Properate is an employee-owned social-purpose cleantech startup. We "digital twin" communities so that we can plan energy and sustainability upgrades for each home within them. We value self-starters, growth-oriented professionals, taking ownership of tasks, and clear communication with the rest of the team. By joining Properate, you get to experience rapid growth and vest company shares.
I disagree. It's a rudimentary features of all these models to take a concept picture and refine it. It won't be like the director would give a prompt and get a feature length movie, it will be more like the director uses MS Paint (as in a common software for non tech people) to make a scene outline and directs AI to make a stylish and animated version of that. Something is wrong? just erase it and try again. Dalle2 had this interface from the get go. The models just haven't gotten there yet.
This was such a delighting read for me. Not because it is a success story, but because of the way it talks about the human interactions. Thinking back, it is true that most of my very seemingly random leads came from people who were weakly connected with me and they would be considered equals.
Perhaps beyond that point of a weak connection is why SV is different than everywhere else. The author was ready to take a position in a startup out of the basic knowledge of the founder and the general idea. This is practically unheard of where I live. Yes, everyone wants to think it's like that, but in reality they will be asking for a "data room" from a week-old startup.
Yet again, you can't blame people because I don't know many intern-to-$20B-Adobe-exit around here... and there goes a cycle
I think their point is that the holders of the money after ICO can easily get away with doing nothing and just extract the funds. In reality, their payment is not tied to the interest of the coin holders, legally, or for the sake of their reputation. They can be anonymous.
> I clocked in 106 hours for $1,703 in my first month on Upwork.
So $16 an hour. There is a lot of flexibility of course, but this person does also sound elite for that pay scale. They are even making sure the opening of their proposal has a punch to it.
Are there low time commitment opportunities out there that pay way better?
My company has one, just a few hours a week, higher pay, and it eventually is even more economical, not needing proposals etc. Just wondering how common those low-hour part time jobs are.
This article fails to present a fair view and it's too shallow to be taken seriously.
I have had the opportunity to be involved with a big player in the mid-C power market and it quickly showed me that the real challenges are different than what Reddit armchair experts identify.
tl;dr: just head over to [MIT's EN-Road Climate Simulator](https://www.climateinteractive.org/tools/en-roads/), move the Nuclear dial to maximum adoption, and see what changes. You have gone from 4.1 degrees of temperature change to 3.9C. The 0.2C that is almost negligible compared to other solutions like reducing methane emissions.
The US's Green New Deal is a comprehensive document not only about climate protection but also about social injustice. The US does need something like this Deal and making a case for a "Nuclear New Deal" does not address the same issues. The internet appears to think of nuclear energy as this misunderstood miracle that the interest groups and politicians have killed.
I do think nuclear has an important role in lowering electrification costs when the carbon pricing goes up and we do need to start looking at SMRs and nuclear fusion much more seriously; below I will try to balance some of the article's points.
Before I start, I'd like to highlight that to my understanding, the biggest sustainable energy challenges come from the demand side not the supply.
> when wildfires broke out the following month, a blanket of ash blotted out the sun in some places, cutting the state’s solar energy output by one-third.
Under the wildfire circumstances many of the energy generation plants, including nuclear, may need to adjust. Solar is 20% of california's generation, so the roughly 7% cut is significant but [was not the culprit as someone pointed out](https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/2020/08/why-renew...).
Solar has an important advantage over nuclear in a disaster: it is decentralized. Independent communities can rely on their own solar power while they connect to the bigger grid as well. This creates resilience in case one of them is cut.
> Energy in California is incredibly expensive for ratepayers
Some reasons for this are environmental restrictions that stops California from buying relatively cheaper hydro power, inefficiencies in PG&E, and just generally not enough ratepayer anger.
> Reactors from civilian plants don’t blow up like atomic bombs and nuclear waste isn’t a glowing toxic ooze.
The reactors work under extreme safety considerations. Prior to Chernobyl the scientists [did not hold the concern](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q3d3rzFTrLg) that a reactor is capable of making such disaster. The problem is that like most engineering we need to see what happens to fix it, and the sensitivity around nuclear increases the cost of that. The waste does glow, just not in the visible spectrum.
> elements such as uranium and plutonium have such long half-lives, the radiation they emit is low enough to safely hold in your hand.
You probably do not want to do that for a prolonged period. Also, the big issue is not only with the direct radiation but with the particles getting into the body.
The idea behind our green movement is not leaving a problem for the next generations. The nuclear energy at the advancement level of today does not guarantee that.
Calling all entrepreneurs out there who are in the British Columbia sustainable energy market or would like to enter it. We are ENFORS (Entrepreneurs for Sustainability), a volunteer group active since 2017 in the BC Sustainable Energy Association with experience in the local startup, tech, and sustainability ecosystems. We are looking for innovative products or business initiatives in the field of sustainability to help launch or grow.
Think of us as your supporters, advisors, or potential early power users. We start with sharing our first impressions of your website or business idea and extend this all the way to helping you access the right resources to keep your momentum.
If that sounds interesting, head to https://en4s.bcsea.org and fill out our contact form.
Looking forward to hearing about your great ideas!
Properate is an employee-owned social-purpose cleantech startup. We "digital twin" communities so that we can plan energy and sustainability upgrades for each home within them. We value self-starters, growth-oriented professionals, taking ownership of tasks, and clear communication with the rest of the team. By joining Properate, you get to experience rapid growth and vest company shares.
Our current job openings are:
- UI/UX Designer
- Software Testing (QA) Engineer
- Geospatial (GIS) data analyst
Please send your resume/portfolio to: [email protected]