Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:A good idea (Score 2) 93

While they're at it they should eliminate professional licensing requirements in any but the most safety critical jobs.

More than 1,200 professions are licensed in at least one state, but only 60 are licensed in all states. Eliminating 95% of the licensing requirements would have little negative consequence.

In California, you need a license from the state to make yogurt.

The excessive licensing requirements are often caused by regulatory capture: Incumbents like the requirements because fewer competitors can afford to enter the business.

Comment Re:Well, there's one logical consequence (Score 0) 147

Women are very openly choosing men based on earning potential, real estate assets and family wealth

Supply and demand. Millions of gender-selective abortions have messed up the ratio of men to women, so women can be picky.

The birth dearth has exacerbated the problem. Men often prefer a younger woman, while women often prefer an older, financially settled man. As birth rates fall, more people are in the older cohort than in the younger cohort.

or just deciding the entire arrangement is not worth it

That makes the problem even worse. But lots of men are also dropping out.

Comment Re:A good idea (Score 4, Informative) 93

California restricted non-compete agreements in 1872 and banned them in the 1940s.

The ban is one reason the Silicon Valley phenomenon happened in California. Startups can hire with fewer restrictions, ideas spread faster, and employees are more productive because they can easily move to a better-fitting job.

California does a lot of stupid stuff, but got this right.

Comment Re:What I find more amazing (Score 5, Interesting) 54

It's likely well documented and well written.

It's all in assembly, but the program is small.

There are three RCA-1802 CPUs onboard.

They are 8-bit processors. The instruction set is straightforward. It's not difficult to program.

The RCA-1802 is notable for being the first CMOS CPU and was likely picked for that reason since CMOS uses much less power than NMOS, which was the prevailing technology at the time.

There are rad-hard RCA-1802s, but I don't know if Voyager used those. Rad-hard semiconductors are fabricated with depleted boron, which has a much smaller neutron cross-section.

Comment Re:Now who saw that coming? (Score 3, Informative) 316

They're or you're doing variable pricing wrong if you're not already charging when the price is negative...

Wholesale prices are negative.

That is not passed down to the consumer level.

When PG&E is trying to shed excess power, they are still charging me the normal high daytime rate. I have no incentive to help them soak up the surplus.

Comment Re:Now who saw that coming? (Score 2) 316

If you invest in a mining rig, will you want to leave it idle 98% of the time?

Same for an osmotic purifier. They are expensive and need steady baseload power to be cost-effective.

Neither is effective as demand peakers.

Hydrogen generators are cheap and can suck up a lot of power, but you need to store the H2 and find a market for it.

Comment Re:Pumped Hydro (Score 1) 316

We could also use that cheap electricity to desalinate water or train AI models.

Desalination plants are expensive. It's silly to build one and then only run it for 50 hours per year when energy prices go negative. You wanna run it 24/7, but then it's baseload and contributes nothing to solving the surplus energy problem.

AI data centers are even more expensive. They need clean, reliable baseload power.

Comment Re:Now who saw that coming? (Score 5, Informative) 316

Adding more solar is good. We need more.

TFA talks about prices going negative, but that happened 21 days last Spring and only for one or two hours. 98% of the time, it isn't a problem.

There are many solutions:

1. Storage: Pumped hydro and/or peaker batteries.

2. Long-distance HVDC to sell the surplus to other states.

3. Variable pricing. I currently charge my EV from 2-4 AM, when prices are lowest. I'm happy to switch to mid-afternoon charging if PG&E gives me an incentive.

Comment Re:Screw the American auto industry (Score 1) 303

Median income numbers mean nothing as the inflation calculations have changed

Most economists believe that inflation is over-estimated, so median incomes have actually risen even more that the official figures.

all the hyper processed stuff that is called 'food' now.

Poor food choices are a completely different topic.

There's plenty of quality food if you want to buy it, and it's cheaper as well. Potatoes cost less than potato chips, carrots cost less than candy, and water is cheaper than soda.

The healthiest food is available in the neighborhoods with plenty of immigrants.

Slashdot Top Deals

"May your future be limited only by your dreams." -- Christa McAuliffe

Working...