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Comment Re:haha Google Android head is wrong (Score 1) 86

Just because Bitanica gets it right, doesn't mean the broader world understands it.

His complaint is that too many people think of it as a 'degree to get coding' and it's more than that. You seem to agree with that, though maybe room to quibble over the nuance of what more it is or how it should be described.

Comment Re:Everything old is new again (Score 2) 38

Yes, it does need an exclusion zone, it is laid out in their page:
https://thekitepower.com/the-f...

They also note that the flight zone can be used for multiple purposes, subject to limitations.

While Agrivoltaics is a thing, trying to discuss how much power output per area becomes tricky. They are splitting the sun between the crops and panels and so that ability to get 10kw in 40m2 becomes who knows how much more land depending on which approach is selected. It's just a statement that sparse panels might mike good shade for livestock, or that being at a *super* suboptimal angle allows enough light for the plants, while tanking the efficiency of the panels so you are spending way more per kw than deploying them optimally.

Of course, while they mention agriculture, their main scenario seems to be a medium term rental for a project site, which they tout as quick as a big diesel generator but without the emissions. So they are thinking about not needing a project to deploy the solar before doing the actual project when compared to solar, and then having to take down the solar. I'm not sure, practically speaking, the "green" ness is enough to move people away from the status quo of big diesel for such projects,particluraly since they do need the flight zone left clear of structures and the "potential" flight zone seems like a big risk for any construction you might do, even if you could spare the "flight zone" from active work.

Comment Re:My experience (Score 1) 23

Agreed, the move to call them "reasoning" models annoys me.

They basically just go "generate even *more* text and only provide the last bit. Basically to write a story about what "thinking" about the question would look like, which does seem to produce marginally better final output at the expense of an order of magnitude more tokens expended.

But then you look at the "reasoning" chain and you'll see mistakes that, if it were really a reasoning chain, would propagate to next step of the "reasoning" process, but frequently they are anomalies and the next text is generated as if the previous text said the correct thing.

Seems to be that they established that expending more tokens and disposing of most of it causes better results, and that the content to be ignored cosmetically resembles a reasoning chain when it's all correct and consistent, but the errors don't propagate in a way that would be consistent with that truth.

Comment Re:Everything old is new again (Score 2) 38

I think the point was that with solar, that area can have bulidings or "I don't care about what's underneath", but it can't be deployed and have the land also be used for farming. In the kite scenario, the land can do double duty for some things, like agriculture, so long as you land and secure the airfoil during times when you want people in the flight zone.

So you give up 20m2 to get 100kw of wind power with a large 'no people should usually be here' area, but plants, sure. To do the same with solar, you'd need about 745 m2 of non-farm land available, though that can include roof tops, though angle may be suboptimal.

Comment Re:Everything old is new again (Score 2) 38

Looks like they claim 30kw for current product, and 100kw for an iteration coming soon, rather than 10kw. Also for 10kw, we are talking about 40 square meters of area, and the base station for these is about 20 square meters, and yes this is still comparing just the base station of one to total footprint of the other, and if we compared total deployed area, then solar *easily* wins in every factor except for all I know cost.

However while the total area may be pretty large, the area doesn't have to be as cleared or denied sunlight. So you might get to ignore the overall volume for some applications. So it might be fair to compare the ground station footprint to solar footprint.

For example you have a farm where the land is valuable for crops, but you could abide an airfoil around when the fields aren't being worked, or are being worked by pure automation. When you need the flight area worked, you can probably easily land the airfoil for that duration, and then return it to operation when that is done.

Conversely, useless in urban or suburban scenarios but solar is trivial to deploy there.

So if you have a bunch of effectively wasteland, I think this is unlikely to make any sense. But if you have a nuanced land area where people don't need to be, but you do want the land for other purposes, I could see this kite scenario playing out.

Comment Re:The writing is on the wall (Score 1) 31

I'm not sure that I'd consider vCenter to look more sophisticated than vCenter, just different. I will say that at least once the WebUI got a VM into a state it didn't understand how to come back from, and had to log in and directly run a qemu command, which would probably be a deal breaker for a vmware shop, but it *looked* fine at least.

