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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)DR
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12 mo. ago

  • What do I do? I‘m a cooker. Yeah I cook meals. Early in the morning I press this button and meals get ready and dishes cleaned and served. That’s cooking today.

    I love it old school. Cooking on a stove, cleaning dishes by hand and peeling vegetables manually. Automation is evil, you know, it takes jobs. That’s why I cook on a stove

  • Well done. It’s needed so urgent. Craftman still work like in the 60-90ies. They are sooo old school. And call it „tradition“.

    If they use a laser for measuring things, that‘s advanced. If they use a smartphone and digital apps for notes and customer contact (instead of pen and manual notebook) that’s advanced. Wtf.

    I had quite many craftman in my house last years and it’s unbelievable how they work nowadays. Two of them even didn‘t send me a final invoice. Well, that’s stupid backoffice work. Many couldn‘t send me an offering after having a (time consuming) site visit at my house. One showed up twice because he lost his paper with the measurements. And didn‘t send an offering.

    Nono, I lost all my respect about any modern capabilities of craftman. It’s insanely old schooled.

    Coming back to the 3d printer: How is construction building up a house nowadays? One after the other is doing their work. Nobody thinks ahead. How do they lay out pipes, lighting or power lines? By cutting into the wall. Why? Because of tradition. Any documentation? With pen and notebook? No way. How laying tiles in a bathroom? Showing up with a stack of tiles and cut it one by one. Laser measure it first and cut ahead at their shop to save time? Well, the leaning walls and tradition, they will answer.

    I do not wonder that building up houses became insanely costly.

    Sorry for my rant. But my experience were just eyeblowing and frustrating. (And as my mother was a craftman I know that matter a bit)

  • And if you ignore construction sites with high cranes and not documented buildings. Or overland high voltag power cables, wind mills, hobby drones, and local variations of birds.

    It‘s just taking the complex challenges of autonomous drivinf into the third dimension. Making it even more complex.

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  • It uses high frequency radio waves to disrupt or damage critical electronic components inside drones, causing them to crash or malfunction.

    At a range of 1km…

    That‘s useful not just for drones. I wonder if this works against helicopters, too.

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  • That’s it. And, indeed, you see light. That’s what your eyes do.

    Little smart ass knowhow: With your hands, you can feel light.

    You feel infrared light as heat. Not visible light though. Just heat up your cooker stove and it emits a bit visible red and a lot infrared light. Don’t touch just keep your hand close to the stove. Now you feel the IR-„light“.

    Or just take an IR-lamp for your neck pain. You‘ll feel the light that’s emitting with your hands.

  • When that happens and one can talk to dolphins:

    • There will be a debatte about dolphins and animal rights
    • There will pop up startups with Talk-to-your-dog/cats/whatever-AI
    • In 10 year or so, we might discover that one can communicate to trees, flowers, plants as well through chemical transmitters or whatsever
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  • There have been robots for cows for years. It‘s the SHIT PUSHER ROBOT. It‘s pushing away the straw and shit all the day. That’s useful automation imho.

    Edit: And a feeding machine is know for years as well. Same with the hugging brushes.

    Call it a „robot“ and it gives you an article in the IEEE magazine and promotes your startup. What a shit show.

    Editedit: Ok, read the article. It’s more a „Hey look how much automation is in a cow barn already“

    The life of a cow becomes much more free and comfortable. Somehow it reminds me of the life of a human working and living in a modern society. (Not sure, if we recognize the fences around us and still call it freedom)

  • Good luck dear US friends. I honestly hope this movement becomes big and survives the first wave of media‘s shit show to undermine the reputation. And I hope you survive the next wave when your troops stand against your own population. It can work out as revolutions in Eastern Europe has shown in past years.

  • In the slaughterhouse image you arguing with the consumer-demands-industry-follows-argument. That is way too easy and not true. Take emobility for example: did it scale because customers demanded it? Or does it because it was subsidued by the Government tonlower prices AND incentivized with tax reduction and special traffic permits?

    No, emobility was enforced and engaged by the Government. Neither customers nor industry was the lead. So, is the way with petrol and gas.

    I didn‘t get your last point. You are saying that Norway is producing more petrol and gas, are you? And then you claim, that it‘s not that bad because Russia reduced its oil production? Wtf is this? Whatsaboutism?

    Same as we produce mountains of carbon every year through oil and gas production. But it‘s not that bad because we all ride electric cars?