Comment Re: It's not THAT difficult (Score 1) 165
Not to mention resizing it. A taskbar sith a max of 6 tasks is not very helpful. Fortunately, there is Retrobar.
Not to mention resizing it. A taskbar sith a max of 6 tasks is not very helpful. Fortunately, there is Retrobar.
Even if it's not a resounding success. Trust them ! Pinky swear
Or not. And buy from a manufacturer that promises 5-7 years of security updates, with a track record of doing so. Don't buy the Fire phone and let it become ewaste due to lack of updates.
Yes. About, what, 3 GPUs at current prices ?
It is now called "drinking your own champagne". Keep up with the times.
I also have questions for the engineer who designed that "secure development environment".
And whether the engineer who used it understood the threat model.
This is a company that posts things like "done is better than perfect" or "move fast and break things" on large signs in their lobby.
So, I'll go with "working as designed".
But still allowed to go out to the network and reply on a forum ?
Guess I have different definitions of what secure means.
I don't know how you got any kind of apology from my comment.
The lawsuit wasn't brought by Stallman.
Source ? I thought it was $1b/day. Which is still huge. Enough to subsidize 133k EVs with the defunct federal tax credit/rebate.
It is not better. It just wants to sell you stuff. It is one of the worst chatbots in terms of getting your question answered. You would need a much better chatbot to sort through amazon reviews and make sense of product defects. Not just a price mining chatbot that they're trying to block.
Massive house, but not massive lot. A quick gemini chat states i would need more like 1200sq ft and specific clearance. I would not have on my inclined lot. It is moot since the project would cost at minimum $500k, probably closer to $1M. Possibly more. Too much. My electric bill is currently negative annually. I also don't want to have that much battery at home due to fire risk. I live fire risk area, and fire department is at least 10 mins away. I don't think off grid is practical unless you live way south where days equalize in winter and summer.
Also, we use more in winter due to heat, especially for the EVs.
Our massive home is also quite efficient. 2200 kWh for a 4600 sq ft home that includes 2 central ACs, a sauna, a hot tub, and 2 EVs, is actually very spartan considering all the loads. GP states the average US home uses 1000 kWh, and the average US home is about half the size, and does not include any EV.
To fully cover the average home's 1000 kWh usage, you would need to be in my sunny Norcal climate, with my 70-panel 23.2 kw PV system that wouldn't fit on the average home's roof. You would also need a couple days worth of battery still. Even here, I have seen 7 consecutive days of rain certain El Nino years. Very few consecutive ones this winter, though. That PV system produces 31 MWh a year, also, where the average home only uses 12 MWh a year. So, what would you do with the excess 19 MWh, if you are off-grid ? Mine bitcoin ?
Off-grid might really work near the equator, where the days are approximately constant year round. Not so much at US latitudes.
Forgiven. I'm in Norcal also, so less sun in winter. I have seen as low as 4 kWh produced on rainy winter days, and as high as 145 kWh produced on peak summer days. But no battery. Last year, I had net grid exports of 6030 kWh. But actually imported 17200 kWh, and exported 23200 kWh.
Of course, PG&E punishes us now by paying much less for exports than charging for imports. I just setup with 2 OpenEVSE to do load following from my Rainforeast Eagle with an HA automation and MQTT. I also got a local LLM running to use that excess power doing the day. Hoping to reduce both imports and exports by a few MWh a year this way. We just replace one furnace with a heat pump though, so winter overnight use might cancel all of it. Once we are forced onto NEM3 in about 5 years, we will probably put batteries then. Hopefully the cost is more reasonable than right now. We would want at least 100 kWh to get through one cold winter day when we turn on our 8 kW sauna.
Marvelous! The super-user's going to boot me! What a finely tuned response to the situation!