myne
myne t1_ja6mdb1 wrote
Reply to comment by ImAnonymoose in Invest responsibly my friends by ihatedarkies420
Hahahaha! I thought it was fixed term deposits.
myne t1_j9wiuma wrote
Reply to comment by BrotherAmazing in Cathie Wood Continues Coinbase Buying by predictany007
How much have you spent on goods and services?
myne t1_j9vc6vd wrote
Reply to comment by TheTerribleInvestor in Cathie Wood Continues Coinbase Buying by predictany007
Since 2008 money has been chasing anything with a return/growth. Crypto has existed entirely in that world. Until now.
myne t1_j9vbsxb wrote
Reply to comment by BrotherAmazing in Cathie Wood Continues Coinbase Buying by predictany007
Eh? Use case? Btc doesn't have one. Eth does. Those smart contacts have potential. The key is adoption. I don't see much of that.
myne t1_j90tg16 wrote
Reply to comment by cambeiu in Ultra-enthusiast hardware is strangling PC gaming by redhatGizmo
I'm fairly sure they look at the steam stats when they make a game and make sure it'll run ok on at least the top 70% of the in-use market.
Sure, you have to turn stuff off/down, but it still should play ok.
It's a volume business. They need sales. They need to target the audience that exists.
I'll note the 1060 is finally the #2 card on steam.
A 6 year old mid range card is still way up there in the market. It'll be hard for game designers to not target it.
myne t1_j8vuliu wrote
Reply to comment by My_reddit_strawman in Tesla Workers Announced a Union Drive. The Next Day They Were Fired. by psychothumbs
It's in NAFTA 2.0 that trump passed.
Literally in a treaty.
myne t1_j74lmat wrote
Reply to comment by sweetplantveal in Planting more trees could axe summer deaths by a third. Modelling of 93 European cities finds that increasing tree cover up to 30% can help lower the temperature of urban environments by an average of 0.4°C and prevent one in three heat deaths as a result. by MistWeaver80
I'm going to suggest vines.
Deciduous vines can be trained, pruned and intertwined to cover a roadway entirely with a lower footprint than a tree. Presumably there are vines that can reach at least 6m high.
myne t1_j6h2pkx wrote
Reply to comment by DYTTIGAF in Guru whooroo by Exonerated_living
I'm Santa. Buy my tell-all exclusive subscription
myne t1_j665s0m wrote
Reply to What time is it on the Moon? - Satellite navigation systems for lunar settlements will require local atomic clocks. Scientists are working out what time they will keep. by Gari_305
They will keep the same time all computer clocks keep.
Seconds since 1970.
The people will have a panel of clocks with earth times so they call their family at an appropriate hour.
myne t1_j5jke9i wrote
Reply to comment by Smart_Character1880 in Investors Seek to Pull $20 Billion From Core Real Estate Funds by Fatherthinger
He who panics first panics best.
Probably why so many ceos are pushing for the minions to return to the office.
Just get them back long enough to unwind the positions to retail bagholders, and then about face with some bs about productivity synergies. Throw in cloud a few times for good measure. Cloud workers.
Actually, fuck cloud. This needs a new term. The Nebula. Nebulous workforce. The ultimate in galactic workforce flexibility and productivity. Where every star employee and speck of dust can shine like Lucy in the sky.
myne t1_j5d0zn6 wrote
Reply to comment by Infernalism in Eye-popping new cost estimates released for NuScale small modular reactor by paulfdietz
Oddly, your never hear about the US submarine/carrier fleet having these problems.
Every couple of years they pump out a working, small reactor.
Is there something majorly different about designing a really small reactor vs a much larger one?
myne t1_iy0dcf6 wrote
Reply to comment by hithisishal in Record efficiency of 26.81% for large silicon solar cells by Wagamaga
That's all in the cutting/polishing.
Here's an ingot prior to cutting :
myne t1_ixywh7p wrote
Here's something I imagine: we build a steel belt around the planet to attach "satellites" and solar panels to, space elevators in central Africa, sth America, and Indonesia.
The only thing I'm unsure of is whether it is possible to build it "flat" on the ground and expand it outward by adding new segments until it reaches space, or if it must be built up there in the first place. I suspect it can't be built down here because it'd have to be the strongest self supporting structure ever built, and it would have to be held in the air, paradoxically by wires holding it down like bike spokes. Perhaps the smart way to build it is with spools of wow. Just feed the spool until it laps the planet, catch the end, and then keep adding wires until it turns into a rope.
LEO ~2000km. Earth radius ~6000km. 2pi8000=50,000km of wire for one lap. A decent size near solid rope would need a hell of a lot more than that.
But at some point, something like that is inevitable in my view.
myne t1_ixysxb7 wrote
Reply to comment by hithisishal in Record efficiency of 26.81% for large silicon solar cells by Wagamaga
Those are the largest silicon wafers. No idea if they're used for solar
myne t1_ixyo2a0 wrote
Reply to comment by hithisishal in Record efficiency of 26.81% for large silicon solar cells by Wagamaga
If it's a full size wafer it'd be 30cm ~12in
myne t1_ixynt4w wrote
Reply to comment by GWtech in Record efficiency of 26.81% for large silicon solar cells by Wagamaga
Interesting. It makes me wonder if some boats will move to at least partially electric motors. Keep the diesel for when it's needed.
myne t1_jeh4l6f wrote
Reply to Bears to Burry after his tweet yesterday... by ExceptionallyGreat
Noooo!!! You were the cho sen waan!