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  1. Re:c-c-c-c on Aussie Data Centres Brace For Dust Storm Barrage · · Score: 0, Redundant

    So Melbourne has been in drough for a good 8 years. QLD was in drought for a good decade before the rains came. The problem that Victorians have is that their quasi-religious problem with building dams has lead to their current dams to run dry while whole river systems that are not dammed are flooding. Did you know that if the Mitchell river was damed that Melbournites would be happily able to run with zero water restrictions? Did you know that the Mitchell has flooded three times in the last decade? Did you know that by damming the Mitchell less than a thousand individuals would be displaced - for the sake of nearly triple the Thompson catchment capacity?

    But instead we have a government down there who wants to spend six times the amount to build a dirty and energy intensive water source that has a tiny fraction of the capacity of the Mitchell dam.

    It is just another case of the blatant and utter disregard for logic which the green religion commonly displays, along with their condemnation of the only reliable baseload emissions free electricity source and their ridiculous condemnation of ecologically important acts like culling kangaroos and camels (which are not a native species by the way).

  2. Re:American meddling huh? on Iran Tries To Pacify Protesters With Lord of The Rings Marathon · · Score: 1
  3. Re:All we need now on Wind Could Provide 100% of World Energy Needs · · Score: 1

    They fit into the discussion because they are the elephant in the room. Carbon neutrality means jack if it is too costly to implement. A country would rather supply goods to its people than cut CO2 emissions. I'm not making a moral judgment on it, I'm just saying that until renewables can provide a cost effective alternative to other baseload power sources they will be not much more than a feelgood solution.

  4. Re:All we need now on Wind Could Provide 100% of World Energy Needs · · Score: 1

    Efficiency is the most important thing when looking at power investment - economic efficiency. The reason Australia relies so heavily on coal is that we can build a power plant on a coal mine and basically cut out the cost of fuel transportation. This gives us an economic advantage over our competitors in highly energy intensive industries (like smelting). No renewable is economically efficient enough for large scale investment.

    You do not need academic papers to show this, you just need to look at what companies are building and buying. CS Energy built a huge waterless coal station called Kogan Creek and Origin built a massive gas fired power station in the last five years which combined dwarf investment in renewable energy over the same period.

  5. Re:Wind Could NOT Provide 100% of World Energy Nee on Wind Could Provide 100% of World Energy Needs · · Score: 1

    The same thing basically happened during the bushfires this year. Unfortunately the NEM isn't designed for a one-in-one hundred year event. The heatwave in Victoria last year was a very exceptional circumstance. The south-east corner of Australia was running several degrees higher than average while the majority of Australia was running several degrees below average. Basslink isn't designed to operate at high temperatures because Tasmania only exceedingly rarely gets to high temperatures, let alone temperatures that will shut down operation of Basslink.

    Ultimately though Basslink is currently a net importer of electicity from Victoria to Tasmania. So all the Taswegians can thank the dirty Victorian brown coal generators for your lack of blackouts this year :).

  6. Re:Wind Could NOT Provide 100% of World Energy Nee on Wind Could Provide 100% of World Energy Needs · · Score: 1

    As with all electricity markets the NEM is designed for efficiency. So what that means is that when demand is high in NSW, demand probably will not be as high in QLD and so QLD can help power NSW. The same thing occurs in Tasmania. The so-called "green" state that relies so much on hydro and wind power will at times have very low demand compared to Victoria (what generally occurs in summer). At these times it will export power to the mainland. In winter the opposite generally happens.

    Tasmania has just experienced the most expensive week of electricity prices that it has *ever* seen and was importing at maximum capacity from the mainland. Droughts have a nasty habit of ruining power supplies no matter *what* type of power is used, but particularly hurts hydro generation. Before Kogan Creek was operational it was QLD that had the high prices (which effected the rest of the national market as well) because Tarong had to switch off most of its generation to preserve water.

    My point: connecting Tasmania to the mainland (actually to the brown coal generators in Victoria) has increased reliability of the power supply on both sides of the strait.

  7. Re:All we need now on Wind Could Provide 100% of World Energy Needs · · Score: 1

    As always the problem is cost. Our current energy supply mix ends up costing anywhere between $20-$50/MWh on the wholesale market. The long run marginal cost for solar has *at best* been estimated to be in the vicinity of $100/MWh. Photovoltaics are much higher - in the vicinity of $440/MWh (at least that is the rebate given for using PV cells to provide electricity back into the grid).

    You bring up South Australia as a good example of using wind power. The fact is that SA is still ridiculously dependent on coal fired generation, both from inside the state and from Victoria. There is also the problem of South Australia having the most variable wholesale cost of electricity of all the states other than Tasmania (we have to exclude WA because it is not a part of the Australian energy market).

