Semester3383

joined 1 month ago
[–] Semester3383@lemmy.world 16 points 4 days ago (4 children)

FWIW, I'm in the process of starting a grid-tied solar installation. Total cost, without batteries, will be about $70,000. That's a 17kW system, that should produce an average of 30kWh/day in the winter.

If I had been doing this last year, it would have been sharply less; tariffs and the drive to kill solar has driven costs up, and the end of the solar tax credit on 31 December means that everyone that wants to do it is trying to do it now, which drives up labor costs.

[–] Semester3383@lemmy.world 3 points 4 days ago

He's not a psychopath; he's psychotic. Those are very, very different.

Psychopathy and sociopathy are functionally identical; they're personality disorders where a person largely lacks the capacity for empathy, and hence remorse. Being psychotic means that you're experiencing delusions; you may be hearing voices, or having uncontrollable impulses to do things that would be out of character. His behavior, based on what he's saying, is entirely delusional; he doesn't even have internally consistent logic in his actions.

[–] Semester3383@lemmy.world 1 points 4 days ago

this at least has real links to tangible asset worth,

Well, kind of. But the worth of those assets is largely due to perception, rather than real utility value. Like, real estate is stupidly expensive in many places, but it's expensive because people believe that it's expensive. When real estate bubble burst, you see the 'worth' of that real estate drop sharply. The utility value is having a place to sleep, but it's often treated as an investment. So you would still see currency value fluctuations. Currency issue by gov'ts largely has worth because the gov't says that it has worth; it's not tied to anything. (BTW - tying currency to a tangible asset limits your ability to add currency when necessary. It will tend to lead to depreciation--the value of the currency rising--which is usually a bad thing.)

The other problem is that corporations and banks go bust; if they were issuing currency, that would mean all your money would instantly be worthless.

[–] Semester3383@lemmy.world 1 points 4 days ago (1 children)

I guess that I would have thought that you could isolate those individual compounds, and then reproduce them, rather than hoping that you can find a lucky ball of whale puke.

I dunno, I'm pretty sure I'm not their target audience.

[–] Semester3383@lemmy.world 1 points 4 days ago

For sound reproduction, I prefer my wired Shure SE-315 with sound-isolating ear tips. But Shokz ar much more comfortable for all-day wear.

[–] Semester3383@lemmy.world 4 points 5 days ago (2 children)

So, I tried wearing earplugs with my Shokz. Disappointingly, the sound became very, very muffled. I don't think that it's true bone conduction, because if it was, then earplugs shouldn't have had a significant impact on the sound. They're still nice, just... Not as cool.

Firefly is solidly decent. It's not great, it's not terrible. It had real potential, and then got cancelled after 12 (?) episodes. Babylon 5 was arguably a better show overall, but I can see why Firefly still has a solid fandom 20 years later.

[–] Semester3383@lemmy.world 6 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Pretty sure that HK-47 called humans meatbags.

[–] Semester3383@lemmy.world 141 points 5 days ago (20 children)

It's already a problem. People are outsourcing their thinking to LLMs, and LLMs aren't capable of thinking.

[–] Semester3383@lemmy.world 3 points 5 days ago (4 children)

Makes me wonder why whale puke still gets used in cosmetics...

[–] Semester3383@lemmy.world 1 points 5 days ago

I believe that he also invented the first silencers.

[–] Semester3383@lemmy.world 1 points 5 days ago

When they gained voting rights none of them knew how to read well so the racist made a law saying you have to pass a reading test or some shit so they couldn’t vote.

Not correct. Literacy tests weren't testing actual reading ability and comprehension; they were explicitly intended to deny the right to vote. White people would be passed because they had grandparents that had been permitted to vote, and literally got grandfathered in. Non-white people would be given tests written in, for instance, latin. So even if they could read, the odds were very poor that they'd be able to read the language the test was in. Or they would be given tests that had very ambiguous questions, and any way they answered could be considered 'wrong'.

[–] Semester3383@lemmy.world 2 points 5 days ago

Yes they should. But at the same time completely ignorant people should not.

Jesus. You're literally arguing for removing franchise from the majority of citizens. If they primarily reside in an area and will be affected by the policies, they should be able to vote on them, whether or not they're ignorant.

The problem is that you can very, very quickly arrive at the conclusion that if someone just had enough knowledge, they'd vote like me, and strip the vote from everyone that doesn't agree with you. Except that people can, and do, have different beliefs, even with the same knowledge.

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