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Submission + - Heat pumps twice as efficient as fossil fuel systems in cold weather (theguardian.com) 1

AmiMoJo writes: Heat pumps are more than twice as efficient as fossil fuel heating systems in cold temperatures, research shows. Even at temperatures approaching -30C, heat pumps outperform oil and gas heating systems, according to the research from Oxford University and the Regulatory Assistance Project thinktank. The research, published in the specialist energy research journal Joule, used data from seven field studies in North America, Asia and Europe. It found that at temperatures below zero, heat pumps were between two and three times more efficient than oil and gas heating systems.

Efficiency is important because even when heat pumps use electricity produced from fossil fuels, they require less of them and therefore produce less CO2/pollution.

Comment Re:First post! Go QEMU, go! (Score 2) 23

Hmm.. i'm a happy user.!
Have running qemu without major problems from early 2000 (when Linux-KVM was a seperated module).
From version 2.6.0 have a binarie for Windows on laptop and a self build on Linux PC (slackware) both using the same images.

Biggest archivement: Fast bootup for Windows and for stop just "kill -9" a kill / restart takes only 4 seconds.

Submission + - SVB collapse: Peter Thiel's role scrutinized as spark of bank run (washingtonexaminer.com)

DevNull127 writes: Peter Thiel is being accused of sparking the run on the bank that forced regulators to close down Silicon Valley Bank. Journalists and critics have turned their focus on Thiel in the wake of SVB's collapse, accusing him of influencing businesses to withdraw their funding from the bank. His efforts are thought to be the first that eventually sparked the bank run, leading to California regulators intervening.

"To be clear, SVB did not properly hedge its risks against two threats, 1) concentration of influence by Peter Thiel, 2) rising interest rates," tweeted investigative journalist Dave Troy. "That was mismanagement, but it still wasn't fraud, and they still have sufficient assets to meet nearly all of the bank's obligations."

"There should be more scrutiny of Peter Thiel and Bill Ackman for yelling fire in a crowded theater in this SVB collapse," tweeted CNBC host Sara Eisen. Others turned their focus to Thiel's promotion and subsequent profiting off of crypto investments after the market crashed as a reason to be suspicious of his withdrawals. "You mean the guy who was touting crypto and trashing critics while he was selling crypto? That guy? Shocker!" tweeted tech journalist Kara Swisher.

Submission + - Pulitzer-winning jounalist accuses the US of sabotaging the Nord Stream pipeline (substack.com)

r1348 writes: From the article:

Last June, the Navy divers, operating under the cover of a widely publicized mid-summer NATO exercise known as BALTOPS 22, planted the remotely triggered explosives that, three months later, destroyed three of the four Nord Stream pipelines, according to a source with direct knowledge of the operational planning.


Submission + - Complex international missing person case solved with subpoena to Google

wattersa writes: I am a lawyer in Redwood City, California and a Slashdot reader since 1998 (not sure when I registered, lol). I recently concluded a three-year missing person investigation that unfortunately turned into an overseas homicide in Taiwan. I was authorized by my client to publish the case study on my website, which is based on our recent court filings and is linked here:

https://www.andrewwatters.com/...

There is an apparently rarely used statute in California that allows conservatorship of a missing person's estate (Probate Code sec. 1849). After a couple weeks of pre-lawsuit investigation, I filed that case in late 2019 and then used the subpoena power to try to solve the disappearance, which seemed appropriate. We solved the case in late 2020 due to a fake "proof of life" email that the suspect sent from the victim's email account, which he sent from a hotel where he testified he was staying alone on the night of the disappearance-- after (according to him) dropping off the victim at the local train station. The victim could not have sent the email from the other side of Taiwan, which is where the email indicated it was from. This is similar to the case of U.S.A. v. Brimager, a prosecution under 18 U.S.C. sec. 1119 in which the defendant sent fake emails from the victim's account and later pled to overseas murder in Panama. The suspect in my case is a Tony Stark-level supergenius with a Ph.D. and dozens of patents, who works at a prominent engineering company in California. He is currently wanted in Taiwan.

The case was solved with a subpoena to Google for the login/logout history of the victim's Gmail account and the originating IP address of the proof of life email. Although Google does not include the originating IP address in the email headers, it turns out that they retain the IP address for some unknown length of time and we were able to get it.

