Or maybe just follow the long-age adage of "if you can't take it, don't dish it."
These journalists are just now realizing the gravity of the very words they threw at these people years ago.
You're playing the game, AC.
Okay, let me illustrate how this works. You gloat about the journalists "learning their lesson"
Someone chimes in with how butthurt the conservatives were when the Kenyan terror baby was elected, then how they went nuts the second time.
Then someone notes how at least Dubya was honest.
Then someone makes a Darth Cheney Dig
Then someone will note that the Neocons are just Trotskyites
Then someone will note about Bill Clinton being a lecher getting oral sex in the white house
Then someone will mention how Trump grabs e'm by the Pussy and pays Pornoo actresses to shut their mouths
Then someone will make fun of Bush 1's Read my lips and turning Broccoli into a bad thing.
All the way back until conservatives are calling FDR a communist, and Liberals making fun of Hoobert Heever, and his great depression. Mixed in with the typical blurbs in between.
What a bunch of sensitive little twerps! Y'all need red or blue Binky's
I am guilty of trolling with various quips myself - thing is I don't take it seriously, like you and the other snowflakes. And it's weird when you do this. Libs think you're a crypto conservative, and crypto conservatives think you're a flaming lib.
But they are all wrong. I'm just stirring the ant's nest with a stick, and enjoying watching the precious flowers come running out to stake their outrage.
So everyone chillaxe, take a deep breath. Let's go get a beer.
Hah! Inviting me for a beer when you know that for "reasons" I am not allow to drink! I shall let you know that I will report you to this fine site's editors for harassment! </s>
I monitor the filewall so if they do attempt to connect out I see it. So far all devices stop when asked to. It's mostly cameras.
Some smart meters use the cellular network or powerline comms, the one I have uses wifi. It's supposed to be better because if you change supplier you don't have to change the meter, at least in theory. Since I change supplier every year or two (you have to or you bills shoot up) that's actually kinda useful.
Yep, the original BPL version of smartmeters is pretty inferior to the wifi version.
Isn't asbestos a kind of "stone wool"? They should at least test this stuff for biological safety.
That is a concern. Silica sand at least can be selected for consistent content. And fiberglass is pretty inert. Just don't go crushing and breathing it.
There has been radioactive minerals and radon production found in granite countertops as well. I'd be a lot more concerned about things like asbestos, maybe orpiment. Anyhow, there is a lot of reason to not trust something simply called "stone wool"
Looking up the composition of stone wool, it apparently tends to have a lot of glass as a component. That slag part though - that's where my concern lies.
Someone needs to make a consumer router that has a special Internet of Shit wifi hotspot built in.
I've got one on my own network. It can't access the internet, can't access anything that isn't local in fact. I can get at it from the main LAN though. Device isolation is turned on as well, so devices can't even talk to each other.
I've got another one just for my smart meter. It is allowed to talk to the energy company server only, once a month, for five minutes. That appears to be adequate for them.
It's just a pity that we have to go to that level to keep these things from reporting home. Do you use Wireshark to check on them?
Does GB use direct to internet for smart meters? I've got one too, but it uses a Broadband over power line method of chatting with home. "Broadband" in the most lenient terms. Anyhow, I can't control it, but there isn't much it can glean on me.
The fact some people feel entitled to basically a chatroom full of millions of people is pretty fucking amazing in my opinion, and not grounded with reality. I want a fair, inclusive service for everyone, but Jesus H. Christ, you don't even pay for this stuff... go make your own, it's the fucking Internet, you got booted from a chat room, grow up.
Insightful. Having been around the internet a log time, I'm used to taking all manner of abuse. It's a big world, with all manner of people in it, with all manner of definitions of abuse. As you note, there can be millions in a room. Maybe I'm not the sharpest pencil in the box, but I do understand that there will be a lot of different opinions, and different levels of civility. What-freaking-ever.
