Comment Re:A meaningless stunt (Score 1) 82
My guess is they're using bluetooth protocol, but over something like S band or whatever is more appropriate
My guess is they're using bluetooth protocol, but over something like S band or whatever is more appropriate
That's funny, because I am also a ham radio operator and an electrical engineer and I have never once been able to detect any appreciable emissions from an EV, including my EV, in the Amateur bands.
This has fuckall to do with safety and everything to do with making sure boomers can listen to the party talking points on political radio shows, which only exist on AM radio because only AM radio stations are desperate enough to carry them.
We pay about $450/mo including electricity for a 35' slip in california. So about $12/ft. A couple of marinas cost more, and several cost less, usually between $350 and 500 for a 35' slip. I spend maybe $1000 on parts per year and $2000 on maintenance. It's like owning a cottage. Most everything will last for 20 years but then due to rust or UV or mechanical wear things begin to break at a pretty rapid pace.
RISC-V support is first class across the board; I've been running Ubuntu (with GUI and mouse!) on RISC-V at home since early (february?) 2022 on $20 devices. Go check out the MangoPi class of $25 RISC-V devices. Ubuntu support has been around for years now.
Used Apple products less than 6 months old usually retain 85% of their retail value, so selling for close to half of retail, especially for something where an older model is not available yet, is really stunning. This was supposed to be a flagship "everyone has got to have one" product that was going to sell out, and sell for more than retail on the secondary market. By apple standards somebody is going to lose their job over this.
For most of history there's been more workers than jobs. Covid amplified things, between people retiring early, and/or, somewhere in the range of 1% (additional) of the population dying in a single year. These kinds of "worker leverage" situations only arise perhaps once in a generation.
There, FIFY.
It's illegal in Europe to work people like people are worked in the US. That's why Americans are worked so much harder than Europeans.
The most popular car on the planet (as measured by absolute sales) is the BEV tesla model 3, what are you on about
Oh look, it's the "it's to hard qq" crew. Go back home nobody needs your doomer shit
That's for the entire bay, though? San Francisco the city only needs about 14 miles of seawall. Then it's another 50+ miles to San Jose, and 65+ miles up to Richmond point. I would imagine each city will tackle the problem different as they're in different counties, different soil types and most importantly different elevations
Yeah I've played that game. It breaks every week or two, when Autodesk releases a new update, and then you're stuck without a solution while you wait for an unpaid developer to fix it sometime in the next month
Do these chemicals pose an actual, realized risk? Or do they only present risk on models or in lab environments, and they're extrapolating?
How many annual deaths can be directly attributed to these chemicals - as in, these chemicals were the root cause of death?
People arguing about grades of steel on "one weird trick to make the PERFECT knife out of a cast iron skilet, EDC" video 7,363,983
The Netherlands have proven without question that you can build and maintain sea walls for centuries at marginal cost to the economy. Building a seawall is very straightforward and a seawall of any length can be built in under a decade.
You have a message from the operator.