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Mastodon == good

Government regulation and call for facist authoritarianism == evil

Europeans do not have free speech and it is making it populace much poorer. Don't hold it up as a standard to aspire to.


What? Can you give some examples on how a different free speech definition make Europeans poorer?


Twitter wasn't ever close to making money - its IP wasn't even that valuable - hence the several clones that have popped up since Musk's purchase.

This is a straw man - like many other of the comments here. Full of emotion, but vapid in real substance.


Minus the FTC settlement payout, they actually were close to profitable.


I run a 46 panel array on my rooftop at my home in Florida. On a good day it generates around 80 kWh. On a cloudy day, 35-45 kWh. On stormy days it generates about 15 kWh. It cost me $40,000. At night, it generates no power, but needs a 20amp AC connection for the controller and 60 amps for the micro inverters.

I save about $50-80 a month on my electric bill. Solar in its current incarnation is not ready to power the world, it destroys the biome in which the panels are deployed, costs an awful lot to fabricate....

I am more interested in personal nuclear energy or recycled nuclear energy production. Solar is a distraction that when you start asking the right questions, feels more like gas-lighting than a solution to renewable sources of energy.


That sounds horribly expensive. I have a 12 panel array here in the Netherlands, and I paid € 3500 for it.

There was no biome on my roof that I was aware of.


You paid over 2x, too.


You can buy a pallet-load of 45 350W-peak panels for under $7000 nowadays. A used Nissan Leaf at 60% battery capacity is another $7000, and a converter/inverter to charge/discharge it is under $1000.

Furthermore: personal nukes will never happen. And, solar does not destroy biomes. And, its cost to fabricate is still falling at an exponential rate. So, you are zero for three, and paid too much.


Lets say 50kWh/day average, giving 1,500kWh/month. If it's only saving $65 on your electricity, doesn't that mean your electricity is around 4c/kWh? My math must be wrong. Are there other fees, or did you also include the payment for the panels?


A few points, my array was installed in 2018, so fairly recently. It still is one of the largest home arrays my installer, PES Solar maintains.

This amount of money I save on my monthly bill is the amount of money my local electric company pays me for the electricity the array generates. The way I was forced to install my array is such that it feeds the grid directly. They deduct this from my monthly bill where my home generally uses around 4500 kWh.

Now, I think they are not giving me fair market value for the electricity and I'm looking into purchasing either Tesla Powerwalls or another brand so I'm drawing from a battery bank and the array before drawing from the grid.

However, my conclusions at this time are that Solar is NOT ready for primary home usage unless you want to live a subsistence lifestyle.

I don't want panels in a field or on a lake for the same reasons I don't like our current versions of pavement or cement. Everything under it dies. Further, birds above the arrays are killed. This is not a reasonable alternative to energy dense fossil fuel yet.

We need to be more creative and realistic in our future energy sources.


> I also don't understand how a single organization making a change to its testing package, in the interest of leveling the playing field, is somehow "pushing" your political beliefs in any one direction... It's your choice whether you want to align your beliefs more closely with any side.

Leveling the outcome is NOT leveling the playing field. And by keeping the algorithm secret, it is tyranny not justice.


Move on. I have already been in this situation twice in previous startups as the engineering leader. This is a situation you cannot control nor influence.

As you move on, do so by not burning bridges and leave on a good note. Don't make it your mission to point out the obvious.


Can you help me understand what you mean by vendor lock-in and how it is different from say, developing a plugin for Wordpress vs a plugin for Ghost? Aren't you still choosing a platform?

Or do you mean technology lock-in, because we built our API server in golang?

For the Store, we provide a reference implementation that is open source in AngularJS 1.x, but the store could be implemented in any JS framework. We have contemplated building a competing reference implementation in ReactJS, for example.


Understood.

To ease this concern we are hoping to ship binary pkgs for Ottemo once we have tested this in the post golang 1.7 timeframe. This would allow access to developers wanting to build add-ons in golang and allow us to keep our source code private.

Link to Cox proposal for 1.7: https://github.com/golang/proposal/blob/master/design/2775-b...


It is the new backend for the Go Compiler

See: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1szwabPJJc4J-igUZU4ZKprOr...


So, currently Stage1 is complete. 2 more to go


From the referenced doc:

  I’m not entirely convinced that stages 2 & 3 are
  necessary, maybe we stop at stage 1.  It all depends on
  what optimizations we’d like to do that can’t be done
  because the IR is in the wrong form.  Proceeding with
  stages 2 and 3 might gain some efficiency in the compiler
  itself because then we don’t have to generate the old IR
  at all.  I suspect that effect will be small, however.


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