When it became clear that this case was a homicide, co-counsel and I dismissed the conservatorship case and filed a wrongful death case against the suspect in 2021. We continue to gather information through subpoenas, depositions, and interviews, all of which show that the victim died in a 10-hour window on November 29, 2019. The wrongful death case goes to trial in late 2023 in Santa Clara County. This is a rare case in which the family can afford an expensive, lengthy, attorney-led private investigation.

This obscure statute in the Probate Code was instrumental in solving the case because we didn't have to wait for law enforcement to take action, and we were able to aggressively pursue our own leads. This gave the family a sense of agency and closure, as well as the obvious benefit of solving the disappearance. Also, Taiwan law enforcement could not do subpoenas from Taiwan, so we ended up contributing to their investigation to some extent as well.

This model of using the missing person conservatorship statute to solve cases appears innovative, in my opinion. I would like to draw people's attention to it in the service of missing person cases generally, as well as the use of electronic evidence from civil subpoenas to develop cases independently of any criminal justice stakeholders who typically hold all the cards.

Submission + - A light-powered catalyst could be key for hydrogen economy (phys.org)

fahrbot-bot writes: Rice University researchers have engineered a key light-activated nanomaterial for the hydrogen economy. Using only inexpensive raw materials, a team from Rice's Laboratory for Nanophotonics, Syzygy Plasmonics Inc. and Princeton University's Andlinger Center for Energy and the Environment created a scalable catalyst that needs only the power of light to convert ammonia into clean-burning hydrogen fuel.

The research is published online today in the journal Science.

The research follows government and industry investment to create infrastructure and markets for carbon-free liquid ammonia fuel that will not contribute to greenhouse warming. Liquid ammonia is easy to transport and packs a lot of energy, with one nitrogen and three hydrogen atoms per molecule. The new catalyst breaks those molecules into hydrogen gas, a clean-burning fuel, and nitrogen gas, the largest component of Earth's atmosphere. And unlike traditional catalysts, it doesn't require heat. Instead, it harvests energy from light, either sunlight or energy-stingy LEDs.

Video: Rice University researchers have engineered a key light activated material for the hydrogen economy

"Transition metals like iron are typically poor thermocatalysts," said study co-author Naomi Halas of Rice. "This work shows they can be efficient plasmonic photocatalysts. It also demonstrates that photocatalysis can be efficiently performed with inexpensive LED photon sources."

"This discovery paves the way for sustainable, low-cost hydrogen that could be produced locally rather than in massive centralized plants," said Peter Nordlander, also a Rice co-author.

Submission + - Boeing 737Max mid-air emergencies revealed as US agency prepares probe (abc.net.au)

An anonymous reader writes: Boeing's troubled 737 MAX planes — which have twice crashed, killing 346 people — have experienced at least six mid-air emergencies and dozens of groundings in the year after an extensive probe cleared them to fly.

Key points:
The 737 MAX crashed off Indonesia in 2018 and in Ethiopia in 2019
The US air safety investigator has now confirmed it did not investigate Boeing's alleged production problems after the crashes. The incidents, pulled from US government air safety databases, are among more than 60 mid-flight problems reported by pilots in the 12 months after the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) recertified the plane's airworthiness in late 2020.

Former employees of both Boeing and the FAA characterised the reports — which included engine shutdowns and pilots losing partial control of the plane — as serious and with the potential to end in tragedy.

In one incident in December 2021, a United Airlines pilot declared a mayday after the system controlling the pitch and altitude of the plane started malfunctioning. An ABC investigation can also reveal the US government will announce a new audit examining Boeing's production oversight of the 737 MAX planes.

In an email obtained by ABC Investigations, the US air safety investigator the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) said the Inspector-General's office of the US Department of Transportation (DOT) would carry out what it described as "vitally important" work.

"The DOT Inspector-General's office [has] confirmed that Congress requested an audit of Boeing's production oversight and that the review of the production of the 737 MAX will be a part of this audit," the NTSB email said.

Virgin Australia — which declined to comment on the new data — has ordered four of the same MAX-8 model that has crashed twice, and 25 of a newer MAX-10 model, which has yet to take to the skies.

