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bracketfocus

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bracketfocus
·2 個月前·discuss
They are likely 200USD+ per TB, so one 250TB drive would be ~50,000USD.

There’s probably bulk pricing, but if you bought 40 drives separately thats 2,000,000USD in storage alone.
bracketfocus
·4 個月前·discuss
From what I understand, the laptop will reduce the refresh rate (of the entire display) to as low as 1Hz if what is being displayed effectively “allows” it.

For example:

- reading an article with intermittent scrolling

- typing with periodic breaks
bracketfocus
·4 個月前·discuss
https://mrshu.github.io/github-statuses/

Sitting at 91% platform uptime over the last 90 days, which is likely inflated due to the perfect uptime over December holidays. My guess is that is attributed to an internal code-freeze and generally reduced traffic.

None of their services have 99.9% availability.
bracketfocus
·5 個月前·discuss
You’d think being charged 1,500 per month for “near zero usage” would motivate you to dig.
bracketfocus
·5 個月前·discuss
How progressive!
bracketfocus
·6 個月前·discuss
Nice. I made something similar ~6 years ago, yours is a lot better though.

https://erikburt.github.io/TSequencer/
bracketfocus
·6 個月前·discuss
Your claim doesn’t seem as definitive as you present it, for China and US at least.

Comparing China and the US it seems like theres a 150 billion ton difference in the cumulative emissions.

Most recent data shows China emitting ~8 billion tons more than the US annually. At that rate that’s about ~20yrs until they flip.

China’s emissions appear to increasing exponentially YoY whereas the US has seen reductions in recent years. That makes it seem like they’d flip in less than 20 years.

Obviously, the emissions on a per capita basis are still nowhere close.

From: https://ourworldindata.org/co2-emissions
bracketfocus
·6 個月前·discuss
The pressure inside the bottle is the same as the outside. So it’s not the same as stomping on an empty bottle.
bracketfocus
·去年·discuss
This makes sense. A lot of end-users have internet speeds that can outpace the decompression speeds of heavily compressed files. Seems like there would be an irrational psychological aspect to it as well.

Unfortunately for the hoster, they either have to eat the cost of the added bandwidth from a larger file or have people complain about slow decompression.