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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)M
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3 yr. ago

  • Scientific consensus is that we now recognise and diagnose autism better than ever. Previously children that struggled in school would be labelled as troubled or slow or any number of other things. The thing about autism is that like many other things it is a spectrum, and thus previously many people with mild autism would have just cruised through and been thought of as odd or antisocial. Often when really questioned, people like your parents can think of a few people like this from their school days that might now fit the definition of autism spectrum disorder.

    Also, it's worth noting that human DNA does not and cannot degrade in any manner you suggest and that kind of reasoning has unscientific and innapropriate connotations that might associate you with very disagreeable groups.

  • I wonder if no one is left at Microsoft that knows enough about the core systems to actually improve those... So the best they can do is throw more shit on top

  • Are you talking about sustainable/ethical investments? Because that's straight up incorrect, on average sustainable funds (often called ESG for "ethical, social, governance") outperform the market. Commonwealth bank, one of Australia's big four banks would not be making this move to end loans to the fossil fuel industry if it was genuinely going to impact their bottom line.

  • Doordash and uber eats take a 40-50% cut from the restaurant when a driver delivers the food. Other platforms take 20ish percent if the restaurant does the delivering. I'm sure you could establish some kind of self hosted network where each restaurant runs their own machine that provides some of the compute. It would have to scale really well with such a decentralized system. You'd probably have to let the restaurants individually decide the amount they want to pay the drivers, and even then it would take a long time to build up a network of drivers. I think there would be a lot more problems with a decentralized approach though as you'd now have to let restaurants figure out disputes with drivers and customers when food goes missing and things. Pros and cons, and a lot of effort.

  • Does this put your standard US citizen on the same level as Saudi or Qatari slave?

  • Summit just added a side by side tablet mode. I haven't tried it on a tablet but worth a look, I like summit.

  • Very cool, I always have difficulty soldering on USB-C connectors. Does this have any major drawbacks?

  • It's an amazing game for the engineer brained, finally got the principles of air conditioning through to me playing on Vulcanus and Venus!

  • How can we make governments think long term again? All they care about is winning the next election and that means giving the biggest tax cuts by slashing the most budgets.

  • I'm actually not surprised this is possible. The thumbnail might just be a bad raw image of unrelated or unfiltered data. The UWB spectrum can be used for radar purposes to an absurd accuracy. We're talking sub-mm measurements. Bringing this to the wifi spectrum seems within the realms of possibility as the frequency is pretty similar. The difference is UWB radar is typically used in close quarters with a fixed radar where as the wifi source is probably further away or moving on a mobile phone or wearable.

  • Okay sure, for a specific use case yes you can point a record to a private IP, however this explicitly doesn't expose your homelab to the web. I misunderstood OPs intention.

  • You can't point to 192.168.X.X that's your local network IP address. You need to point to your public IP address which you can find by just searching 'what is my IP'. Note that you can't be behind CGNAT for this, and either need a static IP or dynamic DNS configuration. Be aware of the risks involved exposing your home server to the internet in this manner.

  • Beyond the obvious CGT and negative gearing loop hole, we really need to look at zoning. Developers continue to buy up land in the furthest suburbs and subdividing it into low density residential (with government approval). Our zoning regulations are completely bizarre and we need to start ending the dichotomy of big land far away vs apartment closer in, so that we can have cheap apartments further out. It's wild to be that they aren't massively developing the regions at the end of metro lines to encourage outbound commutes and building high density residential in these areas as well.

  • The names are the same yes, even with similar origins, but the symbols in the picture are specifically Australian, see the Australian flag and southern cross in many of the logos, and the kangaroo and emu in the Commonwealth coat of arms.

  • Even more hilariously, it's actually Australian, one of the few democracies absolutely rejecting trumpism and slowly moving towards the left.

  • When an overwhelming proportion of the population is elderly, an overwhelming proportion of the working age populations earnings have to will go to support them. This is measured by an economic ratio known as the dependency ratio which is going to get out of hand for countries like Japan. The strain on public finances paying for pensions and healthcare reduces quality of life for everyone in the country and depresses economic growth as young people working to support the countries elderly population and their own parents have less to invest in the wider economy.

  • We could definitely move into industry in space, but a lot of technology still needs to be developed. I think we now have the capacity to launch factories in pieces into space, but asteroid mining remains a technical challenge due as we now know that many asteroids are not so compacted. Furthermore, refining the raw materials in space can't really be done right now, we probably could figure it out, but parts of the production chain do depend on gravity so we'd need to figure out artificial gravity on a rotating station or do some more direct kind of centrifugal refining. All hurdles we could probably cross. Then comes the question of what you drop back down from space and how you do it. Current heat shield technologies are generally poorly reusable, and even if we were we'd have to be flying the reentry devices back into space. Unless we create a cheap means to protect something from reentry that can be manufactured in space as a disposable, most goods would never be returned to earth. Unless we just refine giant cubes of rare metals and drop them into the ocean to be collected. I think most things made in space would be limited to serving those in space, or in lower gravity locations such as the moon or other asteroid bases. I would love to work on these challenges but there's very few companies working on these challenges outside of a couple of asteroid capture startups that seem to have no further vision.

  • I think you misunderstand, this is not talking about road cars, but railcars, like a train wagon.