this post was submitted on 18 Oct 2024
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The Dongfeng (simplified Chinese: 东风; traditional Chinese: 東風; lit. 'East Wind') series, typically abbreviated as "DF missiles", are a family of short, medium, intermediate-range and intercontinental ballistic missiles operated by the Chinese People's Liberation Army Rocket Force (formerly the Second Artillery Corps).

History

In the early years of New China, the industrial development of China mainly depended upon capital investment and technical assistance. At that period, China exchanged through foreign trade at equal values for “156 types” of Soviet industrial project assistance, with building nuclear bombs and missile factories and corresponding technologies included.

Chinese missile production started from imitating Soviet missiles. At the end of 1957, Soviet provided China with two P-1 missile models, and in June, 1958, the first batch of drawings and technical documentation of P-2 missiles was transferred. Scientists and engineers formed the Fifth Institute of National Defense Ministry (hereinafter called “the Fifth Institute”) , translated and copied those documents and made preparation for imitating the “1059”model missile.

“1059” was named for paying homage to 10th anniversary of the founding of New China of October 1, 1959. Under the lead of Qian Xuesen, scientists and engineers gained a thorough grasp of design theories, overcame technical obstacles and managed to advance imitations of Soviet missiles.

While the whole Fifth Institute was quietly getting immersed in hard work, the Sino-Soviet relationship suddenly cooled down and the “honeymoon period” of the two nations came to end. In June, 1956, the Soviets began to tear up the “Sino-Soviet New National Defense Technology Agreement”, and withdrew all the Soviet experts in the next year and abolished all the joint projects.

Although that following serious and tough situation fell upon the shoulders of Qian Xuesen, his confidence, self-improvement and self-esteem once again showed their power. During several round-table meetings, Qian Xuesen called upon all the personnel in the Fifth Institute with great passion not to give up or hold back, and to carry on the imitation of missiles. Qian stated,

“All of us in the Fifth Institute would certainly get straight and upright under the pressure of the fact that Soviet experts were withdrawn. We are able to build our own missile mission with our best efforts, and the Soviets cannot overwhelm us!”

“We shall continue our work day and night; we shall burn the candles at both ends!”

“We will certainly catch up with progress!”

Just like that, inspired by Qian Xuesen’s passion and inspiration, all comrade fellows bent their efforts towards only one direction, held their breath and swore to launch the “1059”missile to the sky.

At 9:00 am, under the command of chief officer, “1059”missile rose to sky, and hit the target exactly within the proposed impact area at the distance of 554km from the launch site after flying for 7 minutes and 37 seconds.

This “missile of our own”- “1059”was named for “Dongfeng 1”, DF-1 for short. From then on, Qian Xuesen led the Fifth Institute to succeed in improving and designing the “Dongfeng 2 and Dongfeng 3” missiles by ourselves and Dongfeng missile family were expanded and gradually grew up to be the champion weapons of our national defense mission. “Dongfeng 31-A model” nuclear missile attending our 60th anniversary military parade of the New China on the 2009 National Day was the strong new member of the Dongfeng missile family.

On October 16, 1964, the first atomic bomb exploded in China and the rising mushroom cloud astonished the world.

However, this atomic bomb was detonated by fixing it upon an iron cradle in advance, which caused western media to state it was “only a bomb without a gun” to satirize China, faced with the reality that, although atomic bomb had been produced, it still could not be discharged.

How to change that situation?

Undoubtedly, missile is the best “gun”. Qian Xuesen proposed to develop nuclear missiles carrying nuclear warheads on the basis of successful test launches of mid-and-short-range missiles, and that is the well-known pioneering work of “combination of missile and atomic bomb” at the present time.

Nuclear missiles are very different from typical ones. A subtle mistake could incur irreparable losses. Qian Xuesen led the Fifth Institute to make improvements for the “Dongfeng 2”missile. All the comrades worked hard and took every detail quite seriously and carefully.

On October 26, 1966, Marhshal Nie Rongzhen and Qian Xuesen came to the site to personally monitor the docking process of the “DF-2A”missile body and atomic warhead.

On the site, a young technician named Tian Xiankun took charge of that docking task. Given that the distance between the warhead and missile body was just longer than one foot, only by moving their bodies sideways could they go there. However, despite the narrow space, Tian Xiankun finished more than a hundred movements with perfect accuracy through his highly skilled technologies and tools, and succeeded in docking warheads and missile bodies just like doing embroidery on cloth.

On October 27, 9:00 am, Tong Lianjie, one of the seven operators pressed the button of the principal machine of the control platform, and China’s first nuclear missile slowly rose and flew to the sky with a roaring boom.

However, the control room fell into quiet after the missile taking off, and no one could dare take a heavy breath. In their eyes, the nine minutes of estimated flight time seemed endless.

At last, Lop Nur testing ground delivered a report,stating: the nuclear missile hit the target exactly and the nuclear explosion smoothly took place!