This whole article in Slashdot should be part of a psychological study. To me it just shows how horribly messed up a lot of people are. How utterly weak we have become.
While the original "learn to code" was trolling, that's all it was - soundbyte type trolling. But some overly sensitive mod apparently got their panties in a bunch over it. Most likely someone who leans left on the PS. Whatever, the left has no monopoly on brittle inability to handle simple things. Cooler heads prevailed, however.
But then the story comes here to Slashdot, and it turns out that the crypto-conservatives have a level of sensitivity at least as bad as the snowflake that caused the "Learn to Code" as abuse problem in the first place.
Between the howaboutism, the product of weak minds that manages to do the exact opposite of what they think it is doing, and the peanut allergy level of inability to take any disagreement. We have a room full of sissies. I'm calling most out.
Protip to both sides - If you're laid off and someone tells you to "learn to code", Thank them and tell them it is a good idea. If they were serious, they'll tell you no problem. If they were trolling you, you'll have played them and pissed them off. Nothing worse to do to a troll than play them with civility.
That told coal miners "Get a Uhaul and learn to code"
Seems they really don't like having that thrown in their face.
I gotta say this very respectfully to everyone here:
If you shit your pants because someone tells you to learn to code, be it MAGA People or thase commie journalists, or get spun up by either.
The USA is ready to be invaded, and subsumed, because we've become a nation of utter weaklings, left or right. So many snowflakes - so precious, so fragile.
Probably all those phytoestrogenes we've been eating.
So everyone chillaxe, take a deep breath. Let's go get a beer.
Ah yes, the famous Whataboutism. Perhaps all people should be held to the same standard. Is this not the nation where "All men are created equal"? Ahem.
Bill and Ted said it best "Be Excellent to Each Other."
The primary problem in building materials is cost. I can buy "natural fiber" insulation for 3x the price of the pink stuff. The $2000 difference is significant. The other issue is that these mostly shift the "bad stuff" somewhere else - whether it has to be replaced sooner or your production and transportation process is dirtier and more energy demanding.
Is the stone wool going to be tested with a radiation counter? Will it be free of any carcinogenic minerals? Hard to imagine that it will be so much more environmentally sound than plain old fiberglas insulation either.
I'm going to go outside now and piss out a few bricks..
Oh, so one of the ingredients of the urine bricks is "nutrients"?
Also sand might be very abundant in total, but sand appropriate for building with is much less abundant - river and beach sand work and there have been articles on Slashdot in the past about sand piracy and blackmarket sand. Desert sand, of which there is a huge abundance, is not appropriate, because it's too small and light.
Rather than some 'urine bricks', I'd be more interested if someone had found a way to make desert sand useful in construction.
Yeah, I'm going to build a house with piss-bricks, full of bacteria, and organic nutrients for the bacteria to eat. As well - you are spot on about the sand. There's actually a building grade sand shortage.
Seriously - what is with some people? We're supposed to eat bugs because they are so yummy, live in places that probably smell like old urine in sleazy uncleaned bar restrooms, made with materials stuffed with urine, bacteria and food for the bacteria to work their magic.
Next they'll be tellling us to stand behind cows and let them piss on us and bathe in it because the piss comes out sterile. Caution for the squeamish - image actually shows this. https://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pi...
Look sustainable people. I'm on your side. But if you ask me to live in conditions that are really unsanitary, ya gotta talk to the hand.
But seriously, if you have an Internet of Things device, it is being used to spy on you. Doesn't matter who made the chips, doesn't matter what it is doing.
We can argue about whether that is a main or secondary purpose, but It is a spying device that you voluntarily install.
It's nothing but another means to make more money for big, for-profit healthcare. There is no internet addiction.
Well there is - but Darwin takes care of that. They either sit in front of the computer and never breed, or stare at their smartphone and walk into traffic. I've saved 2 women from getting hit when they were so engrossed in social media that they walked right into busy traffic. I think I might be an enabler.
