You should look up the NTPC chairman's explanation for why average PLF runs below 75%.
Apparently, the transmission & distribution network for evacuation is overburdened already. This results in plants running below their rated capacities.
Also, you're absolutely wrong about imported coal plants being rare. I don't know of any critical or super critical plants that could use 100% domestic coal without having to blatantly lie on their EIA study about ash disposal. It's just not viable.
That's not true. As anyone in the power industry will tell you, Indian coal, tho voluminous in availability, has a relatively very low calorific content and relatively much higher Ash content. As a result, disposal of ash is far more expensive than project economics can sustain. As a result, imported coal IS the standard, domestic coal may be used as a supplement, and long term supply contracts from local traders who import from sites in Indonesia, et al. is commonplace.
Dell's focus on selling cheaper laptops has resulted in treating the consumer as fungible; and that's the reason for their absolutely appalling customer service.
You're starting to see this across industries where their products and services are commoditized. Quite surprisingly, when the service / product turns into a commodity (due to competition), so does the customer (due to budgetary constraints)
kinda describes what's going on in developing countries too. The lack of innovation in developing country might have almost nothing to do with the previously popular and highly peddled concept of "inferior races"
I started off disagreeing with your statement but as I read further, I became a believer. In fact, "gotcha" and other trick questions are the worst, but understanding CS fundamentals shows that you were paying attention in class and are probably interested (if not passionate) about CS.
If not, there are hundreds of other openings that the candidate can apply to.
I loved this article. Not just the term "AI", I've seen startups abuse the terms "machine learning" and "big data" to such an extent that it literally makes me cringe when I hear them.
How many times have you seen a TechCrunch article where the writer parrots the buzzwords the founder has thrown at them such as "x uses machine learning to sync your contacts with the cloud".
We definitely should. I'm sure there are factors in the ecosystem that rely (but maybe not depend) on mosquito presence.
That's why I love the idea of being able to genetically modify them to produce only male offspring. It provides a nice, asymptotic curve way of culling the population without dramatically changing their ecosystem overnight
I think that irrespective of the title and the benefits of conservation of the ecosystem, letting mosquitoes stay alive needs a far more compelling argument than "it might take away some other animal's snack"
wow. as someone who spends a LOTTTT of time with CSS, this just blew me away. The amount of work, the CSS skill plus the ability to mentally envision and model a three dimensional, living creature. Outstanding.
Apparently, the transmission & distribution network for evacuation is overburdened already. This results in plants running below their rated capacities.