aquarain
aquarain t1_jda9xjn wrote
Reply to comment by Youvebeeneloned in US EV Sales Hit New Record, And People Are Buying More Than Just Teslas by Magister_Xehanort
Or you can just buy a Tesla where they're not trying to play that game (and all the other shitty stealership games) and they don't have to be coerced into compliance. It's like a whole other way to buy a car where you don't have to pack a lunch and deal with exploitive mind games all day to get out of there with the car you intended to buy at MSRP.
aquarain t1_jcnppae wrote
Reply to comment by satoshisfeverdream in Big tech companies are selling their Silicon Valley campuses amid struggle by McFatty7
The site of the Ebola Reston outbreak in Virginia became a daycare.
aquarain t1_jaapec6 wrote
Reply to comment by billdietrich1 in The Dream of Mini Nuclear Plants Hangs in the Balance by OutlandishnessOk2452
I too get pedantic sometimes.
"Solar Plant" can include RV applications where the direct current is used... Directly. Without telling anybody. Like a nasty off grid Mad Max rebel.
aquarain t1_jaailhn wrote
Reply to U.S. Marshals Service suffers 'major' security breach that compromises sensitive information, senior law enforcement officials say by DoremusJessup
Moving day again. Sigh.
aquarain t1_jaadase wrote
Here's the key problem with all of these "new nuclear" plans:
They cost a boatload of money up front, which they can't finance unless they get purchase commitments from utilities for sale of their output at above current rates. Because in the best hypothetical marketing case (pre-overruns) they are still the most costly way to generate electricity known to Man.
Consumers are already aware they can generate their own energy cheaper than their utility's current generation and transport with rooftop solar+battery, and those costs go only down. The savings is more than enough to pay for the interest on the financing too.
If utilities keep buying the most expensive generation available they will soon find they have nobody to sell it to because their customers already solved that problem for themselves and don't need them anymore.
aquarain t1_ja89pv3 wrote
Reply to comment by 547610831 in The Dream of Mini Nuclear Plants Hangs in the Balance by OutlandishnessOk2452
The problem here is that the technology development and engineering required to stand up a solar plant is:
Step one. Throw the panel on the ground.
Step two. Power comes out.
aquarain t1_ja60vse wrote
Reply to Caught between Microsoft's and Google's search war, the ad industry grapples with a 'exciting and terrifying' new reality by marketrent
There is no search war. 19 years after the Microsoft CEO swore to kill Google, their efforts to compete are still a rounding error. The billions spent on the attempt could have solved world hunger, polio, Guinea Worm and built a human colony on Mars.
aquarain t1_ja39vyd wrote
Reply to comment by Dirty_South_Cracka in How Much Land Would It Require To Get Most Of Our Electricity From Wind & Solar? by BlitzOrion
Distributed virtual power plants are a thing now, and will only grow. As with anything else, as the units go up the price per comes down.
aquarain t1_ja39ono wrote
Reply to comment by littleday in How Much Land Would It Require To Get Most Of Our Electricity From Wind & Solar? by BlitzOrion
The iron flow batteries are on the way. Much longer duration, higher cycles and way lower cost. Consumes some of the energy though.
aquarain t1_ja39dfu wrote
Reply to comment by whyreadthis2035 in How Much Land Would It Require To Get Most Of Our Electricity From Wind & Solar? by BlitzOrion
In addition to the cost, and that nuclear promises have always been false, those new reactors use fuel made only in Russia.
aquarain t1_ja397jh wrote
Reply to comment by JawsAteAGoonie in How Much Land Would It Require To Get Most Of Our Electricity From Wind & Solar? by BlitzOrion
And ethanol fuel production we will no longer need.
aquarain t1_j9kuojz wrote
Reply to comment by The_Starmaker in Apple is convinced my dog is stalking me. A vital AirTag safety feature is incorrectly notifying me every day. by MayoFetish
Now check the cat. Is she ignoring you again?