I think that they were all absorbed. My wife tells me that I am a Neanderthal. She's kidding, sorta - but aside from my facial features, which would be considered Italianesque, I'm built like what you see in the museums. I might be pursuaded to get a DNA test if that could be verified.
Speaking of which, noticed how desperate Apple is getting lately? They have pounded YouTube full of commercials for their garbage. All this crap nobody wants is destroying our home, I can't even enjoy Apple's failing because I know it's built on destruction.
Well, at least we know now that everything is Apple's fault.
Or the mesothelioma lawyer fishing expeditions. Maybe if the ads weren't tending toward so damn gross?
Or frightening? How about the "help I've fallen and I can't get up" people. The fairly recent one where the camera slowly pans through the house, and then you hear the calls for help fade in from the basement. It was done so well that some people wrote in to have them removed. Devastatingly effective in this case.
Nothing like frightening old people and their adult children. Yeah - that commercial should be removed.
You got one thing right: DK is in full effect. Selectively bred is not the same as genetically modified. We have NOT been eating genetically modified bananas.
Selective breeding is exactly genetic modification.
You're a genius. I'm not sure how the army of engineers working on bigger chargers managed to get so far without your help.
As likely as not, the diameter and ease of use of the cable was dictated by marketing concerns. The engineers had a cable size they had to use.
And I certainly wouldn't design a charger like that.
Clearly you wouldn't design any charger. I mean if you did you'd probably have read up about it and would know that the limiting factor for >150kW chargers as they stood was cable size and voltage rating for continuous flexible connect / disconnect systems.
Design of charging circuits is pretty simple. These folks just ran themselves up against Ohm's law. Using a fluid cooled system to draw off excess heat generated by the use of too small of cables that are exhibiting resistance heating isn't surprising. The biggest problem is if the cooling system fails. And if the resulting sparks and fire occur at a mixed fuel location, it could be a real disaster if it caught a gas pump on fire as well.
But you are right - I certainly wouldn't design such a charging system. While it might work for a very solidly secured charger, we're talking about a cooling circuit that is in a flexible tube.
The likelyhood of failure is significant. And not unexpectedly, they have problems. This 350 kW system is pushing the envelope of possibility. Combination of needing a liquid cooling system to draw away the heat generated by the resistance of wire that is too thin for the purpose, and the likelyhood of failure that has been proven by it having happened, and we have an easily predictable occurrence.
But hey I can't help it you're so smart. You should go call up Porsche as soon as possible and tell them that after a year of engineering you had a much "better" idea. I'm sure they'll give you a wheelbarrow full of money./sarcasm
This design was one that made sense from a convenience standpoint. An easily handled charging cable that could charge an EV in short order. What's not to like? But as soon as they got into the details, it was pretty obvious that an easily handled cable wasn't up to the task. So adding liquid cooling was indicated. But they have to get the liquid in and out of that easily handled cable. And you better be reliable about it,
And they have obviously had big problems with the device.
It is like you folks are arguing that something that happened, did not happen. I/R heating. It's not just an idea, it's Ohm's law.
As for me? I'm at a point where if I say a design won't work or isn't practical, I'm in no trouble. They wouldn't like what I would tell them. This idea simply isn't practical. Failure of the flexible cooling system is likely. If you are going to be rapid charging at such high currents, you need to redesign the whole charging system, or risk big problems. My evidence? Just what has happened.
Now - I could design a charging system that would handle this amount of current with no need for any cooling. It would take some interaction between manufacturers, and definitely not use a charging port like what is in use today.
Oh, AC. I love it when people call me out when they are 100 percent wrong.
Hmm. Claiming I'm wrong while not even realising who you're talking to, you're not off to a good start.
The evidence in this issue shows that you are wrong, so your internet muscles and AC CV don't mean much. If the cables are liquid cooled it is because they need to be, and if the cooling system fails, the inevitable happens. Liquid cooling doesn't change the resistance of the wire, it simply allows the heat generated to be removed.
