Thanks. I didn’t notice the satellites were on different orbits.
Thanks. I didn’t notice the satellites were on different orbits.
Ah, ok. You mean another satellite on suicide mission. The russkis probably have some available. I was thinking of some anti-satellite rocket missile like it has been used for destruction of the satellite Kosmos 1408. However, as it is launched from an airplane, I doubt it produces a splash, like heavy rockets do, that would be visible from space by espionage satellites.
Wouldn’t we know if anyone was launching a rocket into space.
Sorry, I don’t have more information than you can find in the Wikipedia articles.
The church that has been set on fire (but not destroyed) in WW2 wasn’t exactly the one on the painting either, as that one was destroyed during the Seven Years’ War.
The Altmarkt (old market square) in Dresden, Germany as seen from the Schlossstraße (1751). The centre shows the Kreuzkirche.
https://artifexinopere.com/blog/interpr/peintres/bellotto/les-ruines-de-la-kreuzkirche/
https://www.archaeologie.sachsen.de/grabung-am-altmarkt-5917.html
The query actually shows a lack of confidence. He should have googled “How to recover a file from /dev/null?” instead.
What is she thinking about?
When naming of the DOW, the Germans followed the analogies between the pagan gods as e.g. noted by Tacitus. Mars -> Tyr, Mercurius -> Wodan/Odin, Juppiter -> Donar/Thor and Venus -> Frija/Frigg.
MAU: monthly active users
Sunday comes first in order in calendars shown in the table below. In the Abrahamic tradition, the first day of the week is Sunday. Biblical Sabbath (corresponding to Saturday) is when God rested from six-day Creation, making the day following the Sabbath the first day of the week (corresponding to Sunday). Seventh-day Sabbaths were sanctified for celebration and rest. After the week was adopted in early Christianity, Sunday remained the first day of the week, but also gradually displaced Saturday as the day of celebration and rest, being considered the Lord’s Day.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Names_of_the_days_of_the_week#Days_numbered_from_Saturday
So in Abrahamic religions, first day of week is Sunday, as the day after Sabbath. In Germany, Monday became day one in 1969 (DRG), and 1975 (FRG), respectively.
A similar issue appeared in Linux, when the kernel version jumped from 2.6 to 3 “just because”. At least it was not recommended for normal users to upgrade their system out of curiosity.
Part two is currently running:
It’s also Münster in English. The peace of Westphalia, i.e. the peace treaties of Münster and Osnabrück, ended the Thirty Years’ War in 1648.
Edit: Precisely, this painting shows ratification of the Spanish - Dutch peace treaty, the “birth certificate” of the Netherlands.
My Lemmy client can’t open it either, as the address ends with .jpg
, but opening the link in a browser works fine.
That’s a section from The Ruins of the old Kreuzkirche, Dresden (1765). The church has been destroyed during the Seven Years’ War (1756 – 1763). Wikimedia Commons
I’d say, the one and only Gripen från Norden.
Here you’ll find a similar image: https://united24media.com/war-in-ukraine/ukraine-eyes-swedish-gripen-fighter-jets-in-its-air-battle-against-russia-2916
When your use case relies on using some most up to date software, then Debian (stable) obviously is not the distro of choice. But that case is not what I meant with ‘simply work’, i.e. using the same (major) version of software for several years.
It’s the same for me.
Does debris in the geostationary orbit move relatively to each other and the satellites?