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23:00
how do you see what your delta V is?
Get Protractor if you want to fly to different bodies
@LightnessRacesinOrbit Why are you tweeting me weightloss tips? =p
@DeadMG I don't. One of the mods Cat is using can show you
oh ok
I just guesstimate :D
23:00
@DeadMG Manuever nodes show you estimate for your manuevers
MechJeb or Kerbal Engineer can show you more precise values
And for all stages etc
Useful stuff
@CatPlusPlus but not how much you'll be able to get with the fuel you have left
When do you guys have time to code?
@Code-Guru we... don't? :p
We don't, that's the beauty of it
23:01
lol
well, I coded earlier!
Ell
Ell
@code-guru after school
I've actually been super productive today
Ell
Ell
Most free time
LONG LIVE Project Lounge<Chat>
23:01
Got heaps done and work, and then went home and did some hobby coding before kerballing
Ell
Ell
when I'm not partying or procrastinating
super productive building virtual space ships?
says here I'd need a 36s burn to bring my apoapsis into Duma's orbit.
The best kind of productive
23:02
does that mean 36*0.9 LiquidFuel expended?
@DeadMG that's not bad
@DeadMG ummmm, maybe :D
Ell
Ell
@sehe it could still happen! I would have contributed if it worked on linux (he says)
More or less
I'm a little bit tempted to try out KSP...
Jun 14 '12 at 14:39, by sehe
OK. LEMME STEP UP AND DECIDE

A. You guys will create your own -Cry-/-Kry-/-Kyrostat ROOM
B. You take your 'organizing' meeting over there...

I'll be happy to pin a message to the starboard in case anyone was too shy to ask where you all went.
23:02
hmm
but I already get very little done
There's also oxidizer
^ Maybe it's time for a KERBAL room
nah, let's just go back to Kerbin and retrieve the science I already gained.
This is Kerbal room
Ell
Ell
23:03
@sehe yes please
Oh. Sorry. I must have been lost. Sorry to bother. Good day.
You're always lost
@DeadMG yah, remember that intersecting duma orbit is only the first part of the equation. You also need to have enough to adjust speed to actually stay there
@jalf And then enough to get back to Kerbin.
@DeadMG Ideally!
23:05
Is a Kerbal related to a Tribble?
I don't know what you have against rescue missions though :p
I'm currently omw to rescue Jeb who's stranded orbiting Eve
lol
Got truckloads of science out of sending him there though!
if I can't get back from a position, how am I going to get the rescue mission back? :P
23:05
^^ sometimes I wonder how these people end up here...
made the rescue mission much easier
so "Burn towards the blue icon for the time directed at the time directed", right? for a maneuver?
yes
Start burning earlier
for the time specified, or until the bar above it reaches 0
and yeah, start early so the midpoint of your maneuver coincides with the specified time
Xeo
Xeo
23:06
aw yeah, solar orbit
Half the time earlier, to be specific
If you have 30s burn, start burning 15s from the node
ah, I already waited a smidge after too long :P
Xeo
Xeo
Why?
23:07
but oh well, on an orbital scale, looks close enough.
fuck, I missed the periapsis, and burned all my fuel by accident.
this mission's a bust.
oh well
just man up and attempt a landing on mun or minmus imo :p
naw
so much science available in solar orbit
there's lots in landing as well
true.
but I don't have Unfinished Business with that science.
Xeo
Xeo
Wow. Science Bay gets 275 science from high orbit around sun?
23:13
110 for goo another 80 for EVA as well.
Xeo
Xeo
yea
so much science
@jalf I tried landing a rocket on Mun at first, that failed hard, and then I just decided to reset to an orbital quicksave and go to Minmus instead
there's a nicer version of that data on wiki
I could go back to Kerbin with my probe, but I realised it's not designed for reentering Kerbin
No chutes
Xeo
Xeo
I got a chute - question is, will I ever make it back with so little fuel? :D
23:18
deadly reentry is fun, adds some real excitement to the end of the mission
I just voted
It's pretty sad how little people there are during non-presidential elections
I still have 1700m/s dV
We just had municipal elections, my city is so small the mayor and most counselors had no opposition. (I didn't vote because well what's the point?)
@Borgleader Whoa! Are we talking RL now? Or is that another video game? =p
Do Kerbal's vote?
4k battery power... should just about see me through enough data transmission me thinks
23:25
Voting is interesting.
What is that effect called...
@Pawnguy7 democracy?
Haha, no.
@Pawnguy7 Wasting time
Basic logic says "my vote doesn't really matter." Which, is often statistically true.
gerrymandering?
23:27
Problem is, everybody is thinking that.
So instead of you not voting, thousands don't.
Ell
Ell
Gerrymandering is altering the borders of constituencies to get votes isn't it?
@Pawnguy7 another problem is that depending on how your country's elections are set up, your vote might very literally not matter. If your guy is going to win then all "excess" votes might make zero difference. If he's going to lose, then it might make zero difference whether he got 5 or 500k votes. That doesn't exactly encourage participation
Yes. Same effect though.
