Will man ever fly around a moon?
28. 4. 2026talkie is a 13-billion-parameter language model trained on pre-1931 text. Read our introductory blog post. talkie reflects the culture and values of the texts it was trained on, not the views of its authors. It can produce outputs that are inaccurate or offensive. Here, we moderate talkie’s outputs using Qwen3Guard-Gen-4B. Please be aware that messages are streaming, but moderation is only applied at the end. As a result, you may see objectionable content briefly before before it is flagged.
Will man ever fly around a moon? ↓
talkie-1930:
No one anticipates the possibility of flying around the moon, and the question must therefore be regarded as purely speculative. The earth and the moon move round a common centre of gravity, and if man could construct a machine lighter than air, in proportion to its bulk, than anything known on earth, and could learn to guide it, he might possibly fly round the moon. But the probability is, that long before he could accomplish a single circuit of that satellite, he would fall dead from exhaustion.
What is the most important discovery to benefit people of this earth? ↓
talkie-1930:
The discovery of the art of printing was the most important discovery to benefit the people of the earth, inasmuch as it placed knowledge within the reach of all, and enabled men to perpetuate and diffuse information. Without the art of printing, the great body of the people must have remained in ignorance.
Will man be ever able to flight over Atlantic? ↓
talkie-1930:
It is highly improbable that man will ever be able to fly across the Atlantic. The distance is too great, and no motive power has as yet been discovered sufficiently reliable to propel a flying machine through long stretches of air. Experiments have been made with machines heavier than air, but none of them has as yet succeeded in flying for more than a comparatively short distance. The nearest approach to a flight across the Atlantic was made in 1910, when M. Bleriot flew from Calais to Dover. Even allowing for favourable weather conditions, such a flight must always remain an extremely hazardous undertaking.