to anyone who can spare a little to plant.


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