HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

thinkcontext

no profile record

Submissions

A Niche Technology Became a Choke Point for A.I

nytimes.com
4 points·by thinkcontext·15 giorni fa·1 comments

Covid vaccination cut risk of adverse heart events, large study finds

statnews.com
12 points·by thinkcontext·25 giorni fa·0 comments

Driver, 87, dies after Tesla on Autopilot mode crashes into pond

usatoday.com
18 points·by thinkcontext·mese scorso·9 comments

Trump admin to force foreigners in the U.S. to apply for a green card abroad

npr.org
5 points·by thinkcontext·2 mesi fa·1 comments

Fungus-powered farming delivers higher yields and better-tasting crops

phys.org
3 points·by thinkcontext·2 mesi fa·1 comments

Lawmakers say US Military used laser to take down Border Protection drone in TX

apnews.com
59 points·by thinkcontext·4 mesi fa·58 comments

South Korean crypto firm accidentally sends $44B in Bitcoin to users

cnbc.com
1 points·by thinkcontext·5 mesi fa·0 comments

China Issues First Penalty for Starlink Use in Territorial Waters

gcaptain.com
5 points·by thinkcontext·7 mesi fa·0 comments

Waymo's self-driving cars passed stopped school buses

npr.org
3 points·by thinkcontext·7 mesi fa·1 comments

'Robotaxi has reached a tipping point': Baidu, Nvidia leaders see momentum

cnbc.com
2 points·by thinkcontext·8 mesi fa·1 comments

Internet Archive's legal fights are over, but its founder mourns what was lost

arstechnica.com
224 points·by thinkcontext·8 mesi fa·136 comments

DeepSeek's Push into Africa Reveals China's AI Power Grab

bloomberg.com
4 points·by thinkcontext·9 mesi fa·3 comments

The Extraordinary Rise of Electric Cars in Developing Countries

bloomberg.com
11 points·by thinkcontext·10 mesi fa·4 comments

comments

thinkcontext
·8 giorni fa·discuss
But they did resist locking it down, recall Musk making fun of concerns? They clearly don't take governance seriously, its whatever Musk is gravitating to in his filter bubble.
thinkcontext
·23 giorni fa·discuss
I believe that they made the "butter" out of the leftovers (paraffin) from making liquid fuel out of the coal. So, its not a straight 60:1 ratio, you'd need to add some more products to the equation.
thinkcontext
·23 giorni fa·discuss
Is it not possible that they build the first one and things don't go smoothly and they need to make some adjustments for subsequent builds?
thinkcontext
·23 giorni fa·discuss
This is a brand new type, there's no way that equivalent operation to a decades old design with centuries of operational experience can be assumed. Presumably its been designed for high uptime but it would not be unusual for new technology like this to require some refinement.
thinkcontext
·24 giorni fa·discuss
There already is a multi $B market for the amino acid methionine, made both through a synthetic process and a fermented process. It's used to supplement animal feed. So it's possible to synthesize nutrition economically. And it's a good idea to focus on animal feed since there's not the ick reaction to humans eating science project food.

I've read lately about another startup Savor that aims to make synthetic fats. They can make it in a variety of forms of it, from cooking oil to something like butter. They claim they can make it both much cheaper and with a much smaller carbon footprint than through conventional agriculture.

https://www.hertzfoundation.org/news/hertz-fellows-tech-comp...
thinkcontext
·24 giorni fa·discuss
I'm confused about this investment vehicle. China, their largest external trading partner, is notably absent from the list. I'm assuming they would be willing to extend Iran credit and Iran would probably prefer to deal with a Chinese company over a US company. Are US companies going to offer lower loan rates than Chinese companies? Or is the US going to use financial controls to only allow Iran to conduct international business through approved banks?
thinkcontext
·25 giorni fa·discuss
> And Biden ran a secret covert war using the banking system which is also questionably legal.

The industry is infested with scammers, what a great idea to tie the stability of the banking system to it.

