This isn't completely true, but it is the current standard.
A website can detect and block many user/password attempts from the same IP and block IPs that are suspicious.
Websites can detect elivated login fails across many IPs are react accordingly (It may be reasonable to block all logins for a time if they detect an attack like this)
I'm sure there are other strategies, I don't know how often they are actually employed, but I wish companies would start taking this sort of attack more seriously (even if it's not at all hacking)
Just because a politician looking to be voted into power suggests a simple solution for something, don't blindly assume that solution will actually have any impact.
The truck came with an 80 AMP charger (I'm assuming it's the one that also lets the truck power the house).
His house is currently only a 100 AMP service, so he would need to update the panel to 200 AMP.
The transformer his house uses and shared with his neighbors is already at capacity and would need to be upgraded (that's the bulk of the 12k charge)
He ended up installing a different 30AMP charger which is still more than he needs (I believe he also acknowledged that the 15 AMP household outlet would also have worked for his needs)
Keep in mind that buying photos isn't the only application of NFTs. People stopped buying valueless photos, but other implementations of NFTs kept on being used.
They use Videotrons network. You're covered well in the Ottawa area. Elsewhere in Canada you roam on the other carriers, but you're able to use your plan as you always would. You only get charged more if you roam more than you're at home for 3 months in a row.
Overall I'm very happy with the service. Data rollover is such an amazing thing.
What drives me crazy is that the population growth we're seeing now isn't even all that crazy.
It's a bit higher right now, but it's not a significant outlier when plotted on a graph going back 50 years.
Yes over the last 20 years immigration has been consuming a larger portion of that fairly consistent pie, but assuming we didn't stop having kids 20 years ago we would be in a similar spot as we are today.
The real problem is that we stopped building housing. The rate of houses being built slowed down a few decades ago, and that was always going to be cause us problems, regardless of if we had stopped immigration, but had we done that, our population stagnating would have caused us other problems.
End of the pandemic. Which in this case means we have an effective vaccine, and as long as people get the damn thing COVID seems to stop killing people at such a high rate.
The transition from rural to urban has been happening for the last 100 years and it's going to keep happening.
But we can't just ignore the 15-20% of the population who are currently rural and act like they can just move into a city and it would solve all problems.
If someone lives 20km outside of a city, they are barely rural.
I appreciate the desire to have better public transit whereever we can, but ignoring the existing realities isn't helpful.
And in your case you're likely breaking even or getting a little back from the carbon pricing system.
You as the consumer isn't been told fuck you. You're being slightly incentivised to make better choices, and rewarded if you do, but not penalized if you don't.
It's not wrong headed at all. There is always an alternative.
In some cases that alternative is transit.
In some cases that alternative is cycling.
In some cases that alternative is carpooling.
In some cases that alternative is driving an existing car more efficiently.
In some cases that alternative is choosing to buy a ICE smaller car.
In some cases that alternative is buying a BEV.
In all those cases, even a small step will reward someone for making that choise.
While yes it looks like things are more expensive, it's still effectively a wealth transfer where the poorest get more money back from the system.
It's sorta genius in that way, poorer folk are still rewarded for picking the less polluting option, but in the end don't actually end up payijg more after the quarterly rebate
The modern-day version of the catalogue will instead focus on low-rise builds, such as small multiplexes, student housing and seniors' residences, then explore a potential catalogue for higher-density construction.
This isn't completely true, but it is the current standard.
A website can detect and block many user/password attempts from the same IP and block IPs that are suspicious.
Websites can detect elivated login fails across many IPs are react accordingly (It may be reasonable to block all logins for a time if they detect an attack like this)
I'm sure there are other strategies, I don't know how often they are actually employed, but I wish companies would start taking this sort of attack more seriously (even if it's not at all hacking)