• @[email protected]
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    451 day ago

    After decades of journalists attaching the suffix “gate” to anything even remotely scandalous, I was disappointed that I never heard anyone embrace the full stupidity of this practice by referring to this story as “Oceangate-gate”

    • @[email protected]
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      221 day ago

      After some thought, I’ve decided that we should refer to this apparent lapse by journalists as “Oceangate-gate-gate”

      • @DrownedRats
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        722 hours ago

        It originated from the Watergate scandal iirc. Watergate being the Watergate hotel but I guess water and gate are easy to separate and -gate kind of works as a suffix.

    • r00ty
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      141 day ago

      To be fair, at the exact moment he said “All good here” it probably was. It just became very ungood, very quickly.

    • @Etterra
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      21 day ago

      The first one that guy was a genuine idiot.

    • Kushan
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      91 day ago

      James Earl Jones

      :(

      • @Sterile_Technique
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        11 day ago

        If subnautica taught me anything, he voiced the actual sub.

    • @NegativeInf
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      202 days ago

      Nah, I’ll just watch Iron Lung, thanks.

    • JWBananas
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      102 days ago

      Thanks, I hate it

  • @sramder
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    82 days ago

    Followed shortly by ‘oh shit’ and ‘we dropped two weights’ then ‘guys, it’s getting kind of wet in here…’

    Just kidding, mostly.

    Serious question: how does a submarine know how much it weighs?

    • @just_another_personOP
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      362 days ago

      Explosive decompression is almost instantaneous at that depth. They wouldn’t have had a chance to even blink.

      • @[email protected]
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        132 days ago

        Wouldn’t it have happened so fast that they never even registered the pain of being crushed? Like, the signal from the body never even reached the brain, it was so fast.

        • @just_another_personOP
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          202 days ago

          So fast they’d not even be able to register what was happening. Not a bad way to go.

            • @jordanlund
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              212 days ago

              No joke, I was in the hospital with a heart attack back in January, waiting on my stent.

              Woke up at 6 AM and was fiddling on my phone such as you do. Nurse comes in:

              “Were you asleep about an hour ago?”

              “Yeah, why?”

              “Your heart stopped for 8 seconds.”

              “Um… thank you? I’m not sure what to do with that information…”

              • @Supervivens
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                2 days ago

                I never really got the “heart stop = dead” thing like yes, if you’re heart stops you’re going to die, but even when someone is beheaded, they are still conscious enough for a few seconds to blink their eyes in response to questions. It’s when the electrical signals in your brain stop that you’re actually dead, not your heart.

      • @sramder
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        2 days ago

        Yeah, it was definitely intended as humor an attempt at levity.

      • @Hule
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        32 days ago

        Yeah, the ocean was decompressed by a tiny bit…

    • @[email protected]
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      92 days ago

      I assume that the submarine producer gives stats like empty weight from which the current weight can be calculated.

      However, weight isn’t the important thing in a sub. It’s the weight to volume ratio, or buoyancy.

      A sub sinks when buoyancy is negative and rises if the buoyancy is positive.

      There are three common ways to achieve the changing buoyancy: the most simple one is a vessel with positive buoyancy adding droppable weights until the buoyancy is negative.

      Other ways are a neutral buoyancy vessel that uses it’s engine power to push itself up or down. Or a vessel that can change it’s buoyancy by filling up tanks with water (to reduce buoyancy below neutral) and blow them out with air or other gases lighter than water (to raise buoyancy above neutral). A combination of several methods is also possible.

  • @jordanlund
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    42 days ago

    Amazing how intact the back half is given, you know, explosive decompression.

    • @Arbiter
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      152 days ago

      Actually this is the opposite of explosive decompression.

        • r00ty
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          101 day ago

          Yes, but we required the answer in the form of a question. So, no points for you.