In saner countries, every vote ends up contributing to the countrywide result, regardless of the particular outcome in your local county/city/state/whatever
but yeah, I agree with you. It's not exactly a lot of work to go vote; there's nothing to be lost by doing it
Xeo
Xeo
sweet sweet solar orbit science
And I think I can even get back to Kerbin
23:31
I read about it somewhere.
There was a story about somebody screaming as they were being murdered. Or raped, I forget. Something bad, in an apartment.
Everybody assumed somebody else was checking it out.
Or, perhaps.
oh, that's a completely different thing.
Several people near a ringing telephone.
@DeadMG than what?
than people choosing not to vote in democracy.
Isn't that the reasoning used?
also, I believe it was later demonstrated that the incident with the murder in the stairway was way over-hyped and in fact, practically nobody had actually learned of the murder and gone on
@Pawnguy7 No.
people choose not to vote in democracy not because they want to pass the buck or don't want to get involved or believe other people do the job just fine.
23:34
Oh. What is the reason, then?
they choose not to vote because they believe they will have no effect.
So they don't care who wins?
no, they simply don't believe they will have an effect on who wins.
and to some very rational extent, that's entirely factually accurate.
@Ell Not to get votes exactly, but to create a majority in one district, or to break up a large group of people into a number of districts, so they only form a minority in each.
I thought that was my point.
23:35
people choose to ignore screams, as it were, because they don't want to get involved (for example, murdered by the killer himself).
and they feel that someone else can take care of it.
in one case, they refuse responsibility because they feel the group should have it, and in the other, they have no responsibility in the first place so how can they take it?
I feel we think the same but are on different pages somehow.
How about this.
Let's imagine there are 20 of you here.
And somebody dumps a question.
You expect somebody else to clean it up.
well, not me.
So the voting thing is both this, and the statistics of it, which as you pointed out, as single vote is not much.
but in general, I get your point.
@DeadMG I seem to recall you are fond of binning things.
23:38
@Pawnguy7 No, it's not that at all.
people don't choose not to vote because they expect that somebody else will handle the problem.
at least, not a significant number of them.
@DeadMG it's not true though. Even if your vote doesn't affect the outcome of the election, it might well affect what others think of the political landscape. It might lead whoever gets elected to lean slightly more in your direction if there were a lot of votes for that. It might leads others who share your views to vote in the next election because they saw an increase in votes for "your" party/candidate
it's a bit simplistic to say "my vote did not change who got elected, therefore it had no effect and was a waste of effort"
@jalf It might do both those things, but I doubt that most people think that they will.
I think in many cases, there's also a feeling that it makes little difference who wins or loses a particular election anyway.
@DeadMG true
for example
23:39
Perhaps I have come across a specific subset of people, then.
in this country, my chosen party, the Liberal Democrats, received about 25% of the vote or so
but only about 5% of the seats in Parliament.
I recalled a short speech by somebody who had decided to not vote whilst in college. They cited those reasons.
I think that is already quite oversaturated in terms of getting the hint that they are a serious party now and that our electoral system is clearly broken.
@DeadMG yeah, I remember that election. Your system is downright retarded :p
but, there is still no electoral reform.
Ell
Ell
23:40
IMHO English politics are weird and a bit broken
so what is the point in me voting?
Ell
Ell
the whole seat thing
not to mention that the swamp is very heavily predisposed Conservative.
@Ell Can you name a single country in which the politics are not weird and a bit broken?
@Ell A relic of a bygone era where basically the only national interest was defending against the French.
23:41
Well.
Ell
Ell
@deadmg that made me lol xD
@jerrycoffin Singapore!
I was going to say you cannot win if you quit, but it is more like a team game...
Ell
Ell
A benevolent dictatorship is the ideal
of course the benevolent bit is extremely hard to get right :P
@DeadMG well, in theory, people voting for the lib dems had a big impact, even if they only got 5% of the seats. As I recall, that was enough to ensure that the conservatives couldn't win alone. On paper, that could've given the lib dems a significant amount of pull, which they seem to have squandered from what I've heard
@JerryCoffin I can name a lot of countries where the electoral system is a lot less broken than the UK :p
@jalf Yeah. The principle issue is that absolutely everybody hated Labour at that point, and it would have been suicide not to go with the Conservatives.
so I think to some extent, they were screwed no matter what choice they made.
but I also think they could have gotten a better deal than they did.
Ell
Ell
23:43
The lib dems are the conservatives bitches ATM IMHO
@DeadMG yeah
@jalf Fair enough (but I think my point still stands as well).
if nothing else, they could have stuck to their agenda of demanding electoral reform, even if giving up on everything else, pretty much. That might seed the next election to be more fair, even if it would mean 4 years of utter suckage
@JerryCoffin agreed
I saw an essay recently.
@jalf They did. There was a referendum and they lost it.
probably because their alternative system wasn't an awful lot better, just more complicated.
23:44
They advocated disbanding (somehow?) all political parties.
oh?
AV.
I found that kind of funny.
blue is "up" on the navball, right?