That moment was so valuable and delightful! The seven operators in the underground control room could not help but shed tears of joy…

To celebrate that great and historic moment, and learning we were prepared to build the Qian Xuesen Library, the Second Artillery Force of the PLA donated to our library a missile with the same model as the “DF-2A”nuclear missile , and allowed us to use it as a large-scale physical subject exhibit in the Library. On March 27, 2011, under witness of the public, military officers and soldiers together with the construction company managed to unload the missile and then hoisted it to move from roof to rotunda, which took 45 minutes to complete the whole lift and set-up process.

The most glorious and most dangerous moments condensed into extraordinary, historic, and frozen time, which silently says, the peaceful time and life today we have derive from the endless efforts of Qian Xuesen and others in very tough environment.

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[–] [email protected] 11 points 2 days ago (3 children)
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[–] [email protected] 9 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (11 children)

Question to those of you who are experienced DnD (or any TTRPG) players and/or DMs: how much do you plan out a story vs. letting players sort of run wild and rely on emergent story?

I ask because of the two campaigns I'm in, one (online) feels like we're just playing along to the DM's (kind of mid) script with minimal time spent on character arcs or RP, and the other (in person with a few of the same people, different DM) feels like we're meandering and have way too much downtime (I don't fucking caaare what food we get in the tavern) because there's no real central goal(s). They both have their moments (mostly the in-person one) but I'm never really satisfied by how things play out.

These are the only two full campaigns i've ever been in and I just wonder if there's something I'm missing out on. Plus I'm toying with running a short campaign myself someday and I wonder how I should handle this.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago

Vibe with the group, you're all participating in a leisure activity. Some groups take story telling stuff seriously, some groups just want banter with dice.

But also, remember to take care of yourself and your own needs/desires. I've seen a lot of groups turn into "dunk on the gm's story" sessions for really no reason.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 days ago (1 children)

how much do you plan out a story vs. letting players sort of run wild and rely on emergent story?

This is what defines a good GMs. The goal is to make the players think that the planned story is what they are choosing to do.

This is done through the use of "the hook" If you can get good at developing hooks you will always have players who want to go where you want. Some games are easier to do this for than others as are some players. Ultimately the players should drive the game forward because the GM is luring them in. If they aren't buying what you are selling you have to come up with something else.

As a player if the story is slow and there isn't a central goal take advantage. Go try to push a story your character wants to tell if all you are getting "no you cant do that" then you walk because talking about getting soup at a tavern is boring.

Bunch of blatheringIf you are planning on running your first game ask the people to build their characters and try to get them to you a couple days before. Find your most vocal players and figure out what it is they want. (if they are playing a paladin they probably want justice and dogoodery if they are a thief they want cash and wizards want more magic.) Set your objective to fill that players desire, then incorporate how other players will get their goals. Give the players what they want for your first time so they give you a shot at a second.

subsequent games the goal is to lure the foreceful player in but the have "the twist" where it all comes down to your less confident players saving the day and reaping the rewards.

Then once everyone recognizes your skills and you get sick of DMng you get into the dirty GMing where everything goes wrong and everyone just suffers and you make them feel like its their own fault.

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[–] [email protected] 8 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Anybody ever read the NATOpedia page on the Ford Pinto? It goes so hard in the paint defending the Pinto Memo.

Mark Dowie's investigative article "Pinto Madness", published in Mother Jones magazine, emphasized the emotional aspects of the Grush/Saunby Report and implied Ford was callously trading lives for profits.

The general misunderstanding of the document, as presented by Mother Jones, gave it an operational significance it never had.

How dare he emphasize the emotional aspect of choosing to let hundreds of people burn to death to save $11 per car? What a horrible misunderstanding!

[–] [email protected] 6 points 2 days ago (1 children)

and implied Ford was callously trading lives for profits.

Natopedia does not go on to dispute this though lmao

[–] [email protected] 8 points 2 days ago

wojak-nooo You can't imply that Ford was callously trading lives for profits just because Ford was callously trading lives for profits!

[–] [email protected] 11 points 2 days ago

Forgot my lunch, but thankfully my job had some leftover hummus, pickled veggies, quinoa. Was honestly better than the roughshod rice and beans I would have brought anyway.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (2 children)

Do you need to peel a mature eggplant? I was told yes, but then they got baby eggplants and didn't peel those and basically treated them like zucchini, but they said that that was because they were immature

But Im watching one of my japanese animes and this lady is cutting half rounds of a clearly mature skin-on eggplant. Who is right here? Chefs who are sometimes wrong, or a literal cartoon

Peeling eggplant is a time sink if I don't need to do it, especially when half the time it's just going into something like ratatouille

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

Definitely no need to peel. It can be a little tough sometimes but if it's tough it's usually because it's undercooked and then the middle is dry and squeaky, so the skin is the least of the problem.

