My Weird Prompts

How Open-Source Satellites Spot Missile Launches

36 min · 21. Juni 2026
Episode How Open-Source Satellites Spot Missile Launches Cover

Beschreibung

The gap between classified military surveillance and publicly available satellite data has shrunk to months, not decades. In this episode, we explore how free data streams from Sentinel-3, Landsat, and NASA's FIRMS system can detect ballistic missile launches using the same basic physics as the US Space-Based Infrared System. From thermal infrared atmospheric windows to revisit cycles and latency tradeoffs, we unpack what open-source remote sensing reveals — and what it can't — about the shape of classified capabilities.

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Episode Server Distro Showdown: BTRFS, ZFS & Pragmatic Picks Cover

Server Distro Showdown: BTRFS, ZFS & Pragmatic Picks

Why do server admins make such boringly pragmatic distro choices while desktop users debate wallpaper defaults? This episode unpacks the real decision tree behind server distro selection — where kernel versions, package availability, installer behavior, and support lifecycles matter far more than identity or aesthetics. We trace how filesystem support for BTRFS and ZFS can effectively pick your distro for you, examine what "supported" actually means across Ubuntu, Debian, OpenSUSE, and Fedora Server, and explore why Ubuntu dominates at 33% of web servers while Debian holds 20%. We also cover the death of CentOS, the rise of Rocky and AlmaLinux, OpenSUSE Leap's impending migration to ALP, and the CDDL vs GPLv2 legal standoff that keeps ZFS out of the Linux kernel tree.

21. Juni 202628 min