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Comment Re:Market demand makes them do it (Score 2) 60

There might be a more benign reason for it. In GDPR countries, if you turn it off they will probably need to delete all the biometric data. If you then turn it back on again, it will have to regenerate all the biometic data and re-scan every photo. If people toggle it too often, it's going to consume a large amount of CPU time.

You can confirm it by using an open source facial recognition tool, like the one built into Immich. Importing photos takes much, much longer if you have face recognition turned on.

Of course a more sensible way to do it would be to allow the user to toggle it whenever they want, with the caveat that if the turn it back on, it might take a long time to start working, or might only apply to new photos after the initial back-catalogue freebie.

Or they could just be being dicks.

Of course, the most sensible way would be to say "hey, you keep dithering on this setting, it's clearly not something you confidently want, so we're going to go ahead and shut it off and if you really want it back, you're going to have to grow a year older and wiser first."

Comment Re:This isn't even an online-retailer thing. (Score 1) 79

This isn't even an online-retailer thing, or an Amazon thing, this trick is as old as sales themselves.

Absolutely. What I'm taking home from all of this is:

Don't buy anything within a month before Prime Day because the price may be artificially inflated.
Don't buy anything on Prime Day because it rewards their price-manipulation.

But seriously, these articles keep coming up - and I supposed that's good - but everyone should always be price-conscious at all times. Buyer beware.

Comment Re: No backup. (Score 1) 82

For the official to claim could not have when it could have is misleading. The why of it not having a backup doesn't get asked when the baseline is "couldn't have".

In almost every case when a problem arises, every outsider's answer to the problem is "it could have been avoided." You and others do not exactly why the problem was not avoided but do not probe into details.

Thanks for replying, but in two words, "don't care". Not about your comment, but about the direction it goes. I object to misleading verbiage. What the official said was demonstrably, provably, clearly false. That is bad and a problem and that shouldn't be allowed to go unchallenged.

The why of there not being a backup is beside the point. The speed at which government moves is beside the point. That you got crap Internet is beside the point. They may all be interesting points, but they are not relevant to the point I was making.

Comment Re: No backup. (Score 1) 82

The government official never said they it could not be done due to cost. Everyone here jumped to that misguided conclusion right away. He said it could not be backed up due to size. My interpretation is their current backup solution could not handle the size and they would have to design a new one. My company can easily afford to build a new petabyte server. However installing one is not as easy as me ordering a massive amount of HDDs and doing it over a weekend. There are procedures to follow when it comes to that kind of infrastructure change. Being a government agency, there were probably additional constraints on solving that problem.

I agree the official didn't say it couldn't have a backup due to cost. And I demonstrated that size is not a prohibitive factor. That quantity of data can be backed up, and can be backed up easily. Could have had a backup. Not could not have had a backup.

For the official to claim could not have when it could have is misleading. The why of it not having a backup doesn't get asked when the baseline is "couldn't have".

Once we arrive back at could have had a backup system it's just about the reasons/excuses. I object primarily to falsely cutting off that discussion.

Comment Re:No backup. (Score 2) 82

They could however have mirrored the data in another location. Talk about putting all your eggs in one basket!

Heads will roll....

My favorite is the snowjob. "The G-Drive couldn't have a backup system due to its large capacity."

Couldn't. A quick Amazon lookup shows me a 20T Ironwolf Pro is $455 CDN. 50 of those gets you 1P, at under $25k CDN.

Now, sure, you need a some of infrastructure to connect 50 drives. And you need some infrastructure and bandwidth to handle syncing between the two sites. But... that's a cloud provider's task. Bottom line is that for the price of less than a single Hyundai EV, you could own the hardware which would last for about 5 years. Divide that down to monthly payments and that's the ballpark of what you'd be paying a cloud provider.

Couldn't. Come on.

Comment Re:Putzes Across America (Score 3, Interesting) 84

I've never found it easy to believe that it's cheaper to have workers in the Eastern Hemisphere mold your noxious plastic gewgaws, load them into a shipping container, truck them to the depot, load them onto a train, chugga-chugga-chugga them to the port, crane them on a floating steel island, diesel them across ninety degrees of latitude, past pirates, through toll gates owned by rent-seeking oligarchs, past another container ship jammed in the canal sideways, and then do it all in reverse on the other end, than it is to pay some American putz $7.50 an hour. But I guess it must be?

I think you're close to an insight here.

These Sharpies have six components. A plastic cap, a plastic barrel, a plastic plug at the bottom, ink, the metal tip-holder, and the functional part that actually does something - and is imported from Japan.

It's not a stretch of the imagination to envision a factory that makes three plastic chunks, some ink, and one metal part. Your supply-chain is basically: injection plastic, dyes, and some tin. For Sharpie, it's trivial.

Now imagine making a cell phone. Screen comes from one supplier. Glass from another. PCB comes from another. Battery from another. Chipset from another. Camera from another. Sensors from another. Plastic/metal case from another. And each of those inputs is complex enough that wherever they come from, two or more layers of other suppliers are involved. It's a whole ecosystem of manufacture. Well... China et al managed to turn themselves into a supermarket grocery store. Doesn't matter if you need eggs, flour, diapers, or get-well-soon cards, you can get it all in one place. That is why it becomes worth shipping. Enough individual specialties moved, making it synergistic for more to move.

Comment Re:Thanks Uncle Joe (Score 2) 84

Did you think that maybe it doesn't have so much to do with who is in political power and maybe has more to do with the culture of a company?

My personal theory is that politicians cannot create jobs.

