Ev cars are full everytime you get in them in the morning.
Theres no getting in the car with the fuel light on. For most people and most usage cases a daily range of 450km is more than enough. It doesnt really matter if it takes 6 hrs to charge if youre asleep.
The only time charge time matters is when you exceed 450km in a day.
You would also get a choice. Cheaper power to allow car to be storage or more expensive for not. Same options as ive got for hotwater systems and aircon
Doesn't necessarily require the renewables / nuclear first. If you have more and more EVs on your network they act as storage capacity. Combine with smart meters and you can use EVs for load shedding vs dumping to heat. Even if you don't ever recover any energy from the evs increasing or decreasing charge rates will allow you to stabilise the network.
Once you have that stabilisation effect in place you can increase your % of renewables.
Hardly. There is a pipeline that runs right across the middle of Israel and is the primary method that Russia exports oil to Asia. They bring it in by tanker at Ashkelon, run it through the pipe right across Israel and then load it onto a tanker at Eilat.
And then there is the Bazan group which has an absolutely massive oil refining complex in Israel.
Not sure I would extend your numbers to a % on reasonable doubt. To the outcome of the innocence project shows more the error rate for conviction. There would also be the error rate on not convicting, but that % is essentially unknowable.
It's beyond reasonable doubt, not beyond ANY doubt.
For example
Someone logs into her iCloud account, from an IP address that is registered to her physical address and then wipes the phone immediately after an event that gives her motive to wipe the phone.
You then have means, motive and opportunity with little to no reason to believe anything else was likely to occur. I don't see how you could argue that there was a reasonable doubt.
Magstripe and pin was what I grew up with as a kid in the 80s. We also always had the option of choosing the account at the terminal, CHQ/SAV/CRD are the three options. 3 accounts on 1 card.
Every single traffic light in my city of 4.4 million is a sensored light. And all the arterial ones are connected to a central traffic light control center that adjusts the timings to maximise traffic flow....
Increase your density and you increase your localised consumption demands and your localised supply of workers. This leads to business growth in the area which then leads to more worker demand which leads to more demand for density.
The real issue is suburbia. Each person having their 700sqm block and 4 bed 2 garage house. The transport infrastructure cost for that is prohibitive, so you end up with traffic jams.
If a low level system failure leads to raw effluent being released into the waterways your systems are horrifically designed. All the legacy systems around here that had that failure mode have been replaced. One project example is the BMP Alliance which was built to handle population growth and to remove the "failure to environment" state.
Septic also isn't without its problems. It dramatically increases the nutrient content in nearby waterways which causes all kinds of imbalances. This also assumes the septics are maintained and not just straight up broken.
I also say this as someone who is on a "biocycle" system and not a main sewerage system. Mains sewerage will run to me at some point, but it won't cost me anything to have it connected but will have a cost of about $40 a year once installed.
The Beenleigh Merrimac Pimpama Alliance (BMP Alliance) was a collaboration of Gold Coast City Council, Tenix and sub-alliance partner GHD. The Alliance was created to improve and expand the wastewater network in the rapidly developing areas of Beenleigh, Merrimac and Pimpama on QLD’s Gold Coast. The $220 million program included the design, construction, modification, expansion and decommissioning of wastewater pipelines, wastewater pumping stations and related assets.
Project Scope: Construction of approximately 47km of new wastewater pipes Decommissioning of 40 pumping stations Upgrade 41 pumping stations Overflow storage added to 15 pumping stations Construction of 8 new pumping stations
I work in this industry and plant & network optimisation for waste management is a major place of investment.
That said I live in a first world developed country and the challenges are different. It's pump stations and treatment capacity rather than getting any kind of system in place. The last 20 years has also seen the move towards megaplants and the decommissioning of smaller localised plants. The transfer costs of moving the raw effluent further are far out weighed by the efficiencies of the larger single sites. The larger sites are both economically and environmentally better.
Reverse Osmosis, the method used on the ISS, is high energy, & highly complex. It is perfect for that situation though and is the method that is used in large scale water treatment plants in the developed world.
For places with limited technical skills, unreliable power and limited supporting infrastructure it is not a good fit.
Just because someone is a crook doesn't mean its ok to step over their dead bodies to stop them.
The information the police were obtaining causes the crims to suspect and then kill / harm each other. The police determined that the risks or death / injury to the people involved in or around the criminal activites exceed the rewards
Means lots of poling places everywhere, no queues, the electoral commission comes to your house if you have a reason you cant travel there.
Also set an independent body to set electoral boundaries so gerrymandering is a thing of the past.
Don't want to vote for anyone? Draw a giant cock on the ballot sheet.
Seems to work extremely well in Australia. Sure we have our political problems, but when everyone has to vote it naturally pulls the political representation towards the center as dog whistling to get people out to vote isn't required. You can see a correction coming in australia now. The current ruling party tried to lurch to the right on social and economic policy. There was a byelection that had the highest swing against the government in history and come the general election in may they are going to be wiped out. They will sit in electoral purgatory until they move back to the center.