aquarain t1_j9k5uj8 wrote
Reply to comment by Familiar_Armadillo95 in How many HPE staff does it take to pay for one CEO? 271 — Antonio Neri bags $17m+ in compensation in fiscal 2022 versus $64,000 average for the grunts by marketrent
How many CEOs could it take to shrink wrap one CD to a pallet?
aquarain t1_j76f9er wrote
Reply to comment by tanrgith in Musk found not guilty of fraud over Tesla tweet by civicode
The hate machine doesn't like this.
aquarain t1_j6p6k0l wrote
Reply to comment by Ok-Welder-4816 in PayPal to lay off 2,000 employees in coming weeks, about 7% of workforce by Familiar-Turtle
I use them for buying from random online stores and sending money.
aquarain t1_j6jgr8w wrote
Reply to comment by The-Brit in Mining giant Rio Tinto apologizes for sparking radiation alert after losing device in Australia by hzj5790
It doesn't sound like it's lying in the road somewhere. Four mounting bolts and all screws also missing? Somebody took it.
aquarain t1_j6e26rp wrote
Reply to comment by atchijov in Tesla posted record sales globally last year, more than 1.3 million cars by tickleMyBigPoop
Fun story: Tesla can lower the price to the consumer because Tesla sells the car to the consumer. GM and Ford can't even get their dealers to sell their cars at MSRP.
aquarain t1_j6e1kgs wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Tesla posted record sales globally last year, more than 1.3 million cars by tickleMyBigPoop
It can actually be grass roots hate.
A lot of people make their living in all of the industries that touch fossil fuels. Electricity doesn't need dispatchers to schedule fleets of electricity delivery trucks.
aquarain t1_j6bq6dg wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in DARPA and NASA plan orbital nuclear rocket test by Apart_Shock
You've underestimated the weight of "Advanced" in "Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency". Those megabrains are way out there on the speculative defense benefits.
The stuff you're speculating about them funding someday went operational in the 90's. And a whole lot more you never imagined. The stuff they're funding now is way further out there.
aquarain t1_j6bnu1g wrote
Reply to comment by redonkulousness in Tesla just had its best week since May 2013 by upyoars
https://www.google.com/search?q=all+our+patent+are+belong+to+you
They genuinely don't care about the rewards in the traditional sense of monopolistic control and exploitation of that leverage. They will win, of course, in the fiscal sense. They're not crazy. They owe that to the investors who helped them and stiffing the long term investors isn't in their moral compass. But how they do it will be by creating a wave they are first surfer on. It's Jiu Jitsu. Kung Fu. "The green reed which bends in the wind is stronger than the mighty oak which breaks in a storm." - Confucius
aquarain t1_j6bg67h wrote
Reply to comment by wart365 in DARPA and NASA plan orbital nuclear rocket test by Apart_Shock
Mars is only close enough to visit every second year. And the window is only a few weeks.
aquarain t1_j6beszg wrote
Reply to comment by redonkulousness in Tesla just had its best week since May 2013 by upyoars
With production optimizations the margins were getting a bit fluffy. The point isn't really to sell cars. It's to change the world by killing the internal combustion engine, the carbon fueled electric generator. They have to make a profit to serve shareholders but if they can do that in a way that also serves their social goals then more power (sic) to them.
aquarain t1_j6be0zu wrote
Reply to comment by TrippieBled in Tesla just had its best week since May 2013 by upyoars
Any Elon/SpaceX/Tesla story may be posted here because of the blacklist controversy.
https://old.reddit.com/r/Futurology/comments/21melq/anything_related_to_tesla_has_been_secretly/
It turned into a global media shitstorm.
aquarain t1_jdbahxd wrote
Reply to comment by Zenshei in Job listing platform Indeed lays off 2,200 employees by marketrent
It always sucks when you get laid off. But this is why you don't get committed to a job, especially a tech job, especially in the first few years.