marssaxman 3 days ago

pet peeve - pick one:

"How the Atomic Tests Looked from Los Angeles"

or

"What the Atomic Tests Looked Like from Los Angeles"

just don't mash them together like this.

  • brettermeier 2 minutes ago

    Thanks for pointing that out. As a non-native speaker, I have learned something new.

  • noman-land 2 hours ago

    This is a pretty common construction among some non-native English speakers.

kmoser 3 days ago

These are neat images, but it's hard to tell how they differ from long exposures taken without any illumination by atomic blast. I've taken long exposures at night that look very similar.

johnnienaked 3 days ago

Nevada tests, done north of Las Vegas, were all pretty small, and they produced flashes visible from LA. Imagine a big one.

delichon 37 minutes ago

In his latest podcast Joe Rogan claimed that John Wayne and others died from cancer caused by radiation from a nuclear test upwind of a movie set for "The Conquerers". Wayne was also a heavy smoker so nobody really knows. Nobody knows how much death and misery the tests caused, or how much war was avoided by nuclear deterence.

By the early 1980s around 40% of the cast and crew had developed cancer, also including Susan Hayward, Agnes Moorehead, and director Dick Powell. And the movie nuclear bombed at the box office.

andrewstuart 26 minutes ago

Nuking yourselves is fine.

Now if some other country was to, well that’s end of the world.

Of course the British nuked Australia and we don’t hold that against them so maybe ….

FridayoLeary an hour ago

>There are also pictures of people enjoying the spectacle that demonstrate the morbid fascination that many Americans had with nuclear weapons at the time.

Was this written with ai? No person in any time period wouldn't be interested. Big explosions are never boring.

  • ricardobeat 12 minutes ago

    I don’t think “fascination” is what you’d get if you started detonating atomic bombs on the regular near any major city today.

  • NoboruWataya 29 minutes ago

    The article doesn't generally read like AI to me, though I can't discount the possibility that I have been fooled by a new and more advanced slop machine.

    I think HN is probably biased towards a subset of the population that is perennially interested in nuclear explosions. They surely occupied a much greater part of the public consciousness in the 50s than they do today (and certainly much greater than a few years ago, before a nuclear power invaded Europe).