Your argumentum ad verecundiamis is cute though. I appeal to Ohm's law
Perhaps you can set up an experiment to prove me wrong. You'll also be proving the people that took the higher power chargers out of the loop as incorrect. They would love to hear from you so they can put them back in service per your say-so. Those cables were simply insufficient to the task. Take it up with Georg Ohm if you like.
The genetic modifications are unlikely to cause many problems.
However, glyphosate (Round-Up) is used on these GM crops by the millions of tons and it is toxic.
Herein lies the whole mess over genetically modified foods.
Somehow, Monsanto and their utterly stupid Roundup ready products have been deemed the equivalent of any and every genetically modified foodcrop. D-K is in full power here.
When in fact, we have been eating genetically modified food for thousands of years. Corn and wheat bear very little resemblance to their original plant, having been heavily genetically modified. Teosinte to Zea to a multitude of corn crops makes a good read.
As well, the traditional and presumably acceptable genetic modification methods are quite capable of producing toxic results. Google the Lenape potato.
So anyhow, the anti GMO crowd is simply suffering a milder version of the mindset that produces Anti-Vaxxers, or denial of the energy retention effects of certain atmospheric gases. Enjoy yourselves, and remember to equate all GMO with the BS that Monsato is doing.
Or maybe just follow the long-age adage of "if you can't take it, don't dish it."
These journalists are just now realizing the gravity of the very words they threw at these people years ago.
You're playing the game, AC.
Okay, let me illustrate how this works. You gloat about the journalists "learning their lesson"
Someone chimes in with how butthurt the conservatives were when the Kenyan terror baby was elected, then how they went nuts the second time.
Then someone notes how at least Dubya was honest.
Then someone makes a Darth Cheney Dig
Then someone will note that the Neocons are just Trotskyites
Then someone will note about Bill Clinton being a lecher getting oral sex in the white house
Then someone will mention how Trump grabs e'm by the Pussy and pays Pornoo actresses to shut their mouths
Then someone will make fun of Bush 1's Read my lips and turning Broccoli into a bad thing.
All the way back until conservatives are calling FDR a communist, and Liberals making fun of Hoobert Heever, and his great depression. Mixed in with the typical blurbs in between.
What a bunch of sensitive little twerps! Y'all need red or blue Binky's
I am guilty of trolling with various quips myself - thing is I don't take it seriously, like you and the other snowflakes. And it's weird when you do this. Libs think you're a crypto conservative, and crypto conservatives think you're a flaming lib.
But they are all wrong. I'm just stirring the ant's nest with a stick, and enjoying watching the precious flowers come running out to stake their outrage.
So everyone chillaxe, take a deep breath. Let's go get a beer.
Hah! Inviting me for a beer when you know that for "reasons" I am not allow to drink! I shall let you know that I will report you to this fine site's editors for harassment! </s>
Does this mean I have to be fired?
I monitor the filewall so if they do attempt to connect out I see it. So far all devices stop when asked to. It's mostly cameras.
Some smart meters use the cellular network or powerline comms, the one I have uses wifi. It's supposed to be better because if you change supplier you don't have to change the meter, at least in theory. Since I change supplier every year or two (you have to or you bills shoot up) that's actually kinda useful.
Yep, the original BPL version of smartmeters is pretty inferior to the wifi version.
Isn't asbestos a kind of "stone wool"? They should at least test this stuff for biological safety.
That is a concern. Silica sand at least can be selected for consistent content. And fiberglass is pretty inert. Just don't go crushing and breathing it.
There has been radioactive minerals and radon production found in granite countertops as well. I'd be a lot more concerned about things like asbestos, maybe orpiment. Anyhow, there is a lot of reason to not trust something simply called "stone wool"
Looking up the composition of stone wool, it apparently tends to have a lot of glass as a component. That slag part though - that's where my concern lies.
Someone needs to make a consumer router that has a special Internet of Shit wifi hotspot built in.
