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Comment Electricity (Score 2) 55

I don't live in the US but I recently moved to a rural area and in doing so I have started to plan out a utility-independent future.

Why? Well, various reasons, including water and sewage companies taking the piss (or actually... not... just dumping the piss in every river in the country and crying that they can't process it because they gave all my money to their shareholders, but... anyway) but also because electricity is literally a con too.

And nowadays? I *can* viably make my own electricity. So... why wouldn't I? Why would I pay a company to do a bad job when I can do it myself?

I did a number of things when I moved to that area, including demanding smart meters on everything, and I monitored my electricity down to 30 minute intervals for 2 years. And you know what it showed? That 1% of the time, I have no power. That's in dribs and drabs, a power cut here or there, a scheduled one lasting a day or there, and so on. But 1% of the time they can't even get electricity to me and... there's nothing I can do about that.

So, if I want a computer to stay on... I already need to spend money and do it myself because they simply can't do it. 1% may not sound a lot, but that's 3.65 days a year if you think about it. Spread out randomly - an hour here, an hour there. Literally my computer "uptime" was "two nines" and that was driven entirely by grid power supply.

That's ATROCIOUS in my opinion, in the 21st century. And I wasn't prepared to tolerate it. I was already buying the house with the intention of becoming utility-independent but that really drove home why I need to. So I started to build my own solar, for several reasons.

1) To ride out the outages
2) To reduce my bills so they got as little money from me as possible
3) To not be reliant on the grid
4) To ultimately remove the need for grid entirely

And it's really not been hard. I started with cheap junk just to see if it would even work in my climate, with that house orientation, etc. It did. I started with a small 12v panel and an old car battery. And it was actually worth doing when I ran the numbers. It would take a few years to pay off the cost of the panel, but it would do so.

And then every month for 2 years, I would get more panels, more and better batteries, more efficient and powerful equipment in between. And it got to the point where it is technically capable of running my whole house for much of the year. And that's before I ever got onto SERIOUS panels and professional installs. That's just me, a bunch of cheap 12V panels, some 12V LiFePO4 batteries and a serious enough charger/inverter, then later going onto 24V by re-arranging them.

And I'm looking at that and thinking: Why the fuck hasn't government / the utilities done this for me? Why am *I* having to do it? Because it really is that simple and they have access to far more land, far better kit. But, no, I'm still paying inflated grid prices from when Ukraine was first invaded because of the price of GAS. What the fuck are we doing?

So now, more than ever, I plan to be utility-independent by retirement, which is 20 years away, and whereas before I was wondering if that was even viable in that timeframe, I'm now expecting that to be 100% done way ahead of schedule, just by a factor of "whenever I can be bothered". It was that easy, and doing the maths was that easy.

I might retain a grid connection, or not. It depends on what happens and what kind of low-usage tarrifs I can get in the future but I'm looking at the whole thing thinking "Fuck you, I'll do it myself" because even as an amateur... it's perfectly viable to do so. I don't care if it even costs me more (it won't). I don't care about having a grid connection or not. It's just that I will be able to be *independent* of it. When they play games, raise prices, or have power cuts, I won't be reliant on it at all. I'll use it when it's to my benefit, and not other times.

But all I ever think about the whole thing is: How have I, an amateur, cobbling cheap Chinese shit together, come up with a more reliable and cheaper power supply, that's utterly independent of fuel prices, than an entire national electricity grid could do?

The answer, of course, is corruption and profiteering. That's the only part that I've eliminated. And that's the part that, when it's gone, makes it all viable and even cheaper.

And that's the thing that's going to see me having zero electricity bills when I retire. Just by removing the profit and corruption.

Comment Re:Dictionaries Mysteriously Not Sued (Score 1) 53

You seriously telling me this is NOT copyright infringement?

It's not copyright infringement. Copyright doesn't protect ideas, only the specific form an idea takes. This is why, for example, there's many sci-fi seafaring tales, but in space books, TV shows and films.

Heck, I finally got around to watching that Wednesday series on Netflix and they basically did that whole school for exceptional outcasts trope, which is so heavily used that it actually ends up divided into several sub tropes.

Comment Re:F-Droid (Score 1) 25

Google is requiring *all* apps, regardless of how you install them, or from what app store you install them, to be signed *by them*. This means that every app available on F-Droid must be signed (and developer dues paid) also or it won't be installable

Yep. And this just means that F-Droid has to have one person sign up and submit all of the apps for signature, as I said.

Comment No they don't (Score 2) 61

People don't want the news. News consumption continues to drop. People always thought of news as a bit of a chore. Something you were supposed to keep up with but not anything you enjoyed. It got turned into 24/7 entertainment crap when Fox News took over but that's not news that's propaganda. And even that isn't very popular.

