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Comment Beware false equvalency. (Score 1) 42

Neocon warmongering does not invalidate NeoSoviet Putinist warmongering, preceding post-Soviet, Soviet and or Tsarist warmongering.

The Russian body count is vastly higher among their own people and those they invaded. Note that Russians fleeing NeoSoviet imperialist conscription hauled arse for NATO countries, and that formerly neutral Sweden and Finland joined NATO in response to standard Russian behaviours.

Comment Re:Yes They are taking the piss. (Score 1) 69

"Taking the piss" is a coarse way of saying "personalized water conservation". Your ideas are intriguing to me, and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter

Employee catheterization and stoma output harvesting are communal ways Google can proactively involve staff and even local communities in resource reharvesting, plumbing being a solved problem.

Comment Good for FOSS therefore good for US consumers. (Score 2) 51

The more global consumers are alienated by US software and others business practices the more all customers benefit from alternatives. The US is free to compete or not as it chooses.

US culture is now inherently anti-consumer, pro-kleptarchy and anti-personal freedom. As a USian that does me zero good while FOSS does me and other informed users much good, in my case since early this century.

US exports mostly enrich the kleptarchy while US milfare mostly enabled US economic competitors thus facilitating offshoring and domestic job destruction in other than miltary and related businesses.

The US is free to end restrictive arms sale conditions and behave like adults. Weapons sales should not come with a leash unless the objective is domestic job destruction.

Comment New hardware is nice but not a need. (Score 2) 20

I buy mostly buy used hardware, there being no need for perpetual performance improvement unless profit is at stake. No one needs a "new" gaming toy because it's a toy therefore a discretionary purchase.

The retro gaming community especially remains well served and adaptable as do "home lab" enthusiasts typically running business class used hardware, new tiny and SFF PCs etc.

Hardware used to be expensive yet the PC revolution carried on.
Games do not require constant performance improvement to be enjoyable.

Comment ISS was a mistake born of wishful thinking. (Score 1) 42

Everything from which Russia derives tech benefits assists its current and future wars. The EU can afford its own space programs without enemy involvement.

ISS should be deorbited and replaced. There is no need to pretend it's irreplaceable or that space missions using ISS hardware are somehow urgent.

Humanity has millennia to explore space. Russia is a permanent threat to Europe and actively genociding the Ukrainian people. It should not be assisted in any way. If a Eurocentric replacement is wanted the EU can easily afford to build it.

Comment Tech sovereignty is a survival need. Good on 'em! (Score 3, Insightful) 191

US tech is a threat to everyone not of the Epstein class who control it. The US is a business, not a country, and stands for nothing but profit.

That has many practical rewards but no reasons exist to subordinate one's own nation and people to the American kleptarchy which is best kept at a distance.

Comment Why should a just war bother you? (Score 1) 295

Ukraine is defending its right not to be enslaved (again) by the current version of the Russian empire.

European civilization cannot avoid dealing with its eternal, existential Russian enemy. That requires a credible military deterrent because the only thing Russians respect is superior brute force. They are not a society with an ephemeral enemy government, they are an enemy society whose governments are symptoms.

Russia must be contained and that requires war(s).

Comment A couple hundred GB isn't much at all. (Score 1) 39

I don't know why people imagine it is. Storage has been cheap for many years.

The oldest 1TB spinner I've info for was a mere $80.55 in 2013. Multiple drives were also common then even in notebooks like the T61 with UltraBay I used it in. Both still function fine.

My first 1TB Samsung Evo was $330 in 2017. They sold very well and were not considered overly expensive.

Submission + - Thanks to robots, Ukraine is now talking about winning, not just surviving (defenseone.com)

fjo3 writes: A small but growing number of European officials and analysts are saying what four years ago was unthinkable: Ukraine isn’t just surviving its grueling war with Russia, it is in some ways thriving and may even be on a path to victory.

This isn’t yet captured in headlines—for example, about last weekend’s barrage of Russian drones and missiles around Ukraine—but in the details, like how some 90 percent were intercepted.

Several long-term trends have shifted in Ukraine’s favor, and the core reason is its fierce focus on AI and robotics.

Submission + - AWS quietly drops 160 TB of monthly multicloud data to fend off regulators (www.thestack.technology)

NakNak writes: Regulators are very worried about cloud competition between the hyperscalers. AWS said it would make multicloud solutions easier to adopt, so that there would be – in theory – price competition at a service level.

Last week, it dropped what it will probably hold up as proof: a free tier on its Interconnect that let's its customers run 500 Mbps worth of workloads elsewhere. As long as the other side doesn't charge data fees, of course. So far, Oracle Cloud isn't.

Submission + - University of California Math Professors Push for Return of SAT/ACT Math Testing (kpbs.org)

Koreantoast writes: News sources are reporting that faculty members in the University of California system are calling for a return to standardized testing for applications to STEM majors. From KPBS:

Hundreds of University of California faculty members are calling on the university system to require standardized math test scores from applicants to science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) majors.

Nearly 1,000 faculty members have signed the open letter. More than 200 of them are from UC San Diego.

The UC Board of Regents voted to eliminate the requirement in 2020. In their letter, the faculty call it “a temporary measure that has now become a permanent vulnerability...”

“We now observe preparation gaps so severe that instructors must reteach middle-school mathematics while simultaneously teaching the material students need for sciences, engineering, economics, and other quantitatively demanding fields,” the letter reads.

Faculty have reported that students being admitted are unprepared for even basic classes: one faculty report last year saying that the number of students placed in classes to remediate elementary and middle-school math before they could take precalculus increased to 8.5% from 0.5% between 2020 and 2025. Several universities which dropped testing requirements in 2020 have already reinstituted testing over the last several years including MIT, Dartmouth, and Yale.

Submission + - Adafruit Receives Demand Letter from Fenwick Legal Counsel on Behalf of Flux.ai (reddit.com)

Matt_Bennett writes: Adafruit received at 10:38 p.m. ET on May 22, 2026 a letter from former FBI chief of staff, Jonathan F. Lenzner, and partner at Fenwick & West LLP, counsel for Flux, demanding, among other things, that Adafruit refrain from publishing an article addressing what the letter characterizes as false and potentially defamatory claims about Flux, including statements about Flux’s intellectual property, commercial traction and user base.

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