One of the best ways to ensure you have energy is to reduce use and dependence. A huge amount of energy goes to heating and hot water so insulation and shorter showers with on demand can drastically reduce battery and solar panel needs.
Probably thin so it can make a foldable screen. That seems to be the thinking around this because nobody really cares about thinness after a point. Also, a bonus, thin/small generally means better efficiency.
I think what Apple is pushing for is computing efficiency. It still gets faster but with much less power. Focusing on performance solely would be the wrong way to evaluate these chips.
https://www.tomsguide.com/news/apple-m3-chip
A lot of bash errors are not understanding possible cases due to white space.. which shellcheck catches. After using it for a while, I don’t even really worry about white space because of the good habits I’ve learned/(been forced to use).
Also, use shellcheck. Incorporate it into you editor. Fix all warning and don’t ignore them. This will push you deep into bash syntax rabbit holes but you come out better the other side.
BASH is like Obi Wan. It isn’t the most powerful or flashiest, but it survived a long time, where others didn’t, for very good reasons. Bash runs basically everywhere. It has many modern features you wouldn’t expect. Its syntax is literally what you would type on the command line if you were diagnosing or fixing systems so you don’t need to transpile to another language. Its reliance on other programs means it is glue and can easily incorporate highly cohesive functionality/tools others write and maintain. Also, it’s been around and is everywhere so you don’t worry about trying to incorporate the current latest and greatest declarative tool (which will blow over in 5 years) into your other workflows. Basically, don’t disparage a Jedi/tool that has survived where others didn’t. There is a reason.
Totally agree. This is just cutting in places they’ve probably wanted to cut for a while. They’ll hire back in a year or two as things ramp up, and on projects they consider important.
Agree on the economic approach and with a preference for cap and trade. Create a certain amount of emission billets and auction them off. Then restrict the amount each bullet allows over time. It has economics, planning and reductions all in one.
Agile is to Lenin as Agile processes are to Stalin.
Read the Agile Manifesto. That’s what Agile is. All else is either:
- (good) trying to implement the Agile Manifesto, or
- (bad) trying to make current process appear like Agile.
Mine cuts off at 35F and I have to manually switch on the oil. I live where winter is normally below 35 at night. Very annoying system. (I didn’t pick it)
I think people should know how stark the differences for assembly in the US are vs outside of it. Something that costs, at low prototype volumes mind you, $20 in China for a dozen boards or so, would run hundreds of dollars in the US and still take the same amount of time. As it scales up, the ratio might improve, but these aren't like 10%-20% differences.
It doesn't. They claimed that so they could enact the tariffs, otherwise it would be a WTO illegal tariff. I think Canada/others are arguing that it is not a security risk and therefore is indeed an illegal tariff. This is what I remember from some articles. Please correct/elaborate.