Comment by TechRemarker 2 days ago No, not "About to". It's this time "next year". 4 comments TechRemarker Reply troupo 2 days ago > No, not "About to". It's this time "next year".48 years in space and a light-day from Earth? I think it qualifies for "about to" :)(At this point 1 year is ~2% of total time in space) chrisweekly 2 days ago sure - but this time next year is obv more relevant knorker 2 days ago Christmas also starts earlier every year.I guess ScienceClock wanted a "first!". mlmonkey 2 days ago I've been reading such posts for years. Every few months, "Voyager 1 is the most distant man-made object ever!" or "Voyager 1 about to leave the Solar System!"Well duh!
troupo 2 days ago > No, not "About to". It's this time "next year".48 years in space and a light-day from Earth? I think it qualifies for "about to" :)(At this point 1 year is ~2% of total time in space) chrisweekly 2 days ago sure - but this time next year is obv more relevant knorker 2 days ago Christmas also starts earlier every year.I guess ScienceClock wanted a "first!".
chrisweekly 2 days ago sure - but this time next year is obv more relevant knorker 2 days ago Christmas also starts earlier every year.I guess ScienceClock wanted a "first!".
mlmonkey 2 days ago I've been reading such posts for years. Every few months, "Voyager 1 is the most distant man-made object ever!" or "Voyager 1 about to leave the Solar System!"Well duh!
> No, not "About to". It's this time "next year".
48 years in space and a light-day from Earth? I think it qualifies for "about to" :)
(At this point 1 year is ~2% of total time in space)
sure - but this time next year is obv more relevant
Christmas also starts earlier every year.
I guess ScienceClock wanted a "first!".
I've been reading such posts for years. Every few months, "Voyager 1 is the most distant man-made object ever!" or "Voyager 1 about to leave the Solar System!"
Well duh!