> At least with the current you know what is happening and what is allowed.

So you would categorize bribes and North Korean style displays of fealty as a normal part of doing business?
thinkcontext
·27 giorni fa·discuss
The crypto "industry" had a series of multi-$B scams, seems like strong regulation would be called for. On the other hand, Trump executed a rug pulling token for himself and his wife days before his 2nd term and sells pardons to fraudsters and money launders. I know that inspires confidence.
thinkcontext
·28 giorni fa·discuss
I confused BlackCore with Black Cube, a different Israeli private oppo research and dirty tricks group of former intelligence agents. They gained attention for their dirty campaigns against Harvey Weinstein's accusers, NSOs critics and Hungarian opposition.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Cube
thinkcontext
·mese scorso·discuss
I'm extremely unlikely to click on a YT links without some decent context of what I can expect.
thinkcontext
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Another immigration policy that would have negatively effected Trump's own wife. Oh well, she got hers.

This could be a big deal for Big Tech. I wonder how personal experience of Musk and Huang will play into how they react.
thinkcontext
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Curious how the tech lobby will react. You would hope Musk and Huang might take their own personal experience into account.
thinkcontext
·2 mesi fa·discuss
I mean, I really dislike what Musk has become but SpaceX has brought about a huge leap in access to space. Last year they launched more than the rest of the world combined, including the rest of the US. They now own more operating satellites than the rest of the world combined. When the rest of the Western world's launchers have had problems over the last few years (Ariane, Vulcan, EU Soyuz, New Glenn, Antares) SpaceX has been able to absorb their payloads with relative ease rather than waiting many years for other arrangements. They've saved the US many $Bs in launch costs by undercutting the incumbent monopoly. Cheaply and easily reusing a rocket was thought impossible, now it's routine and every rocket maker on earth is attempting to copy them.
thinkcontext
·2 mesi fa·discuss
I read elsewhere that this strain is less deadly than previous strains. I'm no epidemiologist but being less deadly could allow it to spread further, which is obviously concerning.

Also, the article says surveillance picked up the spread late. I wonder if the US's pulling back from the WHO and other international functions had anything to do with this, it used to make up a big chunk of its resources and staff.
thinkcontext
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Not to take away from your point about psilocybin but the mushroom brought up, lions mane, is not hallucinogenic.
thinkcontext
·2 mesi fa·discuss
> It’s an interesting aside in the story but if you’re under investigation for a DUI you can just refuse the field sobriety tests and it appears they don’t follow up so you’ll be declared innocent even if you were arrested for felony DUI.

I assume it varies but for most places if you refuse roadside field sobriety tests and they feel you have given indicators of impairment they will take you into custody. Then they'll take you to the station and give you the option of taking a breathalyzer and if you refuse again your license is automatically suspended for a year.
thinkcontext
·2 mesi fa·discuss
It might be difficult to separate that out from the effect of US tariffs.
thinkcontext
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Do the places you are referring to not require heat? If so I don't see why having a separate heating and cooling system would be cheaper to maintain than a single system. Come to think of it I don't see why a heatpump would be more expensive to maintain than split AC. I guess there is some extra circuitry to make sure it doesn't ice up in the winter and maybe backup resistance heating builtin.
thinkcontext
·2 mesi fa·discuss
> Look at how much pushback, red tape, and cost there is to building a solar farm, road, datacenter or yes, nuclear plant compared to China

That's quite a comparison given China's governance and environmental record. China will take your land, poison you, imprison you if you protest and suppress any mention of it on social media or in the press. Of course a business can get a lot done in that environment, is that really something to aspire to?

Some level of permitting reform is warranted but I would think hard about whether you want to adopt China's policies.
thinkcontext
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Uh, from the UAE's perspective it is much worse. They sold many $Bs worth of oil and had become a global tourist hub, now they can't do those things. They are being patient for the time being but there's a limit. We don't know what that limit is but if 6 months go by and the Strait's not open can we really expect them to not pay Iran a toll and price their oil in yuan?