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vimy

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vimy
·hace 2 meses·discuss
Engie was lying. They just didn’t want to be in the nuclear business anymore.
vimy
·hace 4 meses·discuss
Export is only a small part of their emissions.
vimy
·hace 4 meses·discuss
They are boxing in China. Taking away China’s oil. First Venezuela. Now Iran.

Decoupling from China while taking out China’s allies is the overarching foreign policy.
vimy
·hace 6 meses·discuss
Seeking work | iOS / macOS developer | Worldwide | Remote

Location: Belgium - No problem to be available for US timezone if needed

Technologies: Swift | Objective-C | AppKit | UIKit | SwiftUI | MLX / CoreML

If you need a contractor to ship a macOS / iOS app, upgrade an older Objective-C/legacy UIKit project or integrate local AI (LLMs or Image gen) using MLX or CoreML into a real product, I’m a good fit.

Email: see profile
vimy
·hace 7 meses·discuss
ChatGPT has conversation branches. Or do I misunderstand?

Just edit a message and it’s a new branch.
vimy
·hace 7 meses·discuss
Interesting that most of the shows you like are +- 10 years old. From the early Netflix days.
vimy
·hace 12 meses·discuss
Lol, if you don’t understand we need jobs in Europe this debate has no point.

Wow…

> The European Union’s chemical sector is facing a series of headwinds that the European Chemical Industry Council, Cefic, says are pushing the industry to ‘breaking point.’

A joint study by Cefic and Advancy: The Competitiveness of the European Chemical Industry, paints a bleak picture, with the report saying that between 2023 and 2024 announcements were made indicating that 11 million tonnes of production capacity would be closed across 21 major European production sites
vimy
·hace 12 meses·discuss
It’s late, my brain has shut down but I can name 2 on top of my head:

Steel.

Anything chemical. We already lost half our production. :o

You should read some financial newspapers. Things are really bad.
vimy
·hace 12 meses·discuss
Gas price are still twice as high as four years ago. Whole industries are collapsing because electricity is too expensive for factories. Personally, just heating my home has become very expensive.

Europe is deindustrializing. Especially Germany, the EU economic engine, has been hit hard. So yes, the word crisis is used correctly here.

> For instance, BASF, a global chemical giant, recently announced plans to downsize its operations in the country with the reason being unbearably high energy prices in Germany. Now, the company is shifting its focus toward expanding its production efforts in China and the U.S. to access more stable energy costs. Germany’s prime power- the Automotive industry, is also struggling due to immense pressure caused by rising energy costs. A recent study revealed that energy costs for Germany’s automotive sector increased by 20% in 2022 and a similar trend followed in 2023. https://ceinterim.com/deindustrialization-in-germany/
vimy
·hace 12 meses·discuss
Well, we don't have that capacity.
vimy
·hace 12 meses·discuss
> In Europe we don't have much fossil fuels, so our "hippiness" is not really a choice.

We have plenty of oil and gas (normal and fracking). We have just convinced ourselves its better to leave it in the ground and pay foreign countries instead. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

The energy crisis in Europe is a self-inflicted wound.
vimy
·hace 12 meses·discuss
Batteries can’t cover a dunkelflaute that lasts weeks. Like what happened last year (or the year before, not really sure).
vimy
·hace 5 años·discuss
Worst case scenario is that society collapses and nuclear knowledge disappears. Then at some point in the future some farmers will get radiation poisoning and others will avoid the area since it’s “cursed”. This hypothetical problem is hardly anything to worry about when nuclear is sorely needed to help us with an actual problem, climate change.