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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/)MA
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2 yr. ago

  • Just because I'm a car history guy, I think you have some broken information about Opel.

    The company predated Nazi Germany by a long shot as a general equipment manufacturer in the 1800s and was one of the biggest auto producers in the 1920s holding over 25% of the market. They were actually bought by General Motors (not Ford) in 1929.

    Where you did get it right is the famous Brandenburg factory was funded partly by the Nazi government and to specifically make the Opel Blitz trucks. Which were at the time just a general work truck in high demand. But soon after GM lost control and the plant was used to exclusively make military trucks for the war. But this is the same for any factory at the time.

    A lot of this can be explained by the US political attitude to Germany where they kept up positive diplomatic relationships up until the attacks in the Pacific. The large companies like GM didn't have a direct reason to divest from their ties to Nazi regime, as they weren't really denounced themselves and still an important trading partner. Their investors would have had protests on a change of course. For GM, Opel was a huge success at the time.

    Of course cutting ties and divesting would have been the moral thing to do, but capitalism has no morals... Apple doesn't mind making products in China today but sanctions on tech are already changing the course for companies like Nvidia, not without lots of protest by their leaders.

    Also yes Henry Ford was idolized by Hitler and Ford didn't mind that one bit.

  • There are the mandated penalties for late arrivals. Diverting could result in a 24h delay for ~250 passengers which could mean a 250k fine

    Except despite all the BS reasons AC says flights are outside of their control, this one is definitely outside their control.

    So that doesn't hold.I wonder what their decision was based on.

  • I used to fly them a lot and for international travel and I thought they were passable. Comparable to other options.

    The domestic stuff was sometimes served a lot better by WestJet but even they were quite scrappy. Domestic is hard, European carriers do that a lot better.

    But post-pandemic even their international stuff is an embarrassment. And among my colleagues (worldwide team) they've noticed too!

  • My point here is burning paper on a mass scale instead of using wires or an IC is not a solution, not even a little bit like biodegradable food containers.

    Its solving a problem that isn't really a problem!

    I'm not sure how much of this is the actual project, or the author of the article, as there are all kinds of odd claims in there.

  • So it's proposing we burn traces on single-use paper to solve climate change.

    RFID tags as a security device are important and they can last as long as keys.

    As a business card we can just stop doing it. Solved!

  • What sucks is those components are wrapped together with silicon valley (wannabe) software that's so rushed and poorly planned (except the monetization!) that minor sensor failures take down the whole system. At least it looks pretty.

    A few decades of standards and convergence I hope will result in some extremely reliable cars and lots of aftermarket parts.