Ell
Ell
I often think about a non party politics system
23:45
trying to match minmus's orbit and I have all the rest down.
@DeadMG yeah
@Ell well. People with similar ideas band together, naturally. I don't know how you can keep them separate.
@Ell Politics will always be dominated by political alliances. Parties are just that, but formalised.
when matching orbit, I usually look at the relative velocity listed at the top of navball, try burning a bit, seeing if it goes up or down, and if it went up, turn around and burn. Plain trial and error until I make the number go down :p
I'm sure there is a more efficient way to do it, but it's worked so far
@Ell eh, you can't stop people with similar views from working together. The trick is in formulating a system that encourages an (almost) unbounded number of parties, rather than just two (or three)
IMO, anyway. Countries with lots of political parties generally seam healthier politically imo
Makes sense.
But how do you encourage many parties?
23:49
lol I time warped through Kerbin.
@Pawnguy7 You don't use an electoral system in which basically there is one victor and everybody else gets nothing.
@Pawnguy7 You probably can't--and by trying to stop it, you simply drive it underground, where it's likely to become even less transparent. Worse, it's likely to lead to more of the power that now resides with a party being given to an individual instead. This, in turn, is likely to reduce long-term continuity (e.g., much larger shifts in policy when one individual retires, dies, etc.)
@Pawnguy7 ensure that a vote for a losing party is not lost. That coalition governments are possible, that parties can "pool" their votes in some form or other
@DeadMG what was the name for that? Spoils to the winner something or other.
@Pawnguy7 First-past-the-post.
Don't think so. Though I guess the name does not matter.
23:50
that's basically what happens here. At the end of an election, each party cashes in their votes for a number of seats in parliament, and then they just negotiate with each others to find a coalition that allows them to get a combined majority
consider American presidential elections- only the winner becomes President, and everybody else gets nothing except humiliated and a lot of money lost.
that's why there are only two political parties of note in America.
I just read about some kind of voting system...
Fixed the lesser of two evils problem.
At the moment, we have three parties forming a coalition government, with a fourth party pledged to support them (but not strictly part of the government). Combined those four just barely had a majority of seats
Run-off voting maybe?
Ell
Ell
Well my idea is not to have a formal party system and its just issues that are voted on. Anyone can propose an idea to be voted on
23:52
Direct democracy?
Ell
Ell
With today's technology voting could be made quicker and easier and many moere issues could be voted on
@Ell It could also be made hideously insecure.
@jalf This has both good and bad points. It does generally help give representation to a larger cross-section of the population, but can have the reverse effect--give an inordinate amount of representation to a small minority that happens to be necessary for a coalition for form a majority.
@Ell which would be an awful idea in a lot of cases
I think I had that idea.
23:52
plus, the reality is that most people don't have the necessary knowledge to give a meaningful vote on most issues.
But I was told people were stupid...or something.
Yup, that.
Do you really want the average man on the street to decide on your country's economic or foreign policy?
Ell
Ell
@deadmg well you vote on the issues that you know about
@Ell People will not restrict their votes to issues that they know about.
Then again.
Ell
Ell
23:53
@jalf I'd certainly be more happy about that than a politician ;)
If we recall my genocide example.
@Ell Have you noticed ignorance stopping people from expressing their opinions much?
You said if the majority wanted it, you should do it, yes @DeadMG?
@JerryCoffin sure, and that's not the only downside (another is that coalition governments tend to be less stable, and have a hard time carrying out more radical policies)
no, I said that if the majority voted for the guy who promised to do it, then you should support him.
23:54
Same concept, isn't it?
Ell
Ell
Well idk, politics is complicated xD
@JerryCoffin but assuming there are enough parties to choose from, the minority parties have to compete with each others, effectively. "We need 5% more votes to form a majority. We could ally with part A, B or C. Which of you guys can give us the best deal?"
Ell
Ell
But its late so I'm sleeping. Night all :)
Or just that terrible ideas by possibly informed elected officials are valid?
@Pawnguy7 No.
firstly, if an idea is dumb as fuck, then you expect (obviously this doesn't always work) for elected officials to simply not propose it.
cause what you don't want to be elected is to have the nation's scientists going around calling you a fucking idiot.
23:56
(Also, whichever minority party you end up gaining support from, nothing is stopping you from screwing them over and relying on another party's support later on
@DeadMG I would vote for the nation's scientists to be elected if they went around calling him a fucking idiot :p
I don't even care which nation's scientists it is
heh
Well.
The premise here is that common people do not know things, correct?
no.
@jalf Yeah, in theory--but getting the level of granularity necessary for that doesn't seem to happen very often.
it's that the only know some things.
23:58
Fair enough.
But politicians don't know everything either.
true.
@JerryCoffin Depends on where you look. I think that part works pretty well here, and in a good number of other European countries
but they do get advised by people
who know things
There are still other flaws, but that one doesn't seem like a big issue IMO
Good if that is what happens, I am not certain.
Take this healthcare website.
How many politicians.
Have any idea what should or should not work?
I mean, I don't even know most of these things.

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