xylopyrography
xylopyrography t1_jcbdq27 wrote
Reply to [OC] MCU vs. DCU in Rotten Tomatoes by theotheredmund
The fact that half of these movies have twice the score they should have says a lot about the film critics.
Half of these films are worse than bad, and the other half are mediocre at best.
xylopyrography t1_jc8v5s8 wrote
Reply to comment by Ratstail91 in NASA wants new 'deorbit tug' to bring space station down in 2030 by DevilsRefugee
It'd be awesome if there were away to capture it in a way that is cost effective and safe.
But, alas. Space is hard.
xylopyrography t1_jc7sjk5 wrote
Reply to comment by Ratstail91 in NASA wants new 'deorbit tug' to bring space station down in 2030 by DevilsRefugee
This would be so expensive.
If it's kept in space it becomes a major risk to contribute to space junk.
xylopyrography t1_jc5dprb wrote
Reply to comment by dsafklj in Chart: Clean energy to make up 84% of new US power capacity in 2023 by captainquirk
Yeah I'm no fan of the labeling either.
I'd rather at least a predicted amount of annual energy produced. If batteries are to be included, it should be the amount by which they improve solar and other intermittent sources' efficiency.
xylopyrography t1_jc5dk6a wrote
Reply to comment by twilliwilkinsonshire in Chart: Clean energy to make up 84% of new US power capacity in 2023 by captainquirk
This is just nameplate capacity best I can tell, so it's just the maximum output rate that the installed batteries will be able to do.
Solar and batteries will definitely occupy a much smaller portion of real-world energy.
xylopyrography t1_jayo1zt wrote
Reply to comment by PEVEI in Half of all active satellites are now from SpaceX. Here’s why that may be a problem by ye_olde_astronaut
99% of the risk is in higher altitude satellites and in non-active satellites and other debris.
Starlink could cause a lot of problems for 10 years and some problems for 50 years, but wouldn't disrupt space access on the long term.
xylopyrography t1_j702ioh wrote
Reply to comment by nova_bang in [OC] Boeing 747 cumulative deliveries breakdown by variant by jnpha
This is specifically the 747 though, not Boeing aircraft.
xylopyrography t1_j39mf1c wrote
Reply to [OC] Relative Share of Representation in the US Congress Compared to Lowest Represented State Leaves Montana with 80% More Representation in the House. by SexyDoorDasherDude
How does having 2 reps instead of 1 grant you more representation in a congress of 435?
0 x 2 = 0
Even right now in a fairly split congress, you are 2/9ths of a potential swing vote. You'd need 4 additional over-represented small states fully on your side.
You do have equal representation in the senate, by design.
xylopyrography t1_j303dp9 wrote
Reply to comment by edogg40 in How many animals do you eat in your lifetime? by ImplementAny4362
Meat requires far more agricultural production per calorie, nearly an order of magnitude.
Eating plant-based reduces the death of animals killed by harvesting by 90% all things being equal, on top of the cruelty reduction of factory farming on slaughter.
There is no such thing as perfect ethics, but that's not a valid reason to make things 10x worse.
xylopyrography t1_iz338ze wrote
Does that even include depreciation, fuel, insurance, and maintenance on a vehicle?
Even without that... Just brutal on a per hour basis. I have no idea how this industry is still going.
I think you should try to 5x your earnings by doing something with data or graphic design. Good job on the data!
xylopyrography t1_ixepifj wrote
Reply to comment by jeremymorrison88 in Realistically speaking When do you think we will land humans on Mars? by EnaGrimm
We never tried to go to the moon from 1972-2016. The technological development stopped.
The SLS technology is integration between 60 year old components.
The only new Moon-capable technology being developed is Starship, which really only started in 2016.
xylopyrography t1_ixep8r2 wrote
Reply to comment by Dinindalael in Realistically speaking When do you think we will land humans on Mars? by EnaGrimm
The more confident one was always by 2024, but that was before Starship development even really started.
Gwynne Shotwell gave about 10 years in either 2018 or 2019 I think.