At best they can not hinder jobs and at worst they destroy them. This of course disregarding ignoring government work like road construction and bureaucracy. But straightforward jobs? No. Normal jobs happen naturally as a result of demand and the prosperity to spend on that demand. Every politician claims they will create jobs. And lower crime. And cure cancer. And make your dick harder. None of them actually know how to.

My voting therefore mostly comes down to "who is going to be less of an asshole" while not creating jobs.

Comment Re:Should have tested all 6 common plastics. (Score 1) 44

Pretty stupid to only test PS, when there are only 5 other commonly used.

I know, right?

I'd expect scientists with limited time and budget to do ever experiment simultaneously regardless of space constraints, equipment requirements, complexity of detection, and the scope of their mandate.

It's truly ghastly how experts don't rely on Internet laypeople who know it all already.

Comment Re:Bad decisions (Score 1) 97

Perhaps they meant 'attack surface'.

Yes, Microsoft meant and said it, when they announced WMIC's deprecation nine years ago, in 2016.

https://techcommunity.microsof...
"Removing a deprecated component helps reduce complexity while keeping you secure and productive."

Less legacy code to maintain means fewer opportunities to get it wrong.

As much as I'm used to doing "wmic bios get serialnumber" as a quick & dirty way to get a machine's details, I guess I'll learn to fire up PowerShell and do "Get-WmiObject -Class Win32_Bios | Select-Object SerialNumber".

Comment Re: It's bandwidth that matters (Score 1) 278

But you can put that charger at your home and charge over night. I don't see anybody with a petrol pump in their driveway.

Exactly. Up-thread I dug up that there are about 1.3 million EVs in California. And the article says 800,000 home chargers. That means at 1:1 nozzle-to-charger, the demand for public charging is 61% lower. A single charger is already equivalent to almost three nozzles in terms of supply/demand. Even if you assume a 5-minute pump versus a 60-minute charge, after that 3x multiplier you're already at 1/4 the equivalent throughput.

Comment Re:So... (Score 1) 278

As a huge fan of Saint Kirk, I'd say that you sound like a homosexual commie abortionist trannie who hates America. ICE should drag you back to wherever your ancestors came from. I love Christ and live like Jesus did. Amen!

Well, I mean... I'm not gay, communist, or transexual, but otherwise you're not far off.

As for ICE and deportation... they don't have any jurisdiction where I live. And at this point I'm kind of on board with ICE deporting all the non-natives in America back where they came from. Crewmembers under Captain Kirk will have a hard time in Spain, Portugal, Poland, Italy, England, France etc, and the massive pile of African countries where all the slaves came from, but left-leaning folk will be just fine.

You're admitting you're in love with a dead guy? You know that Jesus didn't have Internet access, right? If you really want to live as Jesus did, it's time to log of and go build a chair or something. Also, you may want to see a therapist about the delusion that your Dad is God.


Be a better troll next time. This just entertained me.

Comment Re:So... (Score 5, Interesting) 278

It's pretty obvious you're one person. So let's treat you that way.

If they are all supercharging at once, you are looking at a total wattage draw of 3,560,000,000 Watts.... Aka, an Entire Nuclear Reactor, JUST for EV Charging. Creating between 1,514L and 2,725L liters of irradiated water per MWh.

Aka, 6 Million GALLONS of contaminated water to cool the Stack. This water will REMAIN contaminated for Decades (Cesium 30 year HL) to MILLENNIA (Plutonium 24,000 year HL) depending on reactor type, age, maintenance levels.

Then one must ask... "How does one 'Contain' Plutonium contaminated water for 24,000 years?" (Good thing we don't build this type anymore... But where is the water from the ones we HAVE built in the past?)

EVs have batteries on average between 50KWh and 100KWh. A quick search indicates there are about 1.3 million EVs in California. So... approximately 97,500,000KWh or 97,500MWh of total EV capacity. Charging literally every Californian EV from 0% to 100% consumes approximately that.

Another quick search tells us that California has a generation capacity of around 87,000MW. The fine summary above tells us that two years ago California was 66% clean energy. Meaning about 57,420MW of clean generation. Meaning... less than two hours of clean power generation charges literally every EV in California.

Average EV range today is about 250 miles. Let's drop that to say... 200 due to older cars. At 1.3 million cars, that's 260 million miles of range we've charged. Yet another quick search tells us average ICE MPG is about 27. We're talking about in the ballpark of 10 million gallons of gasoline not being burned.

So what the hell are you going on about? Zero litres of contaminated water. 260 millions miles driven. 10 million gallons of gasoline not burned. That is what happens if you charge every Californian EV.

Sure, sure, you can play lunatic games going "charging all at once", inventing a fake scenario where we have to come up with some ludicrous extra generation capacity, as if it would be sustained, but it isn't. You supercharge an EV for roughly an hour, or you home-charge (the majority) overnight away from peak demand (and maybe dip into the generous storage capacity they've been building up). Then you drive for a week. Your scenario is not representative of reality.

Comment Re:The single greatest focus of our ruling class (Score 1) 62

AI and robotics can theoretically produce everything except raw materials. But they don't consume anything that causes wealth.

Wait, your idea is that consumption causes wealth? I'd really like to know where you got that idea.

Causes might be the wrong word for what I'm trying to express. Enables might be the right one.

What I mean is... if there are only two human beings left on the planet and robots and AI produce anything they ask for, which one is wealthier? You can't measure that because production is on-demand and effectively limitless. But when you introduce a third person who is demanding to consume something... for instance the time or attention of one of the two originals, that makes them more wealthy, relative to the other one.

Wealth isn't entirely about stuff. It's about ego.

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