empireOfLove2

joined 2 years ago
[–] empireOfLove2 91 points 2 months ago (19 children)

One, it completes one of their long standing policy of "one China". They still view Taiwan as a rogue rebellion state to bring back into the fold, not an independent country to conquer.

Two, it would cripple a lot of the west's high end silicon industry. TSMC is the only one that can make the worlds most advanced nodes, as well as Taiwan holds chip packaging infrastructure that any other nodes require on to be useful.

To that end it is a geopolitical chip that China can use to pressure the west, but likely will never act upon until a real hot war breaks out.

[–] empireOfLove2 12 points 2 months ago

Someone definitely had a lot of money bet on him and is mad they lost it

[–] empireOfLove2 17 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Don't believe it for a second. He gives no fucks about the debt, he's only mad because they're coming after the free money tap ("green" energy incentives) that all his parasitic companies depend on.

[–] empireOfLove2 45 points 2 months ago

me and my 7 allowed days of PTO a year are gonna tell you to go find a fat cactus to sit on

[–] empireOfLove2 3 points 2 months ago

The original and Rise of Rome are great. If you don't have Rise of Rome it's almost mandatory, it runs a lot better and has a lot of quality of life improvements, like a higher population cap.

[–] empireOfLove2 10 points 2 months ago (2 children)

I'll still crack open any one of the Age of Empires series from time to time.

[–] empireOfLove2 31 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Mormons. Lee is a Mormon. The Mormon church has >$250 billion in its coffers, and Utah is more than 70% public land.

If they forced a public land selloff, the church could buy every acre of it and turn Utah into their own little religious ethnostate.

[–] empireOfLove2 79 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Fuck Off you Mormon nazi

[–] empireOfLove2 18 points 2 months ago

Lee wants it sold off so the Mormon church (which sits on an insanely sized endowment) can buy up the entire state of Utah and turn into their true cult paradise.

[–] empireOfLove2 57 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Republicans pay lip service to morality, but they will always, always fall in lockstep behind the party line. This won't pass.

[–] empireOfLove2 5 points 2 months ago

living in a bruh moment

441
I AM UNSTOPPABLE (lemmy.dbzer0.com)
 
72
a winter stroll (lemmy.dbzer0.com)
 
 

Chickens coming home to roost

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/13397075

Reschke is such a huge piece of shit.... oh and he was elected fraudulently in the first place. Doesn't deserve the title of Representative.

 

Reschke is such a huge piece of shit.... oh and he was elected fraudulently in the first place. Doesn't deserve the title of Representative.

 

not being able to ctrl-F a textbook or have click-to-chapter links sure makes studying harder these days... and any scanning software worth it's salt will at least do the bare minimum OCR automatically...

57
Biochem (mander.xyz)
 
 

They were dead as a company the second they went public. It always always happens this way...

Frankly dutch drinks have been heavily mid for a while anyway.

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by empireOfLove2 to c/piracy
 

ok maybe i'm just being a dumbass. I'm getting textbooks off of z-library per the megathread, as they are the only site that lists the specific books I need currently. I am browsing via TOR.

I can't seem to see a download button or link for the books I am looking for, nor for any other book I open. Maybe this is because I don't have an account. But let's say I don't feel like making one, because that means spinning up another burner email, and and and.... idk. I'm lazy.

I thought I'd be nice and access the content via the IPFS CID using the IPFS desktop node/app thing from here. Zlibrary lists IPFS CID's for all books they host. That will save server load on them and likely be faster for a couple of the 200+MB PDF's.
But it absolutely can NOT find any of the CID's that z-library gives for any of it's content, whether I click browse or inspect in the search box or use the import function, even after I let it sit and run on my extra seed PC for two days to populate the peer list.

I know IPFS must be working as some of the test CID's I used from the tutorial imported ok.

am i being dumb? am I missing the fundamental purpose of the IPFS CID's here or something?

 

cross-posted from: https://midwest.social/post/7194668

From my previous comment, it looks like NHTSA is moving faster than I predicted. We're now at step 1, with this Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking.

Most of this notice seems to be a report on why 'impaired driving' is bad. I see alcohol, cannabis, mobile phone use, drowsiness...etc.

Due to technology immaturity and a lack of testing protocols, drugged driving is not being considered in this advance notice of proposed rulemaking.

Makes sense.

There is no clear and consistent engineering or industry definition of ‘‘impairment.’’

Yep, another unclear request by Congress.

NHTSA believes that Congress did not intend to limit NHTSA’s efforts under BIL to alcohol impairment.

Okay, that's fair.

Camera-based-systems, however, are increasingly feasible and common in vehicles.

Uh-oh...

The Safety Act also contains a ‘‘make inoperative’’ provision, which prohibits certain entities from knowingly modifying or deactivating any part of a device or element of design installed in or on a motor vehicle in compliance with an applicable FMVSS. Those entities include vehicle manufacturers, distributors, dealers, rental companies, and repair businesses. Notably, the make inoperative prohibition does not apply to individual vehicle owners. While NHTSA encourages individual vehicle owners not to degrade the safety of their vehicles or equipment by removing, modifying, or deactivating a safety system, the Safety Act does not prohibit them from doing so. This creates a potential source of issues for solutions that lack consumer acceptance, since individual owners would not be prohibited by Federal law from removing or modifying those systems (i.e., using defeat mechanisms).

Note that "make inoperative" does not apply to a "kill switch" in this case. NHTSA uses the term to mean "disabling required safety devices". For example, as an individual vehicle owner, it's perfectly legal for you to remove the seatbelts from your car, despite Federal requirements. But it's illegal for the entities listed above to do it. (This example doesn't extend to state regulations. It's legal for you to remove your seatbelts, but may still be illegal to drive a car without them.)

There's a short 'discussion' here regarding how to passively detect impaired driving, noting the difficulties of creating such a system. Followed by a note that basically says if they can't do it within 10 years, NHTSA can give up and not do it, as stated in the Infrastructure law.

There's a long section on how to detect various types of impairment, current methods of preventing impaired driving, etc. An interesting section about detecting blood-alcohol level using infrared sensors embedded in the steering wheel. Body posture sensors can be used to detect driver distraction.

This is followed by a brief overview of the technologies NHTSA is considering:

Camera-Based Driver Monitoring Sensors

Hands-On-Wheel Sensors

Lane Departure and Steering Sensors

Speed/Braking Sensors

Time-Based Sensors

Physiological Sensors

On page 850 (21 of the PDF), NHTSA asks for feedback to several questions. There are a few pages of relevant issues, so I won't cover them here. If you wish, you can go here to leave a comment. Please don't leave irrelevant garbage like "I oppose this on the grounds of my Constitutional rights..." While applicable in this situation, it's irrelevant to NHTSA, and commenting like that will just waste everybody's time. There's a section on page 855 (26 of the PDF) about Privacy and Security.

That's that. Let me know I can answer any of your questions. I'll try to come back to this post throughout the day and see what's happening. But, I do not work for NHTSA, so can't remark on agency thought process.

 

was experimenting with gravity generators and artificial masses to make zero-contact rotating grids

haven't fully fleshed it out yet for a space station build

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