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2 yr. ago

  • "How did this happen?"

    Well let's see, they were found at a 100 percent FIFO coal mine that ships ridiculous quantities of equipment, materials, and food from all across Australia and the world on a daily basis, and 600 people are shuffled to and from Brisbane every week via the local airport.

    I wonder how those ants ended up there, it's a complete mystery.

  • They also iterate very quickly.

    First car design - "functional" is being polite about it.

    Fifteen years later when they are on their tenth revision - pretty damn good.

    Meanwhile US car manufacturers can squeeze in a revision/refresh every 5 years if they're lucky.

  • I've test driven a few BYD models here in Australia. 50 thousand dollarydoos for an electric car that goes 400+km, can power your house in a blackout, has all the normal electric car performance (6 seconds to 100kmhr) and is chock full of user comforts and safety features.

    There are a LOT of these getting around in Brisbane, and for good reason. I didn't get one this time round, but by the time the lease expires on my Volvo EX30 in 4 years, I'll be looking pretty hard at BYD. Especially if they get their new solid state batteries going by then.

  • Exactly. Every person worries that they are one shaky phone video away from internet mockery.

    It worked out ok for this guy but only by a stroke of internet luck.

  • "Buuuuut I need my RANGER ULTRAMAX PRO LAND BARGE TITANIUM EDITION to carry all my toooools!" - every young tradie ever.

    Meanwhile old painters are still getting around in falcon utes just fine.

  • Why?

    Because people should be looking to expand their knowledge by getting into the details. By handwaving those details away with an AI summary that may or may not actually summarise the article correctly, people lose the opportunity to learn.

    If your attention span or cognitive capacity can't get you through a basic Wikipedia article you need to work on that, for your own betterment.

    If you're reading an article and you're lost in the weeds you should be taking a step back to simpler concepts in Wikipedia (or elsewhere) first. Don't trust a LLM to make a coherent summary about a topic you can't understand, because you won't be able to tell if it's feeding you bullshit.

  • That's right - the Australian government has bulk purchasing power and that's a big motivator for pharmaceutical companies. When companies get their medications listed in the PBS, sales in Australia skyrocket.

    There are some very expensive drugs on the PBS simply because it makes financial sense from a cost of care perspective for the government to do so.

  • It's BLE - Bluetooth Low Energy.

    Basically devices with BLE can listen for a wake-up command and turn on, similar to the "magic packet" of wake on Ethernet.

    Super convenient for "find my device" applications, also nice to be able to connect and activate the device without having to press a power button like a peasant.

    It also means that most devices with BLE end up flat within a month. I had a speaker with BLE and had to deliberately download a much older version of the Android partner app to turn it off, as they dropped the option to do so in later versions for "convenience". With BLE on it would be flat in about 6 weeks regardless of whether I'd used it or not , which really ruined ad-hoc usage for me.

  • The Apples and Googles and Microsofts of the world are all about offering cloud services to hold your precious data, for what is essentially "free" to the end user. Push you into their services with dark patterns, make it a pain in the ass to do without them, join the cloud, it's awesome.

    Unfortunately all that comes with a catch - when automated services fail, and self-service solutions fail to resolve it, you have zero chance or ability to contact a real live human who can apply reason and judgement to sort out the issue. You and all your data are basically fucked at that point.

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  • We've all been there, back in the day haha

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  • But they had "kernel tweaks for buttery smooth performance!!! \*"

    oh yeah bluetooth, wifi, fingerprint sensor doesn't work, camera takes green tint pictures, phone app crashes, and I've had some hard lockups, but it's been my daily driver for two hours now and it's awesome!!1!

  • Perhaps it’s time to start researching alternative materials.

    Plenty of metals floating around in space. Just need to go and get them.

    Only need to capture one decent sized metalliferous asteroid from a near earth orbit and we'd be set for a century or two.

  • Saturn V was done with the resources of a nation behind it, because they had to beat the Soviets. That rocket also only went up, and was not reusable, with a tiny fraction of the Apollo mission hardware returning to Earth.

    All of this with less computing power than some egg timers of today.

    There was considerable computing power on the ground supporting the missions.

  • showed the "percent of time spent viewing content posted by 'friends'" had declined over the past two years, from 22 to 17 percent on Facebook and from 11 to 7 percent on Instagram.

    This is ENTIRELY because of Meta's content algorithms that buried the content from everyone's friends under a torrent of shit. It's pretty disingenuous for the company that controls that algorithm to present this as some inevitable fait accompli, something out of their hands, oh well.

    But of course Meta was terrified of people just viewing all their friend's posts and then logging off for the day because, as everyone knows, line must always go up.

  • Australian here.

    Step 1: design your damn toilets so they do not clog.

    Step 2: there is no step 2.

    Seriously, half a century of toilet use here in Aus and I've never caused - or discovered even - a blocked toilet at home.

    Clearly the fact that I can buy a toilet plunger from the local hardware store indicates that this can happen here. But it seems that every American household has a toilet plunger and poop knife on standby and many articles are devoted to what clogs, and how to unclog, American toilets.

    There are better designs for both toilets and plumbing out there guys, maybe you should look into using them.

  • Everything is fine in the Apple ecosystem as long as you want to do something The Apple Way™.

    As soon as you want to do something differently to how Apple decrees it should be done, then you're screwed.

  • These kind of "manual" a/c units normally have a little sticker or a caution in the manual to "wait 5 minutes before restarting".

    People can easily trigger this kind of thing just by turning the thermostat back and forth, so there is usually a thermal cutout on the compressor to keep them mostly safe.

    You can usually hear it when it activates, there will be a hum from the stalled compressor for a few seconds and then a little click, and then the compressor won't start for a minute or two.

  • This kind of reliability is huge for prosthetic limbs, fitness trackers, and robotic arms, where precision and durability are non-negotiable.

    Thanks, AI slop! Sensors that have been durability tested for a few hundred cycles will be perfect for prosthetic devices that can do that in half a day of office work, or fitness trackers that can do that in five minutes, or in robotic arms that can perform that kind of movement in 60 seconds! I'm going to use them in my next safety critical robotics project for sure!

  • It'll be fine as long as you don't try and start it up again within a few minutes of turning it off.

    Pressure just needs to slowly bleed from the high pressure side to the low pressure side of the compressor before it starts again, so that it isn't initially stalled against high pressure.