mnvoronin
mnvoronin t1_j6373a4 wrote
Reply to comment by hopefulworldview in Could I take the European plug end, cut it off the cord, and wire an American plug end to a light bulb on a wire? by Randomhero360
The adapter is either too expensive or too flimsy and doesn't provide good contact. Not to say it looks fugly.
Splicing the power cord is not a rocket science, it's like five minutes of work.
mnvoronin t1_j1ymffm wrote
Reply to comment by Mr_s3rius in How Ukrainian publishers are fighting to survive by livingmybestestlyfe
Because I do not equate every single Russian to an uncivilized orc, perhaps? :)
mnvoronin t1_j1ymav9 wrote
Reply to comment by Brichess in How Ukrainian publishers are fighting to survive by livingmybestestlyfe
Damn. It's the second time it happens to me.
When I accessed this source via Google search, it didn't paywall the data. Opening it from the Reddit link doesn't let me see shit. :(
Try searching for "world reading habits 2017" from the private window. It seems to allow you to open the stats one time for free.
However looking at the sidebar, the source seems to be an online survey, so results are probably skewed somewhat (though given that over 90% of Russians have Internet access, probably not much - at least the distortion should be relatively similar to that of USA results).
It also does match pretty well with my own observations, though obviously, my account is purely anecdotal and not statistically significant :)
mnvoronin t1_j1yfgx1 wrote
Reply to comment by Joggeri in How Ukrainian publishers are fighting to survive by livingmybestestlyfe
Russia is quite a well-read nation, to be honest. 29% of Russians read books every day, 30% read at least once a week, and a further 16% read books every month. Which leaves only 25% of the non-reading population.
It's more or less on par with the USA statistics (30, 25 and 16% correspondingly).
Sauce (data is from 2017)
EDIT: the sauce seems to be paywalled, however, there is a workaround: search for "world reading habits 2017" in the private browser window. Link to Statista should be among the top results and they allow you to view the data once if coming from a Google search.
mnvoronin t1_j1y3dgh wrote
Reply to comment by Joggeri in How Ukrainian publishers are fighting to survive by livingmybestestlyfe
Russian publishers have a sizeable internal market - about 150 million people, give or take. And sanctions did not affect the Russian economy much - IMF projects a mere 3.4% drop in GDP for 2022 and further 2.3% in 2023 (numbers per the October 2022 release).
mnvoronin t1_j0mn6ld wrote
Reply to comment by spoogekangaroo in World’s first net-zero transatlantic flight: Fly London to New York on used cooking oil. Rolls-Royce Trent 1000 engines will power the airline's flagship Boeing 787s as they fly from London to New York in 2023. by Zee2A
>Carbon emissions were produced at every stage of the use and creation of this fuel.
Well, growing plants is, I believe, a carbon-negative process. But that's the only stage that is negative.
mnvoronin t1_j0gbi6c wrote
Reply to comment by obog in Does rotation break relativity? by starfyredragon
Technically not and you can perform some tests confirming that (objects on the far wall will be accelerating ever so slightly compared to the objects on the inside wall), but the effect on the typical spacestation scale is very small (in order of nanometers per second squared).
mnvoronin t1_izzqgh3 wrote
Reply to comment by OptimalConcept143 in Scientists have developed a solid-state battery material that doesn't diminish after repeated charge cycles, potentially offering a durable alternative to the lithium-ion batteries used in electric vehicles by unswsydney
Huh? It's exactly the opposite.
Liquids typically have a density between 0.7 to 2 kg/l (one of the densest electrolytes used in batteries, sulphuric acid, is 1.84). Common solids go from 1 to 8 kg/l (iron is 7.8) and some even higher. For example, lithium titanate used in the battery is about 3.4 kg/l.
mnvoronin t1_izzn9z6 wrote
Reply to comment by OptimalConcept143 in Scientists have developed a solid-state battery material that doesn't diminish after repeated charge cycles, potentially offering a durable alternative to the lithium-ion batteries used in electric vehicles by unswsydney
If you read the linked article, you will find that the battery in question is using lithium ions. And the researchers claim 300 mAh/g energy density, which is pretty much up there.
mnvoronin t1_itmo15b wrote
Reply to LPT: When mounting a tv on the wall, get extra HDMI cables and plug them in to empty ports, and leave accessible on the side or bottom for future devices. by Puppyismycat
Nah. Source switching is the job for amplifier.
mnvoronin t1_j90nk73 wrote
Reply to comment by Jakeinspace in Globally, the total cost of energy for households has likely increased between 62.6% and 112.9% since Russia invaded Ukraine, say international researchers. An additional 78–141 million people worldwide could be pushed into extreme poverty as a result of these increases. by MistWeaver80
>In my opinion, we should certainly be imposing a windfall tax on these energy companies.
You may find it interesting that Gazprom, Russian gas monopoly, was slapped with a windfall tax last year and ended up paying almost all of its extra profits back to the government.
Unfortunately, western governments seem to be toothless.