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293
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2 yr. ago

  • Underground works well for greenfields construction, where you can map everything out ahead of time and don't have to deal with existing underground services.

    It's manageable on low-density streets where its really only three waters and maybe some telephone lines.

    It's a nightmare to underground existing infrastructure in dense environments. Underground is already full of three generations of critical comms, corroding gas, water, HV lines that will fail if you look at them wrong, and if you're really unlucky, steam pipes too.

  • None of the definitions of tyranny I see have a restriction on scale. You can be a tyrant ruling a hundred people or a billion. It's technology (transport, food storage, writing/communication) and geography that limit the size of a tyranny. I'd argue lots of small tribal societies wander into tyranny; it's just hard to rule over multiple islands when you don't have writing or metals.

    There's religions in Asia other than Buddhism.

  • There was rampant cannibalism in Polynesia along with all kinds of infighting. Maori gods have plenty of murder and war in the mythology.

    War in Asia goes far wider than just one empire. Imperial Japan were thoroughly tyrannical during WW2, as well as many other conflicts.

    Any civilisation that could spare, mobilise, and feed enough people to form an army basically did so, sooner or later. It's a supply lines and population problem. Small populations can't raise large armies and send them long distances.

  • I feel dumber having read that.

    Banning a whole country because you disliked a company?

    Dealing with stuff that's 'almost working' is often harder than starting from scratch; ask any tradesperson.

    They also apparently cannot get their heads around the fact that people might give you a discount if you advertise their brand. Ad-supported pricing has been around for a long time; it's not some voodoo.

  • Until the day comes that I get a letter in the mail from the government saying, "Here's how much you paid in taxes, if you're cool with that then please disregard", I will not be satisfied.

    NZ does that. More accurately, they email you to tell you that there's a letter available online - I don't think they send physical mail by default.

    Then they pay any refund straight into your nominated bank account.

  • "We are gentlemen at the World Conker Championships and we don't cheat. I've been playing and practising for decades. That's how I won.

    Mr Jakins won the men's competition but lost in the overall final to women's champion Kelci Banschbach, originally from the United States, who only took up the game last year when she moved to Suffolk.

    Hmm.

  • It's also torches and everything after the regulator, which run at much lower pressure. At least in NZ

    I think it might be because they're connected and disconnected regularly so misconnection is a common problem, even with colour coding. Gas work on houses involves actually putting the fittings on pipe and is done by people who should be concentrating more on that rather than on what they're about to weld/cut.

  • "Lossless" isn't the term you want; that refers to not lossily compressing the main data. Lossless compression or storage of media is very rare outside of text and sometimes audio, because it ends up so large.

    You want to preserve metadata. That applies regardless of how lossy the data compression is.