I guess that photos of the surface of other celestial bodies is cool or something but think of how many PlayStations you could buy with the money you saved if you just took a bunch of worms-eye-view photos of Antarctica and ran them through a neural net
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Like, sorry, but this does not make my heart sing, especially when I think about the price tag, especially when I think about the labor that went into putting something into space we'll never get back I pretty much already guessed that Venus looked exactly like thispic.twitter.com/jKbnkx2UFi
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Replying to @Nymphomachy
I mean yeah but it's not that big a deal Like to put it in perspective the total cost of the Perseverance rover over the planned 11-year mission ($2.75 billion) is still significantly less than the check Disney wrote George Lucas to buy Star Wars ($4 billion)
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Replying to @arthur_affect
That's true But I could conceivably imagine the price of Star Wars being seriously deflated, like in terms of material considerations Star Wars is probably not $4 billion worth of content and making one man happy doesn't cause that much either Space costs are not so overblown
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Replying to @joegross @arthur_affect
I'm saying Star Wars is capable of being deflated. i.e., it absolutely does not necessarily cost four billion dollars in material expenses at fair value to bring a movie into existence. It is UNnecessarily expensive compared to space investigation, which is NECESSARILY expensive
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Replying to @Nymphomachy @joegross
Well sure But if you try to cut out the money people in our society generally spend for bullshit capitalist market reasons that's a tremendous amount of money, arguably almost all of it
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I guess if you mean the relevant thing isn't the amount of money spent (because the value of money is a highly cooked book) but the genuine underlying scarce resources (including human labor) - I mean measuring that is really hard but space is still a tiny chunk of that
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Like how much metal and manufacturing capacity and human ingenuity went into flooding the nation's car lots with PT cruisers during the disastrous fad in the mid-2000s
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(Did you see the thread about people suddenly finding out no dealership wanted to take PT Cruisers as tradeins when the bubble popped may have been the proximate trigger for the greater 2009 housing finance crisis)
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