Emu1981
Emu1981 t1_jc5u02q wrote
Reply to comment by EffortNoNoNo in Is there a type of precipitation that exists on other planets but not ours? Or theoretical precipitation that doesn’t happen here? by ButIHateTheTaste
It also rains sulfuric acid and basalt frost remnants of metals on Venus. According to my linked article there is also a exoplanet that has molten glass rain.
https://www.bbcearth.com/news/the-strange-world-of-weather-on-other-planets
Emu1981 t1_jc5sl9t wrote
Reply to comment by TheRageDragon in PotatoP Laptop Aims for Two Years of Battery Life by diacewrb
>you can at least eat the potato when it's out of power
That would likely depend on how long that potato provided power for lol
Emu1981 t1_jc0imbi wrote
Reply to comment by migueltrout in As they still have a neutral charge, can antineutrons replace neutrons in a regular atom? by Oheligud
>It absolutely boggles my mind that we as human beings have discovered this knowledge.
What is even more mind boggling is that we could be completely wrong about it all and not even know it - the old story about the blind men describing a elephant by touch comes to mind. We cannot "see" quarks but rather we can only see how they effect the physical world (e.g. via destroying matter in a particle accelerator).
We then infer what they are and build models to describe what we see. All it would take is a discovery that changes our understanding of one little part to completely upend the model.
*edit* bleh, no idea why Reddit insists that there should be a line break in there.
Emu1981 t1_j99ds1x wrote
Reply to comment by Cerulean_IsFancyBlue in Why Nikola Tesla is So Famous (and Westinghouse is not) by pier4r
>There’s a pop-culture, geek level awareness of Nicky Tesla, usually a distorted idea of him not strictly historical or biographical.
And there are the nutters who think that Telsa created a way to provide free electricity to everyone wirelessly, that he developed a death ray and other sorts of kooky claims.
Emu1981 t1_j8dgz5a wrote
Reply to comment by AsianSteampunk in These prosthetics break the mold with third thumbs, spikes, and superhero skins by ChickenTeriyakiBoy1
>a few years ago i was thinking about what if mecha hand got really good would i be tempted to chop off one hand and replace it.
I am hoping that biomechanical stuff really takes off before my natural body starts to give up. Cancer and heart failure are the leading causes of natural death so it would be nice to have "cures" for both.
Emu1981 t1_j75jnba wrote
Reply to comment by TheKnightSpliff in Netflix Deletes New Password Sharing Rules, Claims They Were Posted in Error by echosayswhat
>It's like they're gunning to become the Netscape Navigator of streaming services.
Netscape Navigator is still around in spirit in the 4th most popular browser on desktop/laptop though (3rd if you ignore Safari) - Firefox was originally split off the Mozilla codebase back in 2002.
I think a more apt comparison would be Atari - a once great tech company leading the way to a bright future who's headlines now include operating a cryptocurrency worth a 3600th of a USD each and launching a failed retro console.
Emu1981 t1_j5kk4mx wrote
Reply to comment by Purpoisely_Anoying_U in Radxa Rock5 Model A is a credit card-sized single-board PC with RK3588S and up to 16GB RAM (starting at $99) by giuliomagnifico
>then 2ghz just a few years later and have pretty much stayed there since for practically everything.
*looks at the base speed of 3.6GHz and max boost of 5GHz at stock of his 12700k*.
The wall CPUs hit in terms of frequency was 5GHz-6GHz. Silicon just doesn't like going past those clock speeds without pulling a ton of power and producing a butt load of heat.
Emu1981 t1_j5kgy89 wrote
Reply to comment by Iintl in Radxa Rock5 Model A is a credit card-sized single-board PC with RK3588S and up to 16GB RAM (starting at $99) by giuliomagnifico
>Switch literally has Skyrim available.
Skyrim is not a good example for this though. Skyrim had it's ten year anniversary 2 years ago. This means that the "2015-grade performance" is actually 2 generations ahead of what was available when Skyrim released.
Emu1981 t1_j5kgg4k wrote
Reply to comment by Iintl in Radxa Rock5 Model A is a credit card-sized single-board PC with RK3588S and up to 16GB RAM (starting at $99) by giuliomagnifico
>The Apple M1 proved that ARM cores can outpace x86 in terms of performance.
And a lot of the performance wins are due to the ASICs on the SoC instead of actual core performance. ASICs will always outperform general purpose processors because they are specially designed to do a certain task well instead of doing everything ok.
Emu1981 t1_j52xrle wrote
Reply to comment by HornedDiggitoe in Given that reproduction is difficult or impossible when both animals have different numbers of chromosomes, how did so many species evolve to have so many different numbers of them? by MercurioLeCher
>Imagine what the life expectancy was for disabled/sick people prior to an abundance of food.