I think 2036 is realistically possible. It may require far more resources/effort than are economical or reasonable, but it will probably be possible.
xylopyrography t1_ivv69vx wrote
Reply to comment by Daddy_Parietal in [OC] World's Largest Plastic Polluter Now 2022 United Nations Climate Change Conference Sponsor by haboo213
No they aren't. That's less than 1% of bottled water usage. Probably less than 0.1%.
I live in Alberta. We have among the strictest water quality standards in the world, far more stringent than bottled water. Yet every grocery store sells palettes of bottled water a week and there are entire service industries created around businesses purchasing bulk water for water coolers that are shipped around on trucks from far away distribution plants.
All of that can be replaced with a metal water bottle and our tap water.
And for the communities without access to clean drinking water, there are dozens of other solutions, of which 0.5 L plastic bottle water containers are among the worst.
xylopyrography t1_ivuuhna wrote
Reply to comment by Regressionbyhand in [OC] World's Largest Plastic Polluter Now 2022 United Nations Climate Change Conference Sponsor by haboo213
I get they're separate issues. I think plastic is much worse considering the trend lines. That is, it's the bigger problem 50-70 years form now on our current path.
We are on the track to solve the carbon problem within 100 years, and can probably start reversing the damage.
But the damage we've done with plastic is continuing and it's going to take hundreds of years to undo it, even if we find a way to do it quickly.
xylopyrography t1_ivuu5tw wrote
Reply to comment by richraid21 in [OC] World's Largest Plastic Polluter Now 2022 United Nations Climate Change Conference Sponsor by haboo213
Well, 99% of communities don't need bottled water. It serves no function.
I've been to communities that bottle their own water. You can do it and sell it profitably for $0.50.
xylopyrography t1_ivugsgj wrote
Reply to comment by Regressionbyhand in [OC] World's Largest Plastic Polluter Now 2022 United Nations Climate Change Conference Sponsor by haboo213
Ban bottled water by corporations. If a community wants/needs bottled water, they should bottle it themselves with their own treatment facility.
Consider banning basic flavoured beverages. Just have consumers and businesses buy the powder and add to tap water.
For 1 L and less switch to aluminum (but ban packing plastic)
For 1.25 L and above switch to either vending style with powder or wax carton, or just have consumers buy multiples of 1 L.
Carbon footprint of transportation is already a problem being solved and can be accelerated through carbon pricing.
xylopyrography t1_ivufwwu wrote
Reply to comment by bitey87 in [OC] World's Largest Plastic Polluter Now 2022 United Nations Climate Change Conference Sponsor by haboo213
Bottled water is among humanity's worst decisions.
xylopyrography t1_ivs87o0 wrote
Reply to comment by seiyamaple in [OC] Tech Layoffs in 2022 so far, percentage of total workforce by PieChartPirate
The drop in ad revenue will continue as interest rates rise.
I don't think they will care to retain the same headcount.
Maybe they can continue with just attrition, but they'll likely want to clean 10-15% too.
xylopyrography t1_ivrt89r wrote
Reply to comment by BrokenTurtleShell in [OC] Tech Layoffs in 2022 so far, percentage of total workforce by PieChartPirate
Lyft, Shopify, Snapchat, Robinbood, Booking.com, Opendoor...
That's just the last week.
There are hundreds of other tech companies announcing significant layoffs in the last 3 months.
xylopyrography t1_ivrscoe wrote
Reply to comment by ShinjukuAce in [OC] Tech Layoffs in 2022 so far, percentage of total workforce by PieChartPirate
Google is coming soon.
Apple and Microsoft probably just more strict hiring freezes and internal attrition.
xylopyrography t1_iv3vgzq wrote
Reply to comment by TheFinestPotatoes in England Plans To Be The First Country In The World To Eradicate HIV by DataDevOps
It can be reduced but it can't be eliminated.
Elimination in the UK would require elimination across the world.
xylopyrography t1_jccv1e1 wrote
Reply to comment by Wicked-Skengman in Health spending per capita, life expectancy 2021 by lemonzestttttttt
The last point is important.
Suicide, firearm deaths, deaths from obesity, deaths from smoking are all higher in America.
Opioid deaths are way, way higher, which pulls life expectancy way down because the age of death is tragically so young.
Your first point I'm not sold on. The US pharma system is beyond inefficient. They may output more but there certainly exists a system which could do 10x as much with the same funding.