Comment Re:IPO for billions, sells for millions later. (Score 1) 25
What about Micron?
It's just like the gold rush. The profits were made by those selling equipment and supplies, not those panning for gold.
What about Micron?
It's just like the gold rush. The profits were made by those selling equipment and supplies, not those panning for gold.
There are, or at least were, many applications that were useful and on Windows, but not available on Linux or BSD. Switching off of those can be a significant cost. But if you change the underlying system, those probably won't be available anyway.
The core is a LONG way from the surface. Volcanoes aren't. The mantle plumes move slowly.
OTOH, we've known that the magnetic poles were getting ready to switch for decades now. We don't know when or why or how long it will take. This is probably related to that, but we don't have any really good models.
This sounds like someone made minute, non-revolutionary advances on standard de-salination and described it as if they were the first person to invent evaporative desalination. People have been doing sun powered desalination for thousands of years.
Desalination, even by sunlight, is a power intensive process. The reason why it typically creates brine is not because we are too stupid to complete the process. The original method of pure, unaided solar took about 4 hours to take cups of sea water to make one cup of fresh water ( leaving about 1 cup of brine). If you use a standard fire based distillation you can make a gallon and a half by boiling 3 gallons of sea water and collecting the steam. in ONE hour, with no brine.
Instead, we create brine because:
1) It takes more power to evaporate the last bit of water from a brine solution than it takes to remove the first bit of water from regular salt water.
2) Moving the salt is much easier when it has a bit of water in it. It sticks to the container. (This appears to be the only thing they may have advanced on.)
3) The brine is not just table salt, but a mix of everything that was in the water. Mostly Sodium Chloride, but also any living things in the water, and some bromine, magnesium, calcium, sulfates, strontium, fluoride and yes, some lithium. This will be all mixed up, not nicely separated out. A lot of work to get anything useful from it.
Unfortunately, when they are separated like that each half becomes nearly useless. They need to be merged, though with clear demarcations so you can skip a part that isn't currently relevant.
I think a giant context is not going to be the answer. It's just got too many problems. Better will probably be parsing the context into connected pieces, and at a different level assembling the "lemmas" into "theorums". (Yeah, those aren't quite the right words, but I'm not sure the right words exist, and that's the analogy from math proofs. Code library isn't the right concept as the "lemma" will often be quite specific to the current task.)
But 1st and 2nd grades???
Sorry, but that sounds like a REALLY bad idea. More than half of what those grades should be about is learning to operate well in groups.
This comments looks like it was written by an AI. It is one long line with a single period, is not quite a full understandable sentence, and has 3 lines after the main part of text that is not connected to anything.
When your power plants are non-existent or unreliable, a power source you can purchase and maintain becomes a wonderful choice.
Similarly, people living in a homestead situation do the same thing. Alaska cabins almost all have solar and often have wind or a water turbine.
It's everywhere right now.
Projects are rejecting AI contributions in needlessly cruel and unnecessary ways.
All they need to do is post an agents md file.
The theatrics are needless.
You mean like XML does?
Your mistake is thinking of "the government" as a unitary entity. Different parts of it want different things.
Once it hits the fan, the only rational choice is to sweep it up, package it, and sell it as fertilizer.