What makes you think that there was no abundance of food before the discovery of agriculture? Hunter gatherer groups tended to migrate around to follow the food over the seasons. Between this and the low populations it would have been pretty rare for the groups to go hungry over a long enough period of time for individuals to starve to death.
Agriculture and animal husbandry is what allowed for humans to settle down and to start multiplying like rabbits.
Emu1981 t1_j4z338x wrote
Reply to comment by Divallo in [OC] US Opioid overdose deaths from 1999 to 2018 by hcrx
>You will never solve sorrow and rage by blaming drugs and guns.
But fixing societies problems means that people won't profit as much and we cannot have that now can we? /s
Honestly, I have been saying for years now that the issue that the USA has regarding guns and crime is down to social inequity. The less you have the more likely you are to risk it all to get more (i.e. purely risk versus reward). The lower the social status of your family growing up the more likely you are to have mental health issues that push you towards drug use to escape it all - happy well adjusted people are rarely self-destructive.
Emu1981 t1_j3ps5kk wrote
Reply to comment by HeyZeusDiedForYou in Raspberry Pi launches higher resolution camera module, now with autofocus | Alongside the company’s Camera Module 3, it’s also releasing a new module for use with M12-mount lenses. by chrisdh79
>Same, now I feel compelled to do something cool with it just because of the knowledge that there’s a shortage
My Pi is just sitting attached to my 3D printer that I haven't used in forever because I had health issues. I could probably sell it for a profit or use it in some other project but I do want to get my 3D printer up and running again sooner or later and Octoprint makes life so much easier.
Emu1981 t1_j1l0fuk wrote
Reply to comment by pollok112 in Did Oliver Cromwell Ban Christmas? by Brattonismybae
>Scotland did ban it in the 1500's
Was that during the time period where "Christmas" was basically adults getting drunk AF and causing chaos in the streets?
Emu1981 t1_iy13ap7 wrote
Reply to comment by Commisioner_Bush in News Release: NREL Creates Highest Efficiency 1-Sun Solar Cell - 39.5% efficiency by TimeSpentWasting
>Almost all PV is connected to the grid, there's no point in having a battery
It really depends on your usage patterns. For me it could be a great investment to get batteries if I had PV. The Feed In Tariff is about 20% of the cost of grid supplied KWh which means that having a battery to cover the period between when the sun goes down and the off-peak rates hit could save a decent amount of money. I would have to gather data (power consumption vs time of day) and do the maths to figure out if the cost savings would pay for themselves though and I am not going to bother to do that without having the option to put up PV in the first place.
Emu1981 t1_iy11v9w wrote
Reply to comment by Maiyku in People who win the lottery make poor financial decisions because people who make good financial decisions don't buy lottery tickets. by DjHalk45
>but he won $1,000 twice in the three years I worked there
How much did he spend on tickets over those three years though?
My brother used to be a poker machine junky and would put thousands through them. He would always brag about how he won "$5000" here and "$1000" there but overall he would have been down by tens of thousands of dollars a year despite the wins. I used to go with him sometimes (usually to the Texas Hold'em tournaments and then play the pokies a bit afterwards because he didn't want to leave for a while afterwards) but I would just take like $40 with me to play with and continually buy beers to drink while playing. Despite lucky wins here and there (one time I came home drunk as a skunk with several hundred in gold coins in my pockets lol) I know that I would be down overall on the poker machines.
Emu1981 t1_iy108w2 wrote
Reply to comment by decolored in People who win the lottery make poor financial decisions because people who make good financial decisions don't buy lottery tickets. by DjHalk45
>if you continue to play the lottery after winning, you are likely to continue to use that lottery winner wealth until you eventually win again, when compared with the average player
Let's say the population is 100 million, you have 1 million lottery players* and of these 1 million lottery players, 1000 have won the jackpot. The ratio of jackpot winners to the general population is 1 in 100,000. If a single one of those jackpot winners wins the jackpot again then the double jackpot winner to single jackpot winner ratio is equal to 1 in 1,000. This means that despite having just a single double jackpot winner, the double jackpot winner is statistically 100 times more common in the jackpot winner population than the single jackpot winner is in the general population.
Note: I have no idea what percentage of the population has actually won a jackpot, the numbers provided are just guesses that let me show what I am getting and to do the maths easier.
*edited to hopefully make some sense looks for his coffee*
*I could probably just remove the reference to the percentage of the population that plays the lottery as it isn't really used at all.
Emu1981 t1_iy0y82p wrote
Reply to comment by renomustang in People who win the lottery make poor financial decisions because people who make good financial decisions don't buy lottery tickets. by DjHalk45
>There is no way they be successful with that money absent some very good sound financial advice.
