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Comment Re:"Connected"? (Score 1) 154

Sadly no they don't. BYD cars are just like Tesla and anything sold on the market today. Big screens, always-on connectivity.

The EV perveyors say the screens and always-on internet connection are important so you can make sure to get maximum efficiency and make sure you can find a charging station. Some EVs even require you to use GPS navigation in order to properly prepare the battery for a fast charge! Apparently tactile controls and small screens just don't work on cars these days.

I love the idea of EVs and want to buy one, but the screens are a huge turn off.

Comment Re:How dare you steal trash from my landfill (Score 1) 58

Albums don't really exist on spotify anymore. I mean they do exist theoretically, but most music renters never listen to full albums. Spotify just feeds them individual songs according to their algorithm. I suspect in the near future, if it's not happened already, musicians will just be releasing singles as albums have no real meaning in this streaming world.

Comment Re:So enforce the same working standards (Score 2) 154

You're right of course. But rsilvergun is not wrong too. Slavery is definitely part of the equation.

But at a higher level, China has beaten the rest of the world because they've got a complete, integrated supply chain. Literally every part of a modern EV is made somewhere nearby, by more than one company. Whereas in the US, companies largely abandoned that model in favor of just in time suppliers. In other words, Harvard Business School that placed short-term quarterly gains above everything else. Labor is a liability. having parts on hand is a liability. Making those parts locally is a liability. I'm a little surprised Trump hasn't targetted this aspect of American business ethos and executive ordered the Harvard Business School to disband after the damage they've caused and influenced industry wreckers like Neutron Jack.

Comment Re: Rust is a specialist language (Score 4, Insightful) 165

Do you use a ton of existing crates? If so how do you determine what is appropriate to use? Do you worry about supply-chain attacks? It seems like every rust app I try to install with cargo pulls in a dozen or more dependencies. I have no idea how to vet them. As a mere user it seems like I'm trading one kind of vulnerability for another. This is not unique to rust of course. All the modern, hip languages do the same thing.

Not quite sure what you mean about ignoring concepts like RAII. Those go back to the beginning of C++.

Comment No. Yes. (Score 4, Insightful) 165

Rust's reason to exist has not gone away. Rust will continue to slowly replace C and C++ in systems programming where it makes sense.

In other areas where it seems more like people are creating yet another version of a classic utility but in Rust, the answer is, "yes I sure hope so."

The problem with all modern programming languages now comes down to supply chain risk. Even the simplest utilities depend on dozens of crates to be pulled into my computer from who knows where. Go, Dart, Python, Node.js, all have this problem. I just installed a cool utility (written in Rust of course) that pulled in 50 dependencies. I am to trust that they are all good of course. Still it seems a little excessive for a utility that does graphical browsing of disk usage (darya). But hey it's a modern utility.

Maybe it will settle into just being a useful tool, like it was intended.

Comment Re:What about epubs you own yourself? (Score 1) 62

DeDRM only works for Kindles 4 and earlier, which is the biggest reason Amazon is discontinuing support for them. So as of May 20, there is no practical way to decrypt Kindle books and back them up any longer.

Obviously there are some other reasons for dropping support including the fact that older Kindles don't support formats like epub with more advanced layout and formatting options. But it still stinks.

Sadly I don't know of any decent alternative to buy ebooks at a reasonable price that I can back up to my local calibre library. I guess one alternative is to keep buying Kindle books, but then download them from the usual grey market online libraries. Anyway I'm going to make a list of books I want to buy and get them bought before the May 20th deadline and then import them into Calibre from my Kindle 3.

Someone gave a nice tip about picking up a Kindle e-ink screen driver so I can at least use the screens for projects.

Comment Re:Yet another reason to buy dead tree books (Score 2) 62

That's part of the reason they are discontinuing support for these devices. It's nearly impossible on the newer Kindles to backup your purchases. They really are just rentals. Hence I'll be spending no more money on Kindle from here on. It used to be Kindle plus audible was actually pretty fantastic and affordable and both were easy to decrypt and back up.

Comment That's great and all but Manifest v3... (Score 1) 50

Web sites are within their rights to deny access without showing advertising, but the browser is running on my computer and I can have it manipulate the data how I want. That's why I no longer use Chrome or any Chromium-based browser since Google deliberately blocked Manifest v2 extensions such as uBlock Origni.

Firefox is the only browser that has uBlock Origin now. And vertical tabs of course. There's so much to dislike about Mozilla and horrible Firefox UI choices, but as far as safety goes, it's the only game in town.

Comment Re:What? (Score 1) 87

They survived by manually moving the cattle frequently, using fences and gates. This worked pretty well when you've got lots of cheap labor. Heck people used to live amongst the flocks, keeping an eye on them, and driving them to the better pastures.

I'm not sure you've actually ever seen cattle grazing. They will graze the good grass right to the ground, leaving the other grasses they don't like as much, and then they'll follow each other to some other area. It's not random; you can't just expect that over time cattle will graze equally every square foot. It's far better to move them on before the grass gets that short and essentially removed in favor of the poorer grasses. This is part of what these collars do. They really do work. My family's been using collars like these on some cattle for a couple of years now. It's really been a boon. You can graze more cattle on less land with healthier pasture.

Comment Re:Get a Border Collie (Score 3, Informative) 87

I can tell you are not a rancher.

There's a Canadian company doing something similar called e-shepherd. It's more than a virtual fence. It's part of an integrated grazing plan. Currently there's a certain number of acres required for a certain number of cattle. The cattle don't graze randomly, so you end up getting areas that are overgrazed and the grass damaged. With e-shepherd or a system like this one, the cattle can be slowly moved around the pasture. This basically allows you to keep the same amount of cattle in a much smaller area, as you can move them more frequently without a lot of gates and fences. It doesn't take long for the cattle to figure it out, and it's quite remarkable how the collars can train them to move when you (or the AI!) want them too. It really does work.

Who's dumb?

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