I've got one on my own network. It can't access the internet, can't access anything that isn't local in fact. I can get at it from the main LAN though. Device isolation is turned on as well, so devices can't even talk to each other.
I've got another one just for my smart meter. It is allowed to talk to the energy company server only, once a month, for five minutes. That appears to be adequate for them.
It's just a pity that we have to go to that level to keep these things from reporting home. Do you use Wireshark to check on them?
Does GB use direct to internet for smart meters? I've got one too, but it uses a Broadband over power line method of chatting with home. "Broadband" in the most lenient terms. Anyhow, I can't control it, but there isn't much it can glean on me.
In the new sequel they're going to revise it to "Be Excellent to Anyone Higher On The Oppression Pyramid Than You."
The Oppression Pyramid. Awesome - That is my new touchstone!!!
Wait..... I web searched - and it's real. Jezzuz H Kryste.
So many crazy humans - so few Chicxulub meteors.
The fact some people feel entitled to basically a chatroom full of millions of people is pretty fucking amazing in my opinion, and not grounded with reality. I want a fair, inclusive service for everyone, but Jesus H. Christ, you don't even pay for this stuff... go make your own, it's the fucking Internet, you got booted from a chat room, grow up.
Insightful. Having been around the internet a log time, I'm used to taking all manner of abuse. It's a big world, with all manner of people in it, with all manner of definitions of abuse. As you note, there can be millions in a room. Maybe I'm not the sharpest pencil in the box, but I do understand that there will be a lot of different opinions, and different levels of civility. What-freaking-ever.
This whole article in Slashdot should be part of a psychological study. To me it just shows how horribly messed up a lot of people are. How utterly weak we have become.
While the original "learn to code" was trolling, that's all it was - soundbyte type trolling. But some overly sensitive mod apparently got their panties in a bunch over it. Most likely someone who leans left on the PS. Whatever, the left has no monopoly on brittle inability to handle simple things. Cooler heads prevailed, however.
But then the story comes here to Slashdot, and it turns out that the crypto-conservatives have a level of sensitivity at least as bad as the snowflake that caused the "Learn to Code" as abuse problem in the first place.
Between the howaboutism, the product of weak minds that manages to do the exact opposite of what they think it is doing, and the peanut allergy level of inability to take any disagreement. We have a room full of sissies. I'm calling most out.
Protip to both sides - If you're laid off and someone tells you to "learn to code", Thank them and tell them it is a good idea. If they were serious, they'll tell you no problem. If they were trolling you, you'll have played them and pissed them off. Nothing worse to do to a troll than play them with civility.
Learn to code, y'all.
That told coal miners "Get a Uhaul and learn to code"
Seems they really don't like having that thrown in their face.
I gotta say this very respectfully to everyone here:
If you shit your pants because someone tells you to learn to code, be it MAGA People or thase commie journalists, or get spun up by either.
The USA is ready to be invaded, and subsumed, because we've become a nation of utter weaklings, left or right. So many snowflakes - so precious, so fragile.
Probably all those phytoestrogenes we've been eating.
So everyone chillaxe, take a deep breath. Let's go get a beer.
Ah yes, the famous Whataboutism. Perhaps all people should be held to the same standard. Is this not the nation where "All men are created equal"? Ahem.
Bill and Ted said it best "Be Excellent to Each Other."
There's always time to start.
Learn to code!...please?
The primary problem in building materials is cost. I can buy "natural fiber" insulation for 3x the price of the pink stuff. The $2000 difference is significant. The other issue is that these mostly shift the "bad stuff" somewhere else - whether it has to be replaced sooner or your production and transportation process is dirtier and more energy demanding.
Is the stone wool going to be tested with a radiation counter? Will it be free of any carcinogenic minerals? Hard to imagine that it will be so much more environmentally sound than plain old fiberglas insulation either.
I'm going to go outside now and piss out a few bricks..
