Melting glaciers and ice caps is another such thing. As soon as the polar albedo changes because there is no more snow and ice, temperatures will stay elevated for a far longer time than it took to melt those caps.
Carbon sequestration through plant-life seems to increase more than expected with rising atmospheric CO_2 levels. We are currently seeing increased global plant mass.
We did try planet-scale geo engineering. It has worked so far, predictions were met. Heating through CO_2 and other heavy molecules works as predicted. Cooling through Sulfur compounds works even better than predicted,…
It is also probably BS to assume a periodical die-off for humans in the near future. At the moment, humans are not showing any signs of a die-off, they are just not multiplying anymore. Humans do have something that…
It is also a construction thing. Air ducting is very rare in German homes. AC is also rare because frowned upon. And heating is usually provided by warm-water radiators or in-floor loops. But those radiators and…
You can get an appliance that can do both, well and efficiently. Every modern AC has a reverting valve that changes the flow direction of liquid and gas, such that the liquifier and gasifier change places. For cooling,…
We do have quite a similar discussion here in Germany. Back in the day, everyone used fossil fuels to heat their homes. Back in those days, AC was frowned upon as inefficient, wasteful and decadent. Something only…
-3.5 sigma in the middle of the year in the only graph the article has.
The article is crap as well as the graph. And the author made the planet simmer even more to produce this crap.
Thanks. Those are much better than the graph trash in the original article.
This graph shouldn't be front-page news. Why? Because it is a crappy graph that says nothing. That there are deviations from the median is a normal statistical thing. Even deviations beyond 3 sigma. It happens. That's…
The common thing is that there were no desired results because the west decided to do some half-assed thing and just go with the minimum amount of force and troops. Also, some parts of the west decided to…
Old lines were never gone. All the talk about Europeans finally doing a common thing always carry some footnotes like "the Republic of France reserves the right to deviate in matters of military, security and production…
No, it isn't imho. After the cold war has ended, the western nations focused on not giving a fuck about military strength, allies or facing opponents the size of Russia or China. Instead some small-time infantry…
Requiring login after getting user input is a dark pattern. This bad implementation of it makes it even worse. I hate it with a passion and I will boycott services that do those inconsiderate things to me.
> tactical nukes have never been used. Two tactical nukes have been used, albeit against strategic (civilian, industrial, logistical) targets.
That's because phone browsers have the insane braindead default of scaling everything into tiny unreadableness. You have to explicitly say "stupid browser, nobody ever wanted this shit, behave sensibly by including…
> And yes, no more cross-border workers either way. Well, that will be a problem especially for Swiss industry. Tons of workers from neighboring Italy, France, Germany and Austria work in Switzerland, commuting each…
Have been looking for something like this and will immediately try it out. Logseq is cool, but the desktop client is slow and keyboard usability is low. Also, my "favourite" problem: cleaning up git conflicts that…
> - the tooling is decades behind, say, Rust or Go No way. Where vibe-coded Rust contains tons of "unsafe", you can have your vibe-coded Haskell sprinkled with "unsafePerformIO" and "unsafeCoerce" ;)
What Prusa is that? Last one I've used (not my own, community lab), I had to level the bed using the sheet-of-paper-method. Which is the reason why I got a Bambu for myself.
Exploits are sold and used as weapons, sometimes even weapons of war. Which in many places is criminal, except under very restrictive circumstances. Also, all kinds of aiding and abetting.
I can accept (and welcome) disclosure before there are patches. But publishing a working exploit together with the disclosure before patches are available is really really irresponsible, maybe even criminal. And no, the…
The potential remedy doesn't work on RedHat and derivatives because the affected code is not a module there but statically compiled in.
IMHO all this whining about "layering violations" is stupid. One will always need some kind of layer glue, neighbors bordering on each other need to know something about each other, correlate addresses, etc. It is…
Melting glaciers and ice caps is another such thing. As soon as the polar albedo changes because there is no more snow and ice, temperatures will stay elevated for a far longer time than it took to melt those caps.
Carbon sequestration through plant-life seems to increase more than expected with rising atmospheric CO_2 levels. We are currently seeing increased global plant mass.
We did try planet-scale geo engineering. It has worked so far, predictions were met. Heating through CO_2 and other heavy molecules works as predicted. Cooling through Sulfur compounds works even better than predicted,…
It is also probably BS to assume a periodical die-off for humans in the near future. At the moment, humans are not showing any signs of a die-off, they are just not multiplying anymore. Humans do have something that…
It is also a construction thing. Air ducting is very rare in German homes. AC is also rare because frowned upon. And heating is usually provided by warm-water radiators or in-floor loops. But those radiators and…
You can get an appliance that can do both, well and efficiently. Every modern AC has a reverting valve that changes the flow direction of liquid and gas, such that the liquifier and gasifier change places. For cooling,…
We do have quite a similar discussion here in Germany. Back in the day, everyone used fossil fuels to heat their homes. Back in those days, AC was frowned upon as inefficient, wasteful and decadent. Something only…
-3.5 sigma in the middle of the year in the only graph the article has.
The article is crap as well as the graph. And the author made the planet simmer even more to produce this crap.
Thanks. Those are much better than the graph trash in the original article.
This graph shouldn't be front-page news. Why? Because it is a crappy graph that says nothing. That there are deviations from the median is a normal statistical thing. Even deviations beyond 3 sigma. It happens. That's…
The common thing is that there were no desired results because the west decided to do some half-assed thing and just go with the minimum amount of force and troops. Also, some parts of the west decided to…
Old lines were never gone. All the talk about Europeans finally doing a common thing always carry some footnotes like "the Republic of France reserves the right to deviate in matters of military, security and production…
No, it isn't imho. After the cold war has ended, the western nations focused on not giving a fuck about military strength, allies or facing opponents the size of Russia or China. Instead some small-time infantry…
Requiring login after getting user input is a dark pattern. This bad implementation of it makes it even worse. I hate it with a passion and I will boycott services that do those inconsiderate things to me.
> tactical nukes have never been used. Two tactical nukes have been used, albeit against strategic (civilian, industrial, logistical) targets.
That's because phone browsers have the insane braindead default of scaling everything into tiny unreadableness. You have to explicitly say "stupid browser, nobody ever wanted this shit, behave sensibly by including…
> And yes, no more cross-border workers either way. Well, that will be a problem especially for Swiss industry. Tons of workers from neighboring Italy, France, Germany and Austria work in Switzerland, commuting each…
Have been looking for something like this and will immediately try it out. Logseq is cool, but the desktop client is slow and keyboard usability is low. Also, my "favourite" problem: cleaning up git conflicts that…
> - the tooling is decades behind, say, Rust or Go No way. Where vibe-coded Rust contains tons of "unsafe", you can have your vibe-coded Haskell sprinkled with "unsafePerformIO" and "unsafeCoerce" ;)
What Prusa is that? Last one I've used (not my own, community lab), I had to level the bed using the sheet-of-paper-method. Which is the reason why I got a Bambu for myself.
Exploits are sold and used as weapons, sometimes even weapons of war. Which in many places is criminal, except under very restrictive circumstances. Also, all kinds of aiding and abetting.
I can accept (and welcome) disclosure before there are patches. But publishing a working exploit together with the disclosure before patches are available is really really irresponsible, maybe even criminal. And no, the…
The potential remedy doesn't work on RedHat and derivatives because the affected code is not a module there but statically compiled in.
IMHO all this whining about "layering violations" is stupid. One will always need some kind of layer glue, neighbors bordering on each other need to know something about each other, correlate addresses, etc. It is…