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Comment Re:So to be clear... (Score 1) 32

Also laws in the USA apparently don't matter anymore. Don't forget no need to pay speeding fines, there's no identifiable victim so you shouldn't be punished anymore.

Absolutely wrong. What actually happens is that laws are strictly enforced, just not against the president and his friends, and those that curry favor with the president king. But you as a mere subject, if you do something wrong, expect the full force of the law to be used against you. This is how it works also in Russia or China, and all the corrupt countries on earth.

Comment There was a time (Score 1, Interesting) 16

There was a time when banks' purpose was to safeguard depositors money and invest it carefully so it would grow, and then share those profits with the depositors. Interest was essentially payment for the money we loaned them. Now banks want to take my money for nearly free and then charge me for the privilege. All the while using my money to make tremendous profits, which they keep to themselves (and stock holders).

That said, there are serious issues with the whole ideal of infinite growth which is what everything is based on. Hey at least we can all go to the people's house in Washington DC and enjoy the new gilded ballroom and forget our troubles.

Comment Makes sense (Score 1) 55

It does make sense. At least two generations of people never use them. My sister teaches in a university and says the emails she gets from students are atrocious. Even worse this sometimes carries over into their writing for course work. It's probably better now; this was all before the advent of AI doing students' homework for them. One wonders how they speak with each other if their written grammar is so bad. Turns out they don't speak with each other.

Comment Re:Left out the most relevant part of the story! (Score 1) 40

The fact remains that many people got very rich off of Linus' work. Linus is not one of them. I believe he's okay with that. But it is distasteful so much money is being made with free software but those that are struggling to write and maintain it for the enjoyment of it, live in relative poverty comparatively.

Comment by 2027? (Score 5, Interesting) 60

I don't see any way competitors will be able to land people on the moon by 2027. I'm not convinced space x can do it either. But reopening the contract at this late stage is a little strange politically. All it will do is delay it further and ultimately cost more. Which may actually be fine for SpaceX who will certainly keep the contract.

Comment Re:Said another way (Score 2) 67

Actually they didn't have the key. It was in a flash chip on the computer board that had to be removed and placed in a working camera from the manufacturer and then it was able to read the card. It's beyond me why they felt the need to run a fully encrypted file system on an SD card inside of a hermetically sealed camera unit that would normally never be opened by any customer. Companies have strange ideas about preserving their trade secrets I guess. Like instrument makers that require hardware keys for their software. Surely a million dollar instrument is a good enough hardware key!

Comment nothing about from space in official reports (Score 1) 57

Near as I could tell the idea that this was something from space originated from a random Twitter post by someone who claimed to know someone who was on the flight (but obviously not in the cockpit). Scott Manley covered this pretty thoroughly on his space oriented YouTube channel. But the plane definitely hit something and if it had been hit in slightly a different spot it might have killed a pilot. So serious stuff.

Comment Re:Batteries are too big (Score 1) 261

How many truckers in the UK don't sleep in their own bed at night? Is a "sleeper cab" even a thing in Europe?

Do you know how big Europe really is? Just watched a two-part video of a German long-haul trucker who made a trip from Germany to central Turkey, and back to Portugal. Took him many days (two weeks I think) with an average driving speed of 80 kph for several of those days. Some days were 500 km, some were 800. Took him over 24 hours to cross the border from Turkey into Bulgaria. There were hundreds of trucks lined up there. And every where he goes, there are many, many trucks with drivers who are very far from home. And the open nature of the EU makes it even more likely that a lory you see on the road is from a far country.

Oh and by the way he was driving a new Mercedes Eactros 600 truck, fully electric. Charging coincided with mandatory breaks periods, which worked out great for him. I can't remember the total distance he covered but Germany is roughly 3000 km from Turkey. And Turkey to Portugal is about 5000 km.

Pretty interesting to watch his travels with electric, long-range semi trucks.

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