Oh, so one of the ingredients of the urine bricks is "nutrients"?
Also sand might be very abundant in total, but sand appropriate for building with is much less abundant - river and beach sand work and there have been articles on Slashdot in the past about sand piracy and blackmarket sand. Desert sand, of which there is a huge abundance, is not appropriate, because it's too small and light.
Rather than some 'urine bricks', I'd be more interested if someone had found a way to make desert sand useful in construction.
Yeah, I'm going to build a house with piss-bricks, full of bacteria, and organic nutrients for the bacteria to eat. As well - you are spot on about the sand. There's actually a building grade sand shortage.
Seriously - what is with some people? We're supposed to eat bugs because they are so yummy, live in places that probably smell like old urine in sleazy uncleaned bar restrooms, made with materials stuffed with urine, bacteria and food for the bacteria to work their magic.
Next they'll be tellling us to stand behind cows and let them piss on us and bathe in it because the piss comes out sterile. Caution for the squeamish - image actually shows this. https://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pi...
Look sustainable people. I'm on your side. But if you ask me to live in conditions that are really unsanitary, ya gotta talk to the hand.
But seriously, if you have an Internet of Things device, it is being used to spy on you. Doesn't matter who made the chips, doesn't matter what it is doing.
We can argue about whether that is a main or secondary purpose, but It is a spying device that you voluntarily install.
It's nothing but another means to make more money for big, for-profit healthcare. There is no internet addiction.
Well there is - but Darwin takes care of that. They either sit in front of the computer and never breed, or stare at their smartphone and walk into traffic. I've saved 2 women from getting hit when they were so engrossed in social media that they walked right into busy traffic. I think I might be an enabler.
You call them Neanderthals.
I call them my relatives.
I think that they were all absorbed. My wife tells me that I am a Neanderthal. She's kidding, sorta - but aside from my facial features, which would be considered Italianesque, I'm built like what you see in the museums. I might be pursuaded to get a DNA test if that could be verified.
Speaking of which, noticed how desperate Apple is getting lately? They have pounded YouTube full of commercials for their garbage. All this crap nobody wants is destroying our home, I can't even enjoy Apple's failing because I know it's built on destruction.
Well, at least we know now that everything is Apple's fault.
Fucking hipsters anyhow!
It is a murky concept. ...
Mostly, homo sapiens and neanderthals did not interbreed, just sometimes.
Did you just assume my species?
Or the mesothelioma lawyer fishing expeditions. Maybe if the ads weren't tending toward so damn gross?
Or frightening? How about the "help I've fallen and I can't get up" people. The fairly recent one where the camera slowly pans through the house, and then you hear the calls for help fade in from the basement. It was done so well that some people wrote in to have them removed. Devastatingly effective in this case.
Nothing like frightening old people and their adult children. Yeah - that commercial should be removed.
And we're just supposed to believe your claim that the paper claiming the papers are false is false is true?
Well, it isn't in a paper, so it has to be true.
I read the document. Stone isn't in a real good place, no matter what the kooks think.
Why not go compare the exec trials from enron? Give you a hint though, it's similar. And they were thrown out as well.
So Stone is an innocent patriots because of Enron. I am beginning to understand you y'all think.
You got one thing right: DK is in full effect. Selectively bred is not the same as genetically modified. We have NOT been eating genetically modified bananas.
Selective breeding is exactly genetic modification.
Therefore, you want a bigger diameter cable
You're a genius. I'm not sure how the army of engineers working on bigger chargers managed to get so far without your help.
As likely as not, the diameter and ease of use of the cable was dictated by marketing concerns. The engineers had a cable size they had to use.
And I certainly wouldn't design a charger like that.
Clearly you wouldn't design any charger. I mean if you did you'd probably have read up about it and would know that the limiting factor for >150kW chargers as they stood was cable size and voltage rating for continuous flexible connect / disconnect systems.
