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Comment Re:Just installed Sequoia (Score 1) 31

Could you hook the hardware up to a Linux system and then get that data to your applications some other way? Looks like Linux still has firewire support, and you can connect to pipewire with ffado.

Ostensibly, yes, I could. I could even use an ancient Mac Mini with a built-in FireWire port to do that. But at some point, the level of hackiness becomes high enough that you're spending all your time dealing with things not working, and that's almost worse than it not working at all. :-)

Comment Re:Just installed Sequoia (Score 1) 31

What model of mac do you have ? I doubt any mac models with firewire ports are supported by tahoe.

M1 Max MacBook Pro. The setup involves a Thunderbolt 3 to Thunderbolt 2 adapter chained to a Thunderbolt 2 to FireWire 800 adapter, which in turn is chained to a FireWire 800 to 400 adapter, which is then connected by a cable to the device. It's dongles all the way down.

Comment Re:Just installed Sequoia (Score 1) 31

OWC makes a Thunderbolt 3 dock that has a FW800 port, that might do the job for you. Although avoiding Liquid Gas is probably a sound decision anyway.

Getting Thunderbolt ports isn't the problem; Apple's Thunderbolt-to-FireWire hardware does that, too. Without FireWire device family support in the kernel, FireWire hardware can't be used, period.

Comment Just installed Sequoia (Score 2) 31

I depend on FireWire audio interfaces, so everything from Tahoe on is dead to me for the foreseeable future.

My problem is that I don't do audio recording often enough to justify spending the thousands of dollars it would cost to buy all new hardware, but I do it often enough that I can't upgrade my operating system and lose the capability. It's that really annoying middle ground that Apple really doesn't support well, though to be fair, I've gotten thirteen years out of it after Apple stopped shipping built-in FireWire ports, so I guess that's not too horrible. :-)

I tried getting off of FireWire a long time ago, precisely because I suspected that this would eventually happen. But to keep costs down, my plan was to buy a MOTU LP32 ADAT-to-AVB bridge so that I could keep using 16 inputs from my existing interfaces and supplement that with a MOTU Stage-B16. The problem is, the LP32 has been on permanent back-order for about two years now, with no sign of things improving.

I'm also a late adopter after lots of bad experiences, so I just downloaded Sequoia so that at least I won't be stuck on Sonoma forever. I'm hoping that by the time they stop shipping security updates for Sequoia, either MOTU will have the LP32 available again, someone will have figured out a way to get IOFireWireFamily to build and run on later OSes, or I will have found some other low-cost solution for a large number of inputs. Not holding my breath, though, on any of the above.

Comment Re:Transitions (Score 4, Insightful) 213

Somone quite possibly made a living bitching about the loss of the 3.5" headphone jack, and possibly DB9, parallel, floppy drives, optical drives, firewire, PS2 keyboard and mouse ports, micro USB, VGA, s-video, composite, RJ14, S/PDIF and PCMCIA.

It's always good fodder for an article or a Slashdot story.

Comment Re:Luckily (Score 1) 92

You mean like exactly what happened decades ago since Americans long since stopped wanting to do this low paying work? Oh, it turns out machines don't just magically invent themselves when needed.

Lettuce harvesting machines did in fact get invented when the need and the economic justification arose.

Better? Or are you going to claim that you literally meant "invent themselves" so you're still technically not wrong?

Comment Re:Slow justice is no justice (Score 1) 30

It is not like they didn't find new safer ways to do similar things in the 2024 election and they probably did! You think this time they had whistleblowers to catch them this time? Everybody knows it would be so much worse for anybody who spoke out now compared to back then. Plus Russia was more involved this time around and not buying silly ads on facebook like they did in 2016... we know they did buy influencers this last time.

Comment Re:This isnt the win you think it is. (Score 3, Insightful) 94

We’re kidding ourselves if we think EVs are a drop-in “solution.” Building an EV burns about twice the carbon of making an ICE,

More like 1.6x. But they break even by 11k miles in Europe. (The exact number varies by location; this is an average.)

and scrapping a perfectly functional ICE adds nearly another tonne of COe.

You seem to be under the false assumption that Europe is forcing people to scrap ICE cars. They're not. They're forcing companies to not build *new* ICE cars. This is not changing the number of cars that get scrapped at all. It is ensuring that the cars that replace the cars that were being scrapped anyway are efficient.

Run the numbers: ramping up EV sales by 10%/year for a decade actually adds ~650 million tonnes of COe from manufacturing, even after accounting for fewer ICEs scrapped.

No, it doesn't. The break-even point in Europe is about 11,000 miles, which is less than a year. So by one year after they are sold, they have reduced CO2 emissions by as much as was released producing them. There is no "per year for a decade" here, because by the end of a year of driving, the manufacturing becomes effectively carbon-neutral.

So no, you're not adding 650 million tonnes of CO2. It takes 9 months to break even, which means at any given point in time, the average extra emissions from manufacturing each car would be half of that, so add up the extra CO2 emitted by manufacturing all cars as EVs for 4.5 months, and that's how much you've added. Not cumulative. One-time.

But it gets better than that, because you don't stop driving these cars after 9 months. So after that, they're carbon-negative. That means after 18 months, they've used as much as the next 9-month group of cars produced during their manufacturing, and so have those cars, so your next nine months of manufacturing are free. So after 18 months, the total CO2 from the changeover becomes effectively zero. After 27 months, the total CO2 from the changeover is negative by several months of driving by the cars made in the last 9 months. And so on.

That’s just swapping one carbon-intensive system for another — tailpipes for furnaces and mines. The problem isn’t just the drivetrain, it’s the scale: 75 million new cars every year.

The problem is that you apparently still haven't realized that a car gets built once, but is typically used for decades, and that the emissions for manufacturing are tiny compared with the emissions used during their ongoing operation, so even massive increases to the manufacturing emissions result in reductions in emissions over the relatively *short* term, much less the long term.

The real win isn’t “replace every ICE with an EV,” it’s cutting the carbon out of steel, aluminum, and batteries, cranking up recycling, and maybe even questioning whether churning out this many new cars is sustainable at all.

Churning out the new cars is a drop in the bucket compared with the CO2 savings. Again, nine months after they are made, they've reduced as much CO2 as the excess CO2 spent producing them. Even if we assume that the ICE car wouldn't have been made otherwise (which is not the case), the break-even point would still be only on the order of three years. And after that, they're reducing CO2 emissions more than the total emissions from manufacturing the vehicle. So the time to question sustainability is *after* you transition everyone over to EVs, not before. Doing that now is saving a tiny bit of emissions in the short term while costing you a *lot* of emissions over the long term.

Comment Re:So many things that contribute to this (Score 1) 215

>Which is why I send my school to one.

lol. I won't make fun of you saying you send your school to a private school... because bots who make such mistakes also don't feel anything.

Somebody else's mess becomes your mess when you participate in it. It is too easy to dodge responsibility when it's distributed among others but it's just lazy to say prior history completely exempts you now. "I didn't do it" is for children; what competent parent lets a child get away with that argument?

There are OTHER children that your child will have to live with in their future... unless they become a hermit; perhaps you should save for a private island? You mention only money, but your time and effort for your child can be put into the local school but also, your money. I've seen far too many people bitch about taxes and school funding while hating on their community for being under-resourced! It's not just about throwing money at a problem but a lot of times it does come down to money. Next is paying attention and taking action and not being a deadbeat citizen. I know politicians who want to destroy public schools and willing to sacrifice a few generations to their privatization religion - they are not too hard to spot if you pay attention; their reforms are often identifiable as poison pills.

You make a lot of assumptions about public schools; a much larger group.

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