    There is one state in Australia that is almost entirely dependent on renewable energy sources (hydro and wind) and that state is Tasmania. Unfortunately they have the problem of reliability. Without the big dirty brown coal generators that sit on the southern tip of Victoria, Tasmania would be experiencing rolling blackouts at the moment.

    Finally, peak demand occurs at two times in the year - the middle of the day in summer, and around 6pm in winter. Solar might be great for smoothing over summer demand, but we still need enough generation to cover for the peak winter demand. The amusing thing about it all is that a CPRS won't get companies investing in renewables, but instead it will get them investing in gas, which currently sits at an emissions intensity factor of approximately 0.3 tonnes/MWh versus black coal at 0.7 tonnes/MWh and brown coal at >= 2 tonnes/MWh.

    If people really want to make renewable energy an attractive alternative, find one that comes in at a long run marginal cost of under $100/MWh and watch the money roll in.

  8. Re:I know this isn't the point.... on Newspaper Crowdsources 700,000-Page Investigation of MP Expenses · · Score: 1

    We have evolved beyond tribalism because we simply cannot do things that way any more. Our numbers are too great. How many years do you think it would take for every American to even spend a minute with the president? It just isn't viable anymore.

    I also think you place too much faith in tribalism. Tribes generally have the strongest or longest lived as the leader because living in a tribe is about survival, not about growth or prosperity.

    I really think that it is you who has not thought this through.

  9. Re:Why TF doesn't it happen in US? on Newspaper Crowdsources 700,000-Page Investigation of MP Expenses · · Score: 1

    Hey I like the Sun. It's got everything you could want in a newspaper. Sleaze, poor journalism, and some sleaze.

  10. Re:I know this isn't the point.... on Newspaper Crowdsources 700,000-Page Investigation of MP Expenses · · Score: 1

    I'm pretty sure that almost ANYONE in their shoes would have done the same

    Which is why we shouldn't be electing just anyone, but testing their ethics and wisdom etc. at least, or better yet, not electing representatives at all.

    And who should administer this test? I can't work out whether you're a totalitarian or an anarchist from your post, but whatever ideology your espousing here it's quite frightening. It makes me very glad people only get one vote.

  11. Re:chk chk ka-boom on Could Betelgeuse Go Boom? · · Score: 1

    Nah you just don't speak Kings Cross Bogan.

  12. Re:That's Obvious on Why Isn't the US Government Funding Research? · · Score: 1

    I agree with you, but without the US the allies surely would have fallen was my point.

  13. Re:Invisible Hand on Why Isn't the US Government Funding Research? · · Score: 1

    Governments are not inherently less efficient than corporations. Just go look at various private companies (big and small) they're not all lean mean super efficient entities. Far from it. And it's not a matter of size. It's a matter of quality.

    The major difference between government and free enterprise is that free enterprise has to be economically sustainable to survive. Government does not have to be economically sustainable at all, and can expand to the level of taxation (or past it even as the US has discovered). Free enterprise is concerned with producing a good or service that is useful to someone else in society and doing so in a manner which gives them an advaantage over other businesses seeking to provide the same services.

    This means that the market is great at certain things and terrible at others. The free market is great at driving innovation and services in areas where there is adequate consumers. It is great at solving clearly definable goals. What it is not good at is providing services that are inherently extremely long term and risk filled investments. Private industry also has less capital available to it than the government. The space race and the manhattan project are two wonderful examples of the kind of big budget risk filled activities that government is better than industry at. On the flipside, creating consumer goods is something government is terrible at. An underperforming government body is generally not answerable to shareholders in the same way a corporation is.

    I'm happy to leave defence, industry watchdogs and roads to government bodies and just as happy to leave manufacturing and service in the hands of private corporations. It's not a war of government vs industry. It's a war of "how much government" vs "how much industry". Dollars are a finite resource and the Right tend to tilt the dollar equasion to industry and the Left tend to tip it towards government. That's the theory at least.

  14. You sir are wrong. on Ballmer Threatens To Pull Out of the US · · Score: 1

    Free trade is at the heart of wealth generation and economic efficiency. It also helps prevent wars (who is going to wage war on their neighbour if all of their tyres are produced in their neighbours country).

    Besides, if MS did want to avoid tariffs it could do that too. It could simply technically produce the software in the US legally, but house their assets overseas (workers, buildings, IP etc...). There are ways around what you are proposing. There always have been and always will be.

  15. Re:Run away Whitehouse on Painting The World's Roofs White Could Slow Climate Change · · Score: 1

    Maybe that's why the Stones wanted to paint the red door black.

  16. Re:Well the way things are going on Nine Words From Science Which Originated In Science Fiction · · Score: 1

    According to modern folk lore the term was coined when soldiers hated their CO and would roll a fragmentation grenade into the COs tent. The CO was "fragged" and everyone walked home through the minefield happy.