Design of charging circuits is pretty simple. These folks just ran themselves up against Ohm's law. Using a fluid cooled system to draw off excess heat generated by the use of too small of cables that are exhibiting resistance heating isn't surprising. The biggest problem is if the cooling system fails. And if the resulting sparks and fire occur at a mixed fuel location, it could be a real disaster if it caught a gas pump on fire as well.
But you are right - I certainly wouldn't design such a charging system. While it might work for a very solidly secured charger, we're talking about a cooling circuit that is in a flexible tube.
The likelyhood of failure is significant. And not unexpectedly, they have problems. This 350 kW system is pushing the envelope of possibility. Combination of needing a liquid cooling system to draw away the heat generated by the resistance of wire that is too thin for the purpose, and the likelyhood of failure that has been proven by it having happened, and we have an easily predictable occurrence.
But hey I can't help it you're so smart. You should go call up Porsche as soon as possible and tell them that after a year of engineering you had a much "better" idea. I'm sure they'll give you a wheelbarrow full of money. /sarcasm
This design was one that made sense from a convenience standpoint. An easily handled charging cable that could charge an EV in short order. What's not to like? But as soon as they got into the details, it was pretty obvious that an easily handled cable wasn't up to the task. So adding liquid cooling was indicated. But they have to get the liquid in and out of that easily handled cable. And you better be reliable about it,
And they have obviously had big problems with the device.
It is like you folks are arguing that something that happened, did not happen. I/R heating. It's not just an idea, it's Ohm's law.
As for me? I'm at a point where if I say a design won't work or isn't practical, I'm in no trouble. They wouldn't like what I would tell them. This idea simply isn't practical. Failure of the flexible cooling system is likely. If you are going to be rapid charging at such high currents, you need to redesign the whole charging system, or risk big problems. My evidence? Just what has happened.
Now - I could design a charging system that would handle this amount of current with no need for any cooling. It would take some interaction between manufacturers, and definitely not use a charging port like what is in use today.
Oh, AC. I love it when people call me out when they are 100 percent wrong.
Hmm. Claiming I'm wrong while not even realising who you're talking to, you're not off to a good start.
The evidence in this issue shows that you are wrong, so your internet muscles and AC CV don't mean much. If the cables are liquid cooled it is because they need to be, and if the cooling system fails, the inevitable happens. Liquid cooling doesn't change the resistance of the wire, it simply allows the heat generated to be removed.
Your argumentum ad verecundiamis is cute though. I appeal to Ohm's law
Perhaps you can set up an experiment to prove me wrong. You'll also be proving the people that took the higher power chargers out of the loop as incorrect. They would love to hear from you so they can put them back in service per your say-so. Those cables were simply insufficient to the task. Take it up with Georg Ohm if you like.
Unfortunately the "experts" sometimes have a financial incentive to "know" what they claim is true.
So who funded this research . . . ? The government . . . ? Independent private university . . . ?
Or private industry . . . ?
"He who pays the piper calls the tune."
Tie irony is that the paper claiming most papers are false is false.
The genetic modifications are unlikely to cause many problems. However, glyphosate (Round-Up) is used on these GM crops by the millions of tons and it is toxic.
Herein lies the whole mess over genetically modified foods.
Somehow, Monsanto and their utterly stupid Roundup ready products have been deemed the equivalent of any and every genetically modified foodcrop. D-K is in full power here.
When in fact, we have been eating genetically modified food for thousands of years. Corn and wheat bear very little resemblance to their original plant, having been heavily genetically modified. Teosinte to Zea to a multitude of corn crops makes a good read.
As well, the traditional and presumably acceptable genetic modification methods are quite capable of producing toxic results. Google the Lenape potato.
So anyhow, the anti GMO crowd is simply suffering a milder version of the mindset that produces Anti-Vaxxers, or denial of the energy retention effects of certain atmospheric gases. Enjoy yourselves, and remember to equate all GMO with the BS that Monsato is doing.