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10 votes
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Jakarta’s remarkable urban transit transformation
10 votes -
The great 2028 Olympic ticket crashout, explained (gifted link)
14 votes -
The Great Moose Migration has become a ‘slow TV’ sensation, keeping audiences worldwide glued to the beasts' epic trek – we go behind the scenes with its Swedish makers
16 votes -
Almost half of EU’s busiest flight routes are ‘hard or impossible’ to book on trains
41 votes -
How Copenhagen built a metro for free by capturing land value to finance infrastructure
7 votes -
World's top condom maker Karex to raise prices sharply as Iran war strains supply chain
17 votes -
Why Japan has such good railways
22 votes -
World Cup 2026: Fifa blamed as train tickets set to cost $100
26 votes -
Finnish transport minister Lulu Ranne says a long-delayed cross-border train to Sweden should begin rolling this summer
9 votes -
Why Copenhagen is so well-run
5 votes -
Train Jazz: A jazz combo played in real time by every active NYC subway train
25 votes -
Competence is lonely. Nobody talks about why.
74 votes -
Wuppertal Schwebebahn
11 votes -
Los Angeles Metro approves major rail route expansion into West Hollywood after last-minute deal
17 votes -
A nationwide LGBTQ+ book ban bill for public schools has been introduced in the US House of Representatives
33 votes -
Why are American passenger trains slow?
21 votes -
The United States needs fewer bus stops
7 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 -
The best and worst Swiss trains
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7 votes -
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13 votes -
EU says TikTok faces large fine over "addictive design"
32 votes -
I loved my teaching job. But as a trans man in Texas, quitting was the only way to get my dignity back.
23 votes -
Finland looks to end "uncontrolled human experiment" with Australia-style ban on social media
27 votes -
Why America needs fewer bus stops
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How Copenhagen built the metro of the future | Københavns Metro
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Europe loves night trains - so why are many routes disappearing across the continent?
13 votes -
Flu cases are surging and rates will likely get worse, new US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data shows
20 votes -
Congestion pricing = accessible US transit
21 votes -
Kansas City Streetcar's Riverfront extension is on track to open next spring
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2025 update on LA Metro projects
5 votes -
Spain to launch €60 monthly nationwide public transport pass, in January
25 votes -
Why Canada really lost its measles elimination status
18 votes -
Montreal’s new rail line is the future
16 votes -
Swiss government will not be able to subsidise the overnight train connection to Malmö planned from spring 2026
8 votes -
Deinterlining: simpler subway service, fewer delays (New York City)
9 votes -
San Francisco sues ultra processed food producers
20 votes -
Virginia's Long Bridge Project will improve rail capacity around Washington DC
15 votes -
California High Speed Rail Authority advances track and systems construction procurement
15 votes -
As the war in Ukraine rages on, many Finns are getting reacquainted with the country's remarkable network of väestönsuoja, or civil defense shelters
24 votes -
Beloved cat stationmaster in Japan dies
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Happy World Toilet Day!
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36 votes -
How generations of meddlesome public health campaigns changed everyday life — and made life twice as long as it used to be
9 votes -
Large US study finds memory decline surge in young people
27 votes -
Rising cognitive disability as a public health concern among US adults, trends from the behavioral risk factor surveillance system, 2013–2023
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