This is very true in Australia. I've always been an LNP voter, mainly due to the economic policies. The lurch to the right and the sudden increase of religion in the LNP though has made it impossible to vote for them.
Which means I'm truly stuck. The labor party's economic approach is just retarded, it's not even true socialism it's just jobs for the unions.
What I really want is an actual social liberal, economic dry party. Which is what the liberals were meant to be when they were founded.
The absolute best thing that could happen to the US is compulsory voting.
Make it a requirement to be on the electoral role once you are over 18 and make it a requirement to vote.
Blah blah blah what about my freedom to not vote blah blah blah rights about me blah blah blah it's a free country I shouldn't have to vote if I don't want to. Simply put it's not a free country, try not paying your taxes and see how free the country really is. In the end, as citizens, we get privileges and in exchange we pay costs. If there is no one you want to vote for then draw a giant cock on the voting sheet. Nothing requires you to make a valid vote, just to turn up on the day. And for all the too poor, too sick, too remote people there are a million ways that the vote can be got to you.
Then you stop getting dog whistle politics, because mobilizing the voter is no longer the challenge. Now the challenge is to actually win the majority of your people. It inevitably pulls you towards the middle.
Kinda depends on what your aim is. Always on storage then hard disks. But not for archival purposes.
One example of stuff I have worked on is the storage of seismic data. It is simply too much data to keep hot all the time. Especially since most of it is never used. So it is stored on tape. It goes into an environmentally controlled building and goes into a data migration programme where the tapes are read onto new media every 10 years.
I'm sure there is no technical reason you couldn't drop HDD platters into a reader, but the nice thing about LTO is they are all backwards compatible. An LTO 1 tape can be read by an LTO 8 drive.
For an enterprise the cost of the drives is the smallest part of the total cost.
If you are needing large scale long term archival storage you are using tape libraries anyway and they are far far more than 3000 pounds. Even then tape beats all other options currently.
Ev cars are full everytime you get in them in the morning.
Theres no getting in the car with the fuel light on. For most people and most usage cases a daily range of 450km is more than enough. It doesnt really matter if it takes 6 hrs to charge if youre asleep.
The only time charge time matters is when you exceed 450km in a day.
You would also get a choice. Cheaper power to allow car to be storage or more expensive for not. Same options as ive got for hotwater systems and aircon
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wik...
Definitely Ashkelon. Its the location the trans-israel pipeline.
Also that path is shorter and cheaper to operate than going round africa or via the Suez so it carries huge quantities of oil.
Doesn't necessarily require the renewables / nuclear first. If you have more and more EVs on your network they act as storage capacity. Combine with smart meters and you can use EVs for load shedding vs dumping to heat. Even if you don't ever recover any energy from the evs increasing or decreasing charge rates will allow you to stabilise the network.
Once you have that stabilisation effect in place you can increase your % of renewables.
Hardly. There is a pipeline that runs right across the middle of Israel and is the primary method that Russia exports oil to Asia. They bring it in by tanker at Ashkelon, run it through the pipe right across Israel and then load it onto a tanker at Eilat.
And then there is the Bazan group which has an absolutely massive oil refining complex in Israel.
Sorry didn't pay enough attention to see you were not Bill.....
I need more sleep
Not sure I would extend your numbers to a % on reasonable doubt. To the outcome of the innocence project shows more the error rate for conviction. There would also be the error rate on not convicting, but that % is essentially unknowable.
It's beyond reasonable doubt, not beyond ANY doubt.
For example
Someone logs into her iCloud account, from an IP address that is registered to her physical address and then wipes the phone immediately after an event that gives her motive to wipe the phone.
You then have means, motive and opportunity with little to no reason to believe anything else was likely to occur. I don't see how you could argue that there was a reasonable doubt.
Magstripe and pin was what I grew up with as a kid in the 80s. We also always had the option of choosing the account at the terminal, CHQ/SAV/CRD are the three options. 3 accounts on 1 card.
Only a decade?
The uk had chip and pin in 2006 when i lived there. Not sure when they rolled it out out.
And in 2014 australia stopped accepting signatures at all.
Now though im pretty much 100% contactless and done mainly via my phone.
Every single traffic light in my city of 4.4 million is a sensored light. And all the arterial ones are connected to a central traffic light control center that adjusts the timings to maximise traffic flow....
Only if roads are your measure of max capacity.
Increase your density and you increase your localised consumption demands and your localised supply of workers. This leads to business growth in the area which then leads to more worker demand which leads to more demand for density.
The real issue is suburbia. Each person having their 700sqm block and 4 bed 2 garage house. The transport infrastructure cost for that is prohibitive, so you end up with traffic jams.
If a low level system failure leads to raw effluent being released into the waterways your systems are horrifically designed. All the legacy systems around here that had that failure mode have been replaced. One project example is the BMP Alliance which was built to handle population growth and to remove the "failure to environment" state.
Septic also isn't without its problems. It dramatically increases the nutrient content in nearby waterways which causes all kinds of imbalances. This also assumes the septics are maintained and not just straight up broken.
