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23 votes
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Directors Guild Awards 2026: Paul Thomas Anderson, Ryan Coogler, Guillermo Del Toro, Josh Safdie, and Chloe Zhao nominated
5 votes -
US judge indicates Elon Musk’s fraud lawsuit against OpenAI will head to trial
20 votes -
Atlanta Hawks trade Trae Young to Washington Wizards for CJ McCollum, Corey Kispert
7 votes -
All about (computer) love
19 votes -
Actor Awards, formerly SAG Awards, nominations: ‘One Battle After Another’ leads film nods with seven
4 votes -
Post-American internet by Cory Doctorow
31 votes -
Announced at the Consumer Electronics Show 2026 in Las Vegas, Lego's Smart Play system introduces new electronic components to the classic plastic blocks
15 votes -
NASA’s science budget won’t be a train wreck after all
24 votes -
Flu cases are surging and rates will likely get worse, new US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data shows
20 votes -
Oscar-winning composer Ludwig Göransson sits down with Paste to talk about his rustic, genre-fluid score for Ryan Coogler's vampire thriller Sinners
5 votes -
Critics Choice Awards 2026: ‘One Battle After Another’ wins Best Film
5 votes -
Luxury apartments reduced rent in some big US cities
22 votes -
Request for help: Backing up NASA public databases
TL;DR: NASA's public Planetary Data System is at risk of being shut down. Anyone have any ideas for backing it up? Hi everyone, Bit of a long-shot here, but I wanted to try on high-quality tildes...
TL;DR: NASA's public Planetary Data System is at risk of being shut down. Anyone have any ideas for backing it up?
Hi everyone,
Bit of a long-shot here, but I wanted to try on high-quality tildes before jumping back into the cesspool of reddit. I'm posting it in ~science rather than ~space as I figure interest in backing up public data is broader than just the space community.
I work regularly with NASA's Planetary Data System, or PDS. It's a massive (~3.5petabytes!!) archive of off-world scientific data (largely but not all imaging data). PDS is integral for scientific research - public and private - around the world, and is maintained, for free, by NASA (with support of a number of Academic institutions).
The current state of affairs for NASA is grim:
- NASA Lays Off ISS Workers at Marshall Space Flight Center
- More layoffs at JPL
- NASA is sinking its flagship science center during the government shutdown — and may be breaking the law in the process, critics say
And as a result, I (and many of my industry friends) have become increasingly concerned that PDS will be taken down as NASA is increasingly torn down for spare parts and irreparably damaged. This administration seems bent on destroying all forms of recording-keeping and public science, so who knows how long PDS will be kept up. Once it's down, it'll be a nightmare to try and collect it all again from various sources. I suspect we'll permanently lose decades worth of data - PDS includes information going all the way back to the Apollo missions!
As such, we've been pushing to back-up as much of PDS as we can, but have absolutely no hope of downloading it all within the next year or two, nevermind in a few months if the current cuts impact us soon.
If you or someone you know would be interested in helping figure out how we can back-up PDS before it's too late, please let me know here or in a DM. I've already tried reaching out to the Internet Archive, but did not hear anything back from them.
Edit: to clarify, the larger problem is download speeds - we've topped out at 20mb/s with 8 connections.
61 votes -
‘One Battle After Another’ named Best Picture by National Society of Film Critics
9 votes -
2025 moviegoer attendance hits 780M, -5% from ’24; majority went to cinemas during pics’ first thirty days of release
16 votes -
2025 NFL Season 🏈 Weekly Discussion Thread – Week 17
Welcome to the 2025 NFL Season Weekly Discussion Thread! Share your thoughts on Week 17 — wins, losses, fantasy fumbles, predictions, or anything else football-related.
5 votes -
Box office: 'Stranger Things' finale grosses $25m+ for movie theaters
10 votes -
Danish energy company Ørsted said on Friday that it had launched a legal challenge to the US government's suspension of its Revolution Wind project off Rhode Island
9 votes -
Waymo: lessons from the PG&E outage in San Francisco
21 votes -
Research library at NASA’s Goddard Space and Flight Center to close Friday (gifted link)
16 votes -
The Wes Cook archive
8 votes -
Judge to Texas: You can’t age-gate the entire internet without evidence
21 votes -
One piece of news from every country in the world in 2025
14 votes -
Thousands of books and films released in 1930 will enter the Public Domain/lose copyright protection January 1 2026
35 votes -
Congestion pricing = accessible transit
21 votes -
Warren Buffett’s sharpest lessons in investing
7 votes -
The time Weird Al Yankovic went too far
29 votes -
Kansas City Streetcar's Riverfront extension is on track to open next spring
8 votes -
A, B, C or D – grades might not say all that much about what students are actually learning
17 votes -
The hydrant directory
15 votes -
Bringing back the battleship? - Railguns, US shipbuilding and a 35,000 ton bad idea?
16 votes -
Histories of the Nintendo Entertainment System and a lost communist game console
Here's a a double feature about game console history: two YouTube videos that were released in the past few days. While the videos are unconnected, both are great quality little documentaries and...
Here's a a double feature about game console history: two YouTube videos that were released in the past few days. While the videos are unconnected, both are great quality little documentaries and I think when watched together offer an interesting contrast between the two worlds that existed at the time.
The Untold History of the Nintendo Entertainment System (45 min) by The Video Game History Foundation documents how the NES was launched in the US 40 years ago. While I was familiar with the main story, many of the details were totally new to me, including the prototypes and the initial ideas of what the NES might have been, and could well have been had the market and initial test audiences reacted differently.
The Hunt for the Lost Communist Console (18 min) by fern looks at the BSS-01, a video game console manufactured in East Germany in 1979. It was the only game console released in the country and I think somewhat similar to the Soviet console Turnir, as both used the same AY-3-8500 chipset imported from the West and offered a collection of Pong clones.
11 votes -
Report shows bike lane initiative positively impacting traffic in Boston
14 votes -
Toll roads are spreading in America
31 votes -
Can a heavily modified Rivian take the electric vehicle Cannonball record? (Part 1)
25 votes -
The iPhone 16e is good, actually
22 votes -
‘Avatar: Fire & Ash’ heads to $214m cumulative, ‘Marty Supreme’ $26m-$27m, ‘Anaconda’ $22m, ‘Song Sung Blue’ $12m in final box office weekend of 2025
8 votes -
Upon this rock
5 votes -
Frederick Douglass and the power of photography
4 votes -
King Air autolands in Colorado
26 votes -
Why this long-range bomber will likely be the first jet aircraft to reach 100 years of continuous flying
19 votes -
A history of PG&E and how we got here
14 votes -
Hoopla Bonus Borrows of December 2025
8 votes -
I sell onions on the Internet (2019)
31 votes -
52 years later, only known copy of Unix v4 recovered from randomly found tape, now up and running on a system — first OS version with kernel and core utilities written in 'newfangled language' C
55 votes -
Lady Gaga in Harlequin live: One night only (2025)
7 votes -
New way you can discover asteroids
13 votes -
August Burns Red - Carol of the Bells (2012)
7 votes -
2025 NFL Season 🏈 Weekly Discussion Thread – Week 16
Welcome to the 2025 NFL Season Weekly Discussion Thread! 🏈🎅🎄🎁 Share your thoughts on Week 16 — wins, losses, fantasy fumbles, predictions, or anything else football-related.
4 votes