  17. Re:Some more interesting facts... on Is Climate Change Affecting Bushfires? · · Score: 1

    Queensland had a worse and longer drought, which broke sometime last year. At the same time that the southern states were experiencing the heatwave, we were experiencing temperatures barely hitting the high 20s. Worldwide, while Melbourne was suffering a heatwave, Great Brittan was suffering from extreme cold. Contrary to popular belief, this was not the longest or hottest heatwave in Victoria - that was in the 1930s.

    Local fluctuations are simply that - fluctuations. Trying to use a variation to verify something as big, far reaching and slow burning (so to speak) as climate change is akin to drawing one card from a deck and using it to "prove" that all cards are aces.

    None of this is to say that climate change is not real, only that isolated incidents like this cannot be used to verify anything, except an individual's religious beliefs on this topic (eg those who religiously preach global warming like Al Gore or Tim "let's pump sulfur dioxide into the atmosphere" Flannery will use this as "proof").

  18. What Windows 7 really needs. on Windows 7 Taskbar Not So Similar To OS X Dock After All · · Score: 1

    I don't care too much about the other features in Windows 7 but these are the two things that I need:
    Quick Launch Bar
    Up button in windows explorer

    Without these I will find it very difficult to migrate (I launch almost all my apps from the quick launch and use the up button religiously - particularly on notebooks).

  19. Re:What about the search dialog? on Windows 7's Media Hype Having the Opposite Effect As Vista's · · Score: 1

    The explorer file navigation pane is still missing the "up" button that was present in all versions of Windows prior to Vista.

    Microsoft can go get stuffed if they expect for me to buy an operating system without this button. I use it all the time and it kills me that it isn't there.

  20. Re:what happened to you, Austrailia? on Australia To Block BitTorrent · · Score: 1

    Not with civilisation it wasn't. Bands of nomads living subsistence lifestyles who had not developed writing do not count as settled.

    If it weren't for the Brittish it would have been the Spanish, the Dutch or the Portugese. It may have been the Chinese or the Japanese. It may even have been Singapore. No matter who planted the flag, Australia would never have existed primarily as an Aboriginal nation after the age of sail.

    The sooner people realise that the sooner that we can move forward as a nation and work on solving the real problems that beset the Aboriginal communities. Self loathing for acts performed eight generations ago will do noone any good today.

  21. Re:Wow Must Suck To Live Down There on Australia To Block BitTorrent · · Score: 1

    They're only impotent because the opposition has the numbers in the senate.

    I'm guessing that you're a lefty? I always loved the effect that Howard had on the lefties out there, much as I love the effect Keating had on the right wingers while he was in power.

    To see the rabid foaming at the mouth of the left-wing media was a glorious sight and I enjoyed it for the last 11 years.

  22. Re:what happened to you, Austrailia? on Australia To Block BitTorrent · · Score: 1

    Or to put it another way, the Brittish came and settled before the Chinese did thus ensuring that Australia was founded as a democracy with the rule of law.

    The self loathing of some of my countrymen and women really is difficult to believe. The English were the least worst choice for settling our country.

  23. Re:Wow Must Suck To Live Down There on Australia To Block BitTorrent · · Score: 1

    Really the previous government was about as good as you can expect from politicians. They just botched their last term by trying to introduce IR legislation without taking it to an election.

  24. There are success stories out there on Are Newspapers Doomed? · · Score: 1

    The Australian is an example of a successful newspaper with growing readership at the moment. It is successful because it puts out very good content. All of its articles are well researched and informative. The opinion pages gives voice to both sides of any political debate.

    My father calls it a "Tory" newspaper because it is well-researched and factual, and sometimes has opinions that present a conservative opinion. Yet I think that many of the columnists would cry fowl to have that label applied. Regardless, a newspaper should promote debate and factual analysis, which it does well.

    Contrast that against the tabloid rags that are losing popularity as the internet takes hold and you can see why the newspaper industry is "dying". Tabloids will lose popularity to flashy websites, while content rich newspapers will always appeal as their audience is different. Print media is all about the words, while online media is all about the interaction. What many newspapers are trying to do these days is run a website in newspaper form. Opinions are becoming more lopsided and thus boring in most newspapers, but the ones that are succeeding are the ones in which there is very informed and factually based opinions that present both sides of any debate.

  25. Re:wow on If Programming Languages Were Religions · · Score: 1

    Marital rights are now likened to atrocities? A widely condemned cult is now linked to the mainstream that condemned it? A war sold to the public on secular grounds is now a religious war?

    If these are the largest criticisms you have of Christianity, or at least the best examples you can give of "why Christianity is evil" then you are doing a very poor job of selling your argument. The fact is that the worst atrocities associated to Christianity actually occurred before the printing press - and the subsequent public education of what Christianity actually said.