People in America are in the habit of blaming individuals for either systemic problems or what our Epstein class is doing. It's a bad habit and I wish we would stop but well, there's all that propaganda encouraging us to do it...

Comment Re:People want biased news. (Score 3, Informative) 61

> So, any news source that makes a sincere effort at being unbiased will be distrusted by viewers at least half the time

I disagree with that. In general the left is more likely to consider centrist or center right media trustworthy. How many on the left do you think like MSNow? It's fewer than you think.

I'm not saying it's impossible to produce an openly left wing news outlet that the left finds credible, look at the Alan Rusbridger Guardian, for example, as a paper that did its best to have integrity while focusing on issues important to the left. But this cable-news shit is killing everyone. I'm not interested in Trump's gaffes, There's more important things this administration is doing the media - all of it - needs to cover. And do so objectively - but not in a bipartisan way, which isn't the same thing at all.

Comment Re:Why? (Score 1) 150

Yeah, there's two main problems:

1) People entering the wrong fields. For example, medicine really needs workers, at all levels, but not enough people are going into it.

2) Certain manual labour fields, like field work and home construction, because... well, I think we all know why there's a shortage of workers in those fields.

Comment Re:F-Droid (Score 3, Informative) 25

Nope. Google is still set to kill F-Droid later this year when they turn on mandatory developer certificates which will require developers to pay Google and hand over their personal information, regardless of what app store they want to distribute through.

Nonsense. There's no reason to expect that mandatory developer certificates will kill F-Droid, at all. F-Droid will need one guy to pay the $25 fee and identify himself. Unless they can use the open source developer exception that Google has talked about (but hasn't announced any details, AFAIK).

This will essentially kill F-Droid for casual users (their main target is almost certainly NewPipe). Yes you can still use F-Droid but you'll have to do a 24 hour delay before you can install F-Droid.

That's a bigger issue, because Google's announced policy is to require that apps respect intellectual property, which would include not distributing apps that blatantly violate terms of service. Most likely F-Droid will have to stop distributing NewPipe if they want to be in Google Play. If dropping NewPipe is enough to kill F-Droid, then I guess that'll do it.

Comment Re:Well, we've been through this before (Score 1) 238

And, as usual, everyone in the North will roll their eyes at all the whiny babies in the rest of the country.

Those in the north will complain because the portion of the winter they go to work in darkness will increase, and it will be darker. Those in the center will also complain louder because they'll start going to work/school in the dark.

Those in the south will be confused about why everyone else is complaining, but they'll lose.

Comment Re:What the world wants is Unix on commodity hardw (Score 2) 90

> That is a complete fluke, an accident

Are you sure about that?

The legal stuff was sorted out before either became popular, and BSD had the benefit of name recognition, 20 years of development (and thus a mature base), familiarity by academics across the world, and so on. While Linux was some hobby project written by an unknown programmer as a quick and dirty 32 bit replacement for the MINIX kernel so he could run MINIX with applications able to access gigabytes of RAM and be completely secured from one another.

The quick and dirty MINIX replacement somehow became the most popular operating system on Earth. While BSD was basically dead in the water by the early 2000s.

Is it just possible that the development environment mattered? That people contributed to Linux, causing it to become the universal OS compatible with almost every hardware environment with the RAM and processing power necessary, because they knew that their contributions would be more meaningful in an environment where people could copy it but never, ever, hide it and claim it as their own?

Comment Re:An AMAZING number of flaws (Score 1) 64

Actually, producing shoddy code is precisely what Microsoft is know for.

It's really not. 20 years ago, yes, but they've grown up and wised up. I know lots of excellent engineers at Microsoft, and I know they do good work, and they report that their colleagues do, too.

And note that I'm no MS fanboy. I hated them with a purple passion in the late 80s and early 90s, and swore off Windows entirely in 2001. I did finally break down and buy a Windows laptop a couple of years ago because I bought a CNC milling machine and the good software is Windows only, but that's the only thing I use it for.

Comment Re:Context? (Score 0) 90

> That's why many commercial companies like to base their systems on FreeBSD.

Oh you were doing so well until then...

Curious actually to know whether FreeBSD is being used anywhere these days in a finished product? IIRC there was some firewall/router software based on it but for the most part everything, even the crap in your router, your phone, your SCSI controller, etc, is Linux.

Comment Re:BOOOOOOOOO!!! (Score 1) 238

As a natural night owl, nothing sucks more than having to wake up before it's light out. Our bodies are not made for that. If the issue is to get rid of the time changes, standard time would be much more sensible.

I'm a night owl too, and I honestly don't care which one they pick as long as they get rid of the biannual clock fuckery. It's the losing an hour of sleep that makes it rough, once that's done away with I couldn't care less that I'm actually being "tricked" into waking up an hour earlier than solar time.

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