People try really hard in Germany. But it's still only at something like 40% of stuff recycled. Also, most of that "recycling" means "burn it" for energy.
Beer bottles do remarkably well in Germany. Mostly because a lot of the beer drank is by major brands who Reuse the bottles, and there are good money incentives for people to bring them back (or give them to homeless so they do). Beer bottles don't get moved very far on trucks burning fossil fuels. That system is one of the best in Germany and the world.
Moral of the story 1: drink beer like Germans.
Moral 2: Even in societies that try really hard to recycle well... they still mostly fail.
> Despite Amazon's posturing about its care for open source, Elastic's response was pathetic. If Elastic doesn't like their Apache 2.0 software getting forked, maybe they're the ones with "fake altruism or benevolence" (their words). If Elastic is feeling threatened by AWS, they've chosen the wrong business model.
You still have stocks in Amazon?
You worked there for eight years apparently. You are part of the problem. You took part in all their tax dodging, open source exploiting bullshit. You took their massive pay and fucked over lots of people.
An Open Source advocacy group with cloud providers on their board, and cloud providers who pay them hundreds of thousands per year. Their mission is to be evangelists for their definition of Open Source. The one that benefits cloud providers.
Of course a lobby group like this should be transparent. But I don't expect a group like that with closed mailing lists to actually be Open.
For the amount they make off community work, they contribute a tiny amount.
Right near the top of their list (in your link) they brag about contributing to Linux. Let's see how well their brag stacks up? Looking at the contribution reports on Linux, are AWS in the top 10?
Remember that AWS pays the Open Source Initiative, and that their members often post on Open Source related topics here without disclosing their conflict of interest.
Remember that AWS takes from developers, but doesn't give back anywhere near what they have made from the communities work.
Rather than supporting Elastic... they decide to make a hostile fork. AWS are a bunch of jerks.
Thanks for your contribution. It's really good. Your sentences are definitely not too long. You definitely understand the difference between a comment and an essay.
The biggest selling electric car is from Japan. The Nissan leaf.
Yes, you used the weasel word "reputable" - but what better reputation is there than having the most sales? Nissan from Japan sells the most electric cars.
Apart from sales, the Nissan Leaf scores 7-8/10 and 4/5 from the critics. Which is around the same as the Tesla model 3.
If the critics think they are ok, and they sell the most of all electric cars... then they can be considered reputable.
By abused you probably meant abused without payment to Google, or abused by people external to Google. People who pay or are Google can continue their abuse.
Beer bottles do remarkably well in Germany. Mostly because a lot of the beer drank is by major brands who Reuse the bottles, and there are good money incentives for people to bring them back (or give them to homeless so they do). Beer bottles don't get moved very far on trucks burning fossil fuels. That system is one of the best in Germany and the world.
Moral of the story 1: drink beer like Germans.
Moral 2: Even in societies that try really hard to recycle well... they still mostly fail.