Use plenty of olive oil is the trick. You can slice the top off, then slice in half down the middle, then deeply score the inside without cutting through the skin. Rub with lots of olive oil, season* and fry inside-down. When it's browned, it'll partially flatten out. Then you can turn it over and fry the skin-side. Parts will go soft, parts will crisp up as it flattens out more fully. Then you can turn it over a few times till it's cooked.

It's an energy intensive food, ime!

You can also simply leave the skin on however you slice and cook it. Personally, I think it needs cooking similar to the above before adding to anything else. In not remotely an expert. I've just experimented with lots of ways to try to recreate how I've had it in Greek and Turkish restaurants.

*You can also add garlic and paprika or something like ras al-hanout at this point. Get it into the grooves (from the scoring) so that it doesn't burn. And/or rub with tomato puree. And/or once you've browned both sides, add some chopped tinned tomatoes till they're warm, then put it all in the oven till the sauce turns rich (either in an oven dish or in the frying pan if it can be baked and the oven is the right temp – frying pans can't always be baked too hot, depending on the handle and maybe the non stick coating).

PS if you're following a chef's recipe, they might not be wrong. It might be how it has to be prepared for that dish. They might have another recipe where they don't peel it, like sliced thin and fried in a light batter.

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[–] [email protected] 7 points 2 days ago

I need food

[–] [email protected] 12 points 2 days ago

Since I have long hair, I don't really notice it growing much until it starts to hurt my neck or someone comments on it but now I have like 3 feet of hair that's always in the way and I need to remember to cut it this weekend

[–] [email protected] 7 points 2 days ago (1 children)

You know why the Sunday paper is bigger?

spoiler

So they can fit more LIES in it

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[–] [email protected] 15 points 2 days ago

Got the house to myself for the weekend so I can finally fulfill the basic need of walking around naked

[–] [email protected] 7 points 2 days ago (3 children)

The reason people miss CRTs is that the little electron gun inside would make "pew pew" sounds.

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[–] [email protected] 7 points 2 days ago (4 children)

Just go ahead and eat half a sliced cucumber with salt and pepper on a plate why not

what could that do

[–] [email protected] 6 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Make you learn for vinegar and tomato?

[–] [email protected] 6 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I'm not a tomato fan unless it's cubed in a sandwich or sliced very thin.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 2 days ago

Me either really, I only really usually enjoy them cooked. But I grew up in a place where cukes and tomatoes were a common side dish so they somehow get a pass despite my hypocrisy

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[–] [email protected] 13 points 2 days ago

it is october 19 and stalin saved the world from fascism

[–] [email protected] 13 points 2 days ago

https://web.archive.org/web/19980210042431/http://www.x.com

not nearly the worst place on the web!!!

This didn’t age well.

Ahhhh, the ’90s… sometimes I almost miss you.

[–] [email protected] 11 points 2 days ago

What if you wanted to go to a convention to hang out with your friends BUT you had to fight like 1 or 2 people? That's what it's like at a martial arts tournament as a hobbiest... sigh

[–] [email protected] 8 points 2 days ago

It was slightly broken up, but I just got 14 hours of sleep. My head feels like a can of soup.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 2 days ago
[–] [email protected] 13 points 2 days ago

I like folk punk. It has the instrumentals of folk with the unpolished vocals of folk.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 2 days ago

Reviewing the Joker II movie:

I didn't think it was horrible. I thought the musical aspect could have been removed entirely and it would have gone up a point. It's ultimately true to the spirit of the first movie. If the first movie made Arthur too sympathetic, this movie over corrected that a bit. Arthur is ultimately someone who was failed more than he failed himself. Him more or less saying it's all his fault at the end just seems weird considering how the inciting incident was mostly forced upon him.

Don't get me wrong, he's still a villain at the end of the day, but a tragic one nonetheless. He was thrown into an unwinnable situation, identified with the evil person they painted him as, and used that to justify his crimes.

[–] [email protected] 17 points 3 days ago

Kittenposting 💕 🐈‍⬛ 🐈‍⬛ 🐈‍⬛ 🐈‍⬛ 💕

Got fancy with the dinner tonight and they got a new fort to play with and luxuriated in front of the space heater meow-bounce

[–] [email protected] 8 points 2 days ago

if this is Survivor, I am on the wrong side of the numbers

[–] [email protected] 22 points 3 days ago

i read a thing earlier about how the chinese military has done drills against a hypothetical technologically superior enemy (jokingly called 'ROBOTECH' drills), where the enemy has cut off any electronic comms, has a bunch of high quality units, and always knows locations and coordinates etc. the normal forces usually lost early on but eventually were able to stalemate and even achieve one or two victories. i would have made a whole post about it but i cannot find the source where i read this, and google is completely uselesss, giving me nothing but china fearmongering about robot dogs or something.

[–] [email protected] 19 points 3 days ago

"I may not be Dale Earnhardt but I hit a fucking wall because I couldn't turn left" is an all-timer Felix line

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