Here in Australia if you win over a certain amount of money in the lottery (and maybe scratchies?) you are required to take a (admittedly short) financial planning course. I think the hope is that you will make some sensible financial decisions with your money instead of blowing it all on hookers and coke.
Emu1981 t1_iy0xrie wrote
Reply to comment by DruTangClan in People who win the lottery make poor financial decisions because people who make good financial decisions don't buy lottery tickets. by DjHalk45
>Lol so should alcohol be banned then? Caffeine?
Don't forget refined sugar as well.
Emu1981 t1_iy0q4cw wrote
Reply to comment by Tikithing in People who win the lottery make poor financial decisions because people who make good financial decisions don't buy lottery tickets. by DjHalk45
>I work in a shop and I always laugh when people buy lottery tickets because the jackpot has hit a certain amount. Like ugh, $150 million, not even worth winning, but $200 million is.
It is a great way to self moderate your spending on lottery tickets while still getting that "if I won the lottery" feel. If there is 52 draws a year and the jackpot goes off enough for it to only hit (say) $200m+ for 2-3 of those draws then you go from potentially playing 52 times a year to just 2-3 times a year.
Emu1981 t1_ixwsz31 wrote
Reply to comment by garry4321 in A bot that watched 70,000 hours of Minecraft could unlock AI’s next big thing by Soupjoe5
>And CPU’s have stagnated in power offer the last 10 years.
You are joking right? 2012 saw the release of Intel's 3rd gen Core processors and AMD's Piledriver CPUs. The 13900k is around 250% faster than the i7-3770k in the single core Geekbench 5 and nearly 400% faster than the FX-8350 - in the multicore benchmark that lead increases to around 700% and 800% respectively (bit unfair given that the 3770k is 4c/8t, the FX-8350 is 8c/8t and the 13900k is 24c/32t). That isn't even taking into account the iGPU/dGPU would be likely used for running the AI models over the CPU - you cannot deny that there has been a huge uplift in performance of GPUs from 2012 to now.
TL;DR: CPUs may have stagnated with only minor performance gains from each new generation from around 2011 to 2017 but from 2017 to now there has been constant noticeable improvements for each new generation due to AMD actually putting up some decent competition with their Zen architecture.
Emu1981 t1_iv9bde6 wrote
Reply to comment by Orcwin in Researchers create a Drone That Can 'See Through Walls' With Wifi | At the University of Waterloo recently fixed one up with a scanning device that is the definition of invasive. by chrisdh79
>The concept from the article has multiple radios, and can therefore do triangulation of the received signals.
It depends on how accurate of a fix you want. I have a old router that could do fairly accurate Wi-Fi triangulation but the accuracy decreased as the RF clutter increased (e.g. walls between the router and the device).
Emu1981 t1_iuufagy wrote
Reply to comment by meltingpotato in Check where you can watch a movie (or tv show) of your choice in your country by Maker_MG82
>The answer to all of them would be 1337x where I live
I need to utilise a VPN to access any of the torrent websites because our past government decided to kneel at the altar of the MPAA...
Emu1981 t1_iugxna5 wrote
Reply to comment by AndarianDequer in Is taking rabies vaccine 100% effective? as in the once infected person won't need a booster shot in the future? by DetectiveSherlocky
>So his vaccine lasted for him over 40 years.
Given that rabies has a mortality rate approaching 100% once symptoms appear, would you risk relying on your old vaccinations?
Emu1981 t1_iugxfg7 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Is taking rabies vaccine 100% effective? as in the once infected person won't need a booster shot in the future? by DetectiveSherlocky
>the COVID vaccine was a 5
I found that the COVID vaccine highly depended on who actually gave you the injection. I had Pfizer for my first two doses and Moderna for my two boosters. My first dose of Pfizer was barely noticeable other than the mild fever and ache of my arm afterwards. My second dose, which was done by a different nurse but same vaccine at the same centre, was painful AF but the fever and arm ache was way more mild. Third and fourth were done at my local chemist and neither really did much of anything regarding pain or aching beyond a really mild arm arche (barely noticeable) and a very mild fever - I literally feel hotter now due to the combination of heat from my computer (just played around 45 minutes of BF2042) and the high humidity.
Emu1981 t1_jc5uc8a wrote
Reply to comment by YawnTractor_1756 in Confirmed: Global floods, droughts worsening with warming by besselfunctions
>No wonder that despite things are overall maybe 10% worse, people perceive them to be 120% worse.
We had a record fire season in 2019 here in Australia where over thirteen million acres of bushland burned at temperatures hot enough to kill everything. We then had record rain and flooding events for the next few years. Now that El Nino is back in effect I expect that we will go back to record breaking bushfire seasons...