I'd say the distinction between 'dedicated ESXi hypervisors' versus 'full Debian' is actually a bit arbitrary, ESXi is a 'full OS', just VMWare wants to pretend very hard that it isn't. I consider it an asset to be flexible, but I could see how someone could see it as a bad thing because someone could get 'adventurous' and get in over their head by messing directly with the environment too much.

The API continues to be pretty direct about the parts of the solution, without any abstraction so you still must treat LXC *very* different from VMs, but on the other hand they are very different, and VMWare API doesn't even have a model for dealing with containers, so it's not a point of comparison. Based on my vmware api experience, should they add something like LXC containers for some reason, it would be abstracted like crazy, but also fail to be consistent with VM abstraction anyway.

Comment Re:The writing is on the wall (Score 3, Interesting) 31

So VirtualBox is akin to VMWare Workstation, which is about as free as VirtualBox, both with parent companies that I wouldn't personally trust to keep the bargain, though VMWare is a lot more in flux now than VirtualBox. Broadly speaking, no business cares about desktop virtualization except *maybe* as an on-ramp to infrastructure virtualization.

FreeBSD Jails are in the neighborhood of containerization. While VMWare has tried to pretend to be relevant, they really aren't to that. That isolation is of course much more lightweight and manageable compared to trying to do something similar with virtualization. However some contexts are served better by a full fledged virtualization.

KVM is a low level implementation detail, that is important but not really the level that folks would consider competing with 'VMware'. You have libvirt based management stacks (ovirt, which should be pretty much considered abandoned), openshift (which is first and foremost a container platform, but RedHat kind of sort of trumpets the fact you can run QEMU as a container in it, a bit 'weird' for a vmware user), or openstack (not personally a fan, a bit chaotic and ultimately not a solid experience). You also have things like just using virsh from command line, virt-manager from gui, or cockpit over web to manage virtual machines, which can capably compare with using ESXi as a standalone thing.

Probably the closest in nature to 'vCenter' I've seen is ProxMox VE. Simple and to the point to deploy (unlike most of the other multi-node virtualization stacks) and sidesteps libvirt (which in the fullness of time has kind of constrained stacks built on it as qemu has grown up).

Comment Re:Do Not Want (Score 5, Informative) 65

Well, *duh*, if you could have SSD for the same cost as magnetic drives then of course everyone would want them.

Joke can be on you though, you didn't say SSD, you said NVMe. So there is a concept of a spinning disc with an NVMe interface, since it's increasingly weird to bother with SAS/SATA when PCIe interfaces are more and more prolific, including switch chips taking the role of things like SAS expanders. So it may well be that you can get slow disks that are, technically, NVMe drives.

Comment Re:Looks at Windows 8 (Score 1) 71

Maybe you mis typed or omitted something and didn't realize it? He quoted you directly: "Also it's not been very successful so it makes sense to roll it into the Android project." His reading of your comment was pretty straightforward.. My best guess is you meant it wasn't successful at being any more minimalist than Android, since it had Android runtime, you might have had to sweat local storage, and you had ability to run full on debian in container. They got the 'drawbacks' of Android while still being awkwardly 'almost Android'. But that's making a leap because there wasn't an explicit link between the thoughts.

Comment Not just AI... (Score 1) 53

Note that he describes only 5% of submissions as legitimate security issues and only 20% as AI slop, leaving still 75% of the submissions human slop.

Curl has long been one of the projects unafraid to highlight the mess of the "security research" ecosystem. Very good and solid work is drowned out by people fishing for vulnerabilities to pad their resume. A lot of bogus stuff gets CVEs, and even if by some chance MITRE is surprisingly stingy with giving a CVE, there are third party companies that will issue "advisories" that some organizations treat the same as CVEs.

So the AI slop certainly exacerbates the problem, but the broader security industry does have some deep issues with spewing so much stuff that it's very difficult to know whether to take a "finding" seriously or not.

Comment Re:Looks at Windows 8 (Score 5, Interesting) 71

ChromeOS was already "barely enough Linux to run a web browser" with just the most crappy minimalist window management and a concession to let you run Linux applications in a container.

So compared to the typical android experience, you have a lack of Window management (but Android does have a desktop mode with ChromeOS level window management, which isn't much) and container execution (which Google has added to Android in the AVF thing they have been spouting.

This actually makes a ton of sense the only thing that didn't make sense was how long they tried to keep ChromeOS and Android separate.

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