I remember my first job at McDonald's, and this was literally their onboarding. Didn't watch any videos or anything. They just asked:"you know how to make a burger right?" to someone who never eats at any fastfood place. That was a rough week
I don't want to be a downer, but I'm afraid people will see the extra emissions headroom and speed up production instead of letting the carbon capture reverse anything.
I'm sure they thought of this (and this one is in Iceland so they have a bunch of geothermal energy), but wouldn't the power consumption and the emissions that come with producing the power negate some of the practical capacity of these carbon vacuums?
Ye the explanation I presented is something I say to simple minded people as a way for me to tell them that the act of wanting privacy isn't criminal, and that it is wayyy creepier when some stranger is trying to actively breach said privacy.
I want to belive that this entire breach of privacy thing will form a sort of bubble that'll burst and people will wake up and realize that "hey this is kinda creepy", but this does seem to trend towards a dystopian cyberpunk future
I usually shut those "I have nothing to hide" arguments by asking the person what's more creepy: you closing your curtains trying to get privacy, or your neighbor trying to peek in, asking you "why do you need curtains? You've got nothing to hide right?"
I have probably 2 or 3 stuck for movies, and thousands stuck for music. Radarr and lidarr adds them automatically, and after many months, they do actually finish downloading
https://www.onlyoffice.com/
Or
https://www.libreoffice.org/