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Comment Re:Whatabout (Score 1) 45

Let's put it like this: I live in a village (less than 10,000 inhabitants) directly neighboring a small city (130,000 inhabitants). In my village, we have seven bus lines, one train stop with trains running every 30 mins, and a tramway line (and a second one, which is technically not on village territory, but from my place, it's a 5 min walk).

Comment Re: oh oh (Score 1) 51

Just in the Alpine region, where for instance Homo neanderthalensis lived, we had
  1. Biber Complex (2.6 mio to 1.9 mio years ago)
  2. Danube glaciation (1.8 mio years ago)
  3. Gunz complex (800 tsd to 600 tsd years ago)
  4. Mindel glaciation (475 tsd to 370 tsd years ago)
  5. Riss glaciation (300 tsd to 120 tsd years ago)
  6. Würm glaciation (115 tsd to 10 tsd years ago)

Comment Re:Title should read ... (Score 1) 47

Can you elaborate on #2? In principle, an IPv6 firewall / stateful router can protect devices on the LAN by essentially using NAT logic except for rewriting addresses, right? Assuming that a more naive approach of blocking incoming SYN packets by default isn't good enough, at least.

(Posting as AC so I can moderate up some deserving comments below.)

Comment Not surprising, and nothing to worry (Score 4, Interesting) 238

In all countries, where tax credits ended or were reduced, we saw the same pattern: people wanting an EV will buy early to qualify for the expiring tax credit, creating a short boom, and then there will be a period, when only a few people will buy EVs, and then it will normalize again. We had the same in Norway 10 years ago, we had it in Germany two years ago, it will be a short break and then pick up again.

Comment Re:Offline Appliances (Score 1) 153

I have two offline clocks, which synchronize automatically with a local LF time signal bacon. Check if you can receive WWVB (or whatever your national equivalent is, in my case, it's DCF77)! A device to build into a standard wall clock is available for ~$15 in your friendly local online shop (ironic, I know).

Comment Re:Hmm (Score 4, Interesting) 173

The problem in this case, as usual, was lazy government rather than big government. A government with high capacity to get things done is not necessarily bad, but usually government turns into a power trip or a mire of reasons that things cannot be done -- and big or effective government is bad in both of those cases.

Comment Re:Summon MacMann (Score 1) 181

1. That nuclear is "compact", which it isn't. Your error is a factor of about 2.5, a nuclear plant requires more land than the equivalent solar farm at most latitudes where solar makes sense. Dunno about wind, I hear it makes the view terrible and kills many orange-feathered birds.

I tooked the area of the Flamanville Block 3, France nuclear plant as an example. It's a 1.6 GW plant covering an area of about 1.4 square kilometers. I was rounding it for better calculation.

2. That nuclear is (under the current regulatory regimes) cheaper than it is. Your error is a factor of 3 or more. But I guess that can be overcome by cutting regulation.

Again, I was using the Flamanville nuclear plant as an example. Total construction cost was 13 billion Euros.

Please, tell me again, what you believe to know differently.

Comment Re:Summon MacMann (Score 1) 181

What point do I want to make?

The point I was to make was that the only thing that speaks for Nuclear is its compact size, and this is a moot point, because I can use areas of land for Solar, which I would otherwise not being able to use (roofs), or which I can continue to use otherwise (farming around wind turbines).

Comment Re:Summon MacMann (Score 4, Informative) 181

I always like to compare the electricity you could generate from the same piece of land. A nuclear facility usually covers something like 1 square kilometer of land and produces about 1 GW of electricity. The price to build it would be $10 billion. Covering the square kilometer with solar panels will give you about 800 Wp per square meter or 800 MWp, resulting in about 80 MW on average. I can currently buy solar panels for ~$200/sqm. To cover the whole square kilometer would cost me $200 mio. I also could put up 100 wind turbines, giving me about 600 MWp or about 100 MW on average, which would cost me the same $200 mio dollars.

The only thing that speaks for a nuclear reactor is the smaller area footprint. On the other hand, I can't put a nuclear reactor on a roof, nor can I farm the land between the nuclear facilities, which makes the area footprint point moot.

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