Both planes in the disasters were less than four months old and all MAX planes are manufactured at Boeing's factory in Seattle. The first crash was a Lion Air flight that plunged into waters off Indonesia in October 2018.

In March 2019, a MAX jetliner operated by Ethiopian Airlines went down 6 minutes after take-off from the capital, Addis Ababa. Air crash investigator reports pointed to a malfunction caused by the MAX's flight control software system known as MCAS, in both crashes.

Boeing was charged by the US Department of Justice and paid $US2.5 billion ($3.5 billion) in fines and compensation after it was found to have deceived authorities over the system's complexities and removed references to the MCAS from its pilot training manual.

All MAX planes worldwide were grounded after the second crash as a 20-month safety review was carried out. But in April last year, five months after they were cleared to fly again, 100 MAX jets were again withdrawn from service after the discovery of an electrical fault in the cockpit that could result in the loss of critical flight functions. Boeing told the ABC it traced the problem back to a change in production processes at its Utah factory.

Now, an ABC Investigation has unearthed dozens of other mid-flight incidents on MAX planes during the aircraft's first year back in service. The safety report data was extracted from the FAA Service Difficulty Reporting System as well as anonymous reports submitted to NASA's Aviation Safety Reporting System.

Pilots declared mid-air emergencies at least six times last year — including one United Airlines flight en route to Houston, Texas in October, which was not in the database. The MAX's flight control system also failed on 22 separate flights, a problem which became the primary focus of the FAA's 20-month recertification effort after the two fatal crashes. More than 42 incidents involved equipment malfunctions, and on more than 40 occasions, flight crews chose to ground the affected aircraft while problems were fixed.

In one incident on an American Airlines flight in April last year, multiple systems including both autopilot functions stopped working soon after take-off. On landing, the crew found the backup power unit, considered vital for safe flight, had failed and was emitting a strong electrical smell.

Submission + - Code bloat has become astronomical (positech.co.uk) 3

Artem S. Tashkinov writes: An indie game programmer Cliff Harris shares his concerns about the current state of compute: Code bloat sounds like something that grumpy old programmers in their fifties (like me) make a big deal out of, because we are grumpy and old and also grumpy. I get that. But us being old and grumpy means complaining when code runs 50% slower than it should, or is 50% too big. This is way, way, way beyond that. We are at the point where I honestly do believe that 99.9% of the code in files on your PC is absolutely useless and is never even executed. Its just there, in a suite of 65 DLLS, all because some coder wanted to do something trivial, like save out a bitmap and had *no idea how easy that is*, so they just imported an entire bucketful of bloatware to achieve it.

Like I say, I really should not be annoyed at young programmers doing this. Its what they learned. They have no idea what high performance or constraint-based development is. When you tell them the original game Elite had a sprawling galaxy, space combat in 3D, a career progression system, trading and thousands of planets to explore, and it was 64k, I guess they HEAR you, but they don’t REALLY understand the gap between that, and what we have now.

Computers are so fast these days that you should be able to consider them absolute magic. Everything that you could possibly imagine should happen between the 60ths of a second of the refresh rate. And yet, when I click the volume icon on my microsoft surface laptop (pretty new), there is a VISIBLE DELAY as the machine gradually builds up a new user interface element, and eventually works out what icons to draw and has them pop-in and they go live. It takes ACTUAL TIME. I suspect a half second, which in CPU time, is like a billion fucking years.

Submission + - Giant Deep Ocean Turbine Trial Offers Hope of Endless Green Power (yahoo.com)

AmiMoJo writes: Power-hungry, fossil-fuel dependent Japan has successfully tested a system that could provide a constant, steady form of renewable energy, regardless of the wind or the sun. For more than a decade, Japanese heavy machinery maker IHI Corp. has been developing a subsea turbine that harnesses the energy in deep ocean currents and converts it into a steady and reliable source of electricity. The giant machine resembles an airplane, with two counter-rotating turbine fans in place of jets, and a central ‘fuselage’ housing a buoyancy adjustment system. Called Kairyu, the 330-ton prototype is designed to be anchored to the sea floor at a depth of 30-50 meters (100-160 feet). The advantage of ocean currents is their stability. They flow with little fluctuation in speed and direction, giving them a capacity factor — a measure of how often the system is generating — of 50-70%, compared with around 29% for onshore wind and 15% for solar.

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