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ezzaf

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ezzaf
·2 lata temu·discuss
And where are those mining machines that allow this to occur manufactured? How about all the components of the mining machines? The locomotives that take all that iron ore to port? The port infrastructure? The ships that transport the ore to its overseas customers?

WA and its mining wealth and efficiency wouldn't exist without a global market for both its supply and demand.
ezzaf
·2 lata temu·discuss
How do you make a cubic football roll?
ezzaf
·2 lata temu·discuss
They may get reused, but the data shows that:

* Sales of bin liners (for example) do not significantly increase when single use plastic bags are banned

* Plastic bag litter is significantly reduced.

If you want less litter, banning single use plastic bags is a great way to achieve that

Sources https://www.abc.net.au/news/specials/curious-canberra/2017-0... https://www.parliament.act.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/000...
ezzaf
·3 lata temu·discuss
Worse in one specific regard, yes. And they agree with you in their conclusion, saying dust during processing is likely a factor.

You can see the full study here:

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/resp.14625

> In conclusion, this study is the most comprehensive assessment of the physico-chemical characteristics of dusts generated from a wide range of resin-based engineered stones (of high- and reduced-silica contents) and the first to assess how these characteristics relate to the lung cell response, at a scale large enough to potentially identify components of these materials that could be linked to the severity of disease among ES workers. We showed that exposure to high levels of RCS dust during ES processing is likely contributing to disease severity in this occupational group, however, other inorganic components of ES dust, in particular Co and Al, may also be strong contributors. Furthermore, some of the highest inflammatory responses recorded were observed in non-engineered stones, further supporting the view that components other than crystalline silica may be contributing to the pathogenesis of severe silicosis. The outcomes of this study have important implications for future regulation of ES products as they challenge the common view that reducing the crystalline silica alone will eliminate disease risk.

The key take-away I get from that is that it's not silica specifically, but something else about engineered stone that is making it so unsafe to work with. And that's why they are banning the whole product class.
ezzaf
·3 lata temu·discuss
Studies looking into the issue have found non silica compounds cause issues too, and its the engineering process rather than the silica that causes the problem. This is why they haven't created an exemption for low-silica products.

> "It's not just about the silica, it's something specific about the engineered stone products that's causing such a significant issue in workers fabricating these products."

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-12-05/study-finds-safety-co...
ezzaf
·3 lata temu·discuss
This is actually completely reasonable and a positive for the energy grid. Large industrial energy users who can switch off when needed make the grid stronger, not weaker.

To illustrate, imagine a grid with 1000MW max demand and 2000MW of production. Let's say the generation is composed of equal parts solar, wind, gas, and nuclear.

You've got 500MW of always on (nuclear), 500MW dispatchable (gas), and 1000MW intermittent.

When the sun is shining and the wind is blowing, where do you put all your extra energy?

Well if you add on another 500MW of bitcoin mining, you can send it there. And if you hit peak demand when you've got no renewables (or the gas/nuclear is offline) you can switch off your extra demand.

The dispatchable industrial user is helping to pay to keep the extra capacity around you only need a few days a year.
ezzaf
·3 lata temu·discuss
The flip side of that is you can use control of all those high wattage devices to prevent power outages by shifting load to times when more energy is available.

Hopefully, that's how the impulse will be remembered.
ezzaf
·3 lata temu·discuss
Perhaps a more accurate headline would have been this buried deeper in the article

"The US worked through Third World countries and fake companies and finally was able to ship the ore to the US to build the SR-71."

And to complete the loop, Russia is now importing sanctioned American microchips for its missiles via third parties. I wonder if the order form states they will be used in smart pizzas ovens.
ezzaf
·3 lata temu·discuss
The power requirement at cruising speed would quite a lot less than max power would it not? If cruse consumed 60% of max you'd be using closer to 80kW which would give you over 2 hours flight time.
ezzaf
·3 lata temu·discuss
"A FWD EV shouldn't suffer from torque steer."

The torque steer in my FWD EV (BYD Atto) is horrendous. Sure its possible to use clever engineering to manage it, but just switching to EVs isn't going to magically make torque steer go away.
ezzaf
·3 lata temu·discuss
Wouldn't this apply to other continents too? Given for example Vancouver Island is part of North America, then North America (the island, not the continent) would qualify as it too is sub-continental. Europe and Asia would be the only continents excluded by virtue of being connected by land.
ezzaf
·3 lata temu·discuss
They are not part of a continent, but simply islands (well, groups of islands).

Some definitions would include them as part of Oceania.
ezzaf
·3 lata temu·discuss
A quick scan of the Zeppelin list on wikipedia shows that significant proportion were lost after being hit by enemy fire. For example: LZ 20, 21, 22, 23, 28, 29, 32, 33, 34...
ezzaf
·3 lata temu·discuss
If you account for the electric generation and distribution losses, you should do the same for gas.

"It does cost more to run an appliance than to heat with gas."

That's highly dependent on the appliances involved and the price you pay for each fuel. For me, a heat pump is much cheaper to run. You really need to calculate it for each individual situation.
ezzaf
·4 lata temu·discuss
"In Australia a 6.6kw system with 5kw inverter runs about 3500-4500AUD installed and grid connected."

*after subsidies.
ezzaf
·4 lata temu·discuss
Every life is lost eventually, all we have along the way is personal experiences.
ezzaf
·4 lata temu·discuss
You're in luck, the BYD Dolphin should be launching soon in Australia for <$40k and probably 300km range.
ezzaf
·4 lata temu·discuss
> All other outstanding fees, such as tips, will be reviewed as part of the administration process.

Pretty low to withhold tips from their contractors.
ezzaf
·4 lata temu·discuss
Crypto.com claim the entire amount was returned:

"All funds were returned. We have single digit USD million balance on Gate as of now."

https://twitter.com/kris/status/1591610511246102528
ezzaf
·4 lata temu·discuss
$1 000 * $5 000 = $5 000 000

$250 000 first year and $52 500 in following years = 91 years until the money runs out. Of course there is no doubt other costs involved, but you'd make it past a year.