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  • No, I wouldn’t call that diplomacy.

    This is why you and I aren't diplomats.

    If the head of NATO is dependent upon the USA for lots of support to NATO, then it is in NATO's interest for the head of the USA to like NATO. If you know the head of the USA is incredibly shallow and you can achieve that support simply by sending an email/text message which requires zero dollars, and at best, a bit of political capital, then its a good deal for the NATO head to do that.

    This is what is both fascinating and horrible about diplomacy and geopolitics. Its not about being "right" or "moral" in the moment. Its about getting what you want hopefully in service of the overall goal of of your interests. Sometimes that overall goal is "right" and "moral" in the case of NATO usually.

  • Why would it be random?

    Perhaps I should have used the word "uncontrolled" instead of random. If you're expecting this bacteria to work against, say, a field with plastic litter in it, its going to be in contact with lots of other things made of plastic that aren't waste. If the bacteria is able to self replicate, and you've released it into the wild, you've effectively killed the use for nearly all plastics as things that are still in use will be decomposed.

    We are already releasing huge amounts of artificial chemicals into the wild.

    Thats a bizarre argument. That would be like saying: "We have lots of murders in the world, so why not intentionally murder more people?"

  • Remember popping in a CD?

    It could hold up to like 15 songs!

    And remember paying $20 in 1996 for that 15 song CD, and remember your heartbreak when you listen through for the first time and find out there was only the one song you knew that you really liked and maybe two others that were just okay?

    Dark days indeed.

  • Well we went full circle. YouTube and Netflix killed the tv because they were young rebels that challenged status quo and had no ads, and ads on tv went very long. Now YouTube, Netflix and all others just went to shit because of annoying and long ads, or paying extra to skip ads, gathering of usage data, spying on users, selling data, censoring, and building huge monopolies.

    I don't think your gripe is with Netflix on this. The reason they were able to offer mountains of commercial free content was because content owners didn't think "streaming licensing rights" were worth very much, so they sold them very cheaply. When content owners saw their DVD sales dry up and the started looking where their audiences went, and found them subscribing to Netflix. So when the content licensing contract renewals came up, the content owners jacked up the prices to high heaven. Netflix had the choice to either drop content or raise prices. They did a chunk of both, then again at the next renew, and again, etc.

    Scripted content is generally expensive. The alternative is the dirt-cheap-to-produce "reality TV". If you wonder why you're seeing so much more "reality tv" this is why.

  • Are you citing something specific, as in a toolset that has been leaked that the government is known to use with what it can retrieve or do you mean theoretically? I mean, sure, if an organization went to the extremes and desoldered the NVRAM from the phone and dumped the contents from an external reader they could likely get much more than fragments.

  • Iran, take a good look at the amount of military support Armenia received when reached out to Putin after an attack by Azerbaijan:

    "Despite Armenia's appeals for assistance from the Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO) and Russia during Azerbaijan's incursions in May 2021 and September 2022, both entities declined to assist, leaving Armenia on its own.[62][63] "

    source

    And Armenia was a signatory on a mutual defense agreement CSTO. Iran isn't.

  • Tangentially, I was chatting with the owner of my local pub in Boston recently, and apparently it’s become something of a game (?!?!?!?!?) to try to slip people mickeys around here.

    In some time periods in some places in the world, getting a hand cut off was punishment for theft. While that is a bit extreme, maybe assholes convicted of this should lose the final knuckle of their pinky finger as punishment for drugging people at bars.

  • (And, yes, unless apocalypse, and unless battery dies, I know.)

    Simple batteries can be made from readily available materials post apocalypse such as potatoes or citrus fruits like lemons. You'd need a fair amount of them for any appreciable time. After the fall of civilization, such required foods would be considered offerings to the gods to grant the knowledge stored on your Kindle long after its Lithium battery bit the dust. This would be until humans are able to make lead acid gravity cells, which again, isn't that difficult. They aren't very portable, but if you are just needing to run the device you don't need it to be.

  • Is it possible that Home Depot’s supply chain is contaminated with knockoff parts? I guess.

    I never suggested anywhere that knockoffs were the cause.

    The idea that there exists some lesser standards for home builds is a myth I’ve seen repeated over and over again and it simply is not true. But the idea that there are somehow separate standards for home and commercial electrical fixtures, and that home Depot is selling people the former, inferior standard is absolutely, 100% nonsense.

    There are absolutely mechanical difference in residential and commercial constructed receptacles in general. Hospital grade being even higher.

    source

    Is it your belief that Home Depot and Leviton are simply fleecing uneducated buyers by charging more for "Designed for EV charging" NEMA 14-50 outlets?

    Leviton "Designed for EV charging" NEMA 14-50 receptacle


    source

    ...vs the cheap contractor grade outlet?

    Leviton contractor grade NEMA 14-50 receptacle

    source

    How about Enphase/Clippercreek including their own NEMA 14-50 outlet which is a $60 Bryant receptacle? Why isn't Enphase putting a $10 NEMA 14-50 in the box instead?

    Here's the official Enphase Training Installation video from the company (timestamped to the NEMA 14-50 receptacle instructions)

    Enphase Training video timestamped to the NEMA 14-50 comment

    "Even if you have a NEMA 14-50 already, Enphase is requiring you to replace that as we've seen some overheating from some older receptacles"

    Is your assertion that Leviton and Enphase are just scaremongering unassuming consumers?

  • This is complete nonsense.

    You don't need to take my word for it. Simply search "ev outlet melted" and you'll get piles of results showing the gory melted results (just equipment, not people gore).

    Charging a Tesla:

    Charging an Audi:

    Charging a Rivian:

    People are finding the cheap NEMA 14-50 outlets just can't handle the high current EV charging long term. The recommendation is for a Commercial grade NEMA 14-50 outlet instead of the cheap residential ones. Keep in mind the cheap ones work for weeks or months. Sometimes years, but this is the result of many of the cheap ones eventually.

    Enphase/Clippercreek chargers actually ship with the high quality Commercial grade outlet specifically for this reason because they don't want you buying one from Home Depot for $10 and damaging the charger or your home.

    Any UL listed plug will sustain a load indefinitely. There are millions of them running dryers in the US for hours at a time already.

    Home clothes dryers aren't drawing 40A continuous current for 5-6 hours. Even when a clothes dryer is running for an hour its not drawing the full wire rated current. It cycles on and off the heating elements during the drying cycle.