I also say this as someone who is on a "biocycle" system and not a main sewerage system. Mains sewerage will run to me at some point, but it won't cost me anything to have it connected but will have a cost of about $40 a year once installed.
The Beenleigh Merrimac Pimpama Alliance (BMP Alliance) was a collaboration of Gold Coast City Council, Tenix and sub-alliance partner GHD. The Alliance was created to improve and expand the wastewater network in the rapidly developing areas of Beenleigh, Merrimac and Pimpama on QLD’s Gold Coast. The $220 million program included the design, construction, modification, expansion and decommissioning of wastewater pipelines, wastewater pumping stations and related assets.
Project Scope:
Construction of approximately 47km of new wastewater pipes
Decommissioning of 40 pumping stations
Upgrade 41 pumping stations
Overflow storage added to 15 pumping stations
Construction of 8 new pumping stations
Governments are.
I work in this industry and plant & network optimisation for waste management is a major place of investment.
That said I live in a first world developed country and the challenges are different. It's pump stations and treatment capacity rather than getting any kind of system in place. The last 20 years has also seen the move towards megaplants and the decommissioning of smaller localised plants. The transfer costs of moving the raw effluent further are far out weighed by the efficiencies of the larger single sites. The larger sites are both economically and environmentally better.
Agreed, often solving the waste problem partially solves the water supply problem as well.
Reverse Osmosis, the method used on the ISS, is high energy, & highly complex. It is perfect for that situation though and is the method that is used in large scale water treatment plants in the developed world.
For places with limited technical skills, unreliable power and limited supporting infrastructure it is not a good fit.
Just because someone is a crook doesn't mean its ok to step over their dead bodies to stop them.
The information the police were obtaining causes the crims to suspect and then kill / harm each other. The police determined that the risks or death / injury to the people involved in or around the criminal activites exceed the rewards
Think shanty town with no sewer or sanitation system.
Community bathroom facilities provide sanitation to these areas significantly lowering risks of outbreaks.
The outflow of a septic tank is still highly contaminated. Drinking water that is contaminated by that outflow would be hazourdous to drink.
Over 18, must be on the roll. Must vote.
Means lots of poling places everywhere, no queues, the electoral commission comes to your house if you have a reason you cant travel there.
Also set an independent body to set electoral boundaries so gerrymandering is a thing of the past.
Don't want to vote for anyone? Draw a giant cock on the ballot sheet.
Seems to work extremely well in Australia. Sure we have our political problems, but when everyone has to vote it naturally pulls the political representation towards the center as dog whistling to get people out to vote isn't required. You can see a correction coming in australia now. The current ruling party tried to lurch to the right on social and economic policy. There was a byelection that had the highest swing against the government in history and come the general election in may they are going to be wiped out. They will sit in electoral purgatory until they move back to the center.
And it takes them AGES to get anything approved and everything goes through 100 hands.
It doesn't come as a surprise that short deadlines and pressure is a massive culture shock.
This is very true in Australia. I've always been an LNP voter, mainly due to the economic policies. The lurch to the right and the sudden increase of religion in the LNP though has made it impossible to vote for them.
Which means I'm truly stuck. The labor party's economic approach is just retarded, it's not even true socialism it's just jobs for the unions.
What I really want is an actual social liberal, economic dry party. Which is what the liberals were meant to be when they were founded.
Even better that peter dutton is my MP as well.
The absolute best thing that could happen to the US is compulsory voting.
Make it a requirement to be on the electoral role once you are over 18 and make it a requirement to vote.
Blah blah blah what about my freedom to not vote blah blah blah rights about me blah blah blah it's a free country I shouldn't have to vote if I don't want to. Simply put it's not a free country, try not paying your taxes and see how free the country really is. In the end, as citizens, we get privileges and in exchange we pay costs. If there is no one you want to vote for then draw a giant cock on the voting sheet. Nothing requires you to make a valid vote, just to turn up on the day. And for all the too poor, too sick, too remote people there are a million ways that the vote can be got to you.
Then you stop getting dog whistle politics, because mobilizing the voter is no longer the challenge. Now the challenge is to actually win the majority of your people. It inevitably pulls you towards the middle.
Kinda depends on what your aim is. Always on storage then hard disks. But not for archival purposes.
One example of stuff I have worked on is the storage of seismic data. It is simply too much data to keep hot all the time. Especially since most of it is never used. So it is stored on tape. It goes into an environmentally controlled building and goes into a data migration programme where the tapes are read onto new media every 10 years.
I'm sure there is no technical reason you couldn't drop HDD platters into a reader, but the nice thing about LTO is they are all backwards compatible. An LTO 1 tape can be read by an LTO 8 drive.
For an enterprise the cost of the drives is the smallest part of the total cost.
If you are needing large scale long term archival storage you are using tape libraries anyway and they are far far more than 3000 pounds. Even then tape beats all other options currently.
To date all lto drives have been backwards compatible.