Uranium_Green 22 hours ago • 100%
For the texture/pattern around the edges where the squares are cut off; I would either remove them or taper them down towards the edges, so they are less likely to catch and eventually pull away.
Otherwise, this is a very cool idea that I'd like to see updates on!
Uranium_Green 7 days ago • 92%
Idk how true that is, it'll be highly dependent on what you're trying to dissolve.
This sounds to me more like the advice I've heard for using isopropyl for sterilizing equipment and surfaces, its more to do with how quickly the pure stuff evaporates. Evaporate too quickly and it doesn't sterilize, whereas 70% is best of both worlds.
Uranium_Green 6 months ago • 90%
I believe Australia has mandatory voting and achieves a ~95% participation of registered voters basically every election, though they do enforce it with either a day in court or a fine.
I do wonder if you fined people, or wasted a day of theirs with court, whether it would have an impact in Greece after a couple of elections?
Uranium_Green 6 months ago • 100%
The linked app Stremio will work on android, you just download the apk directly as it's not on available on Fdroid, the add-on will work with android and VPNs work on android either natively or via there own app, depends on who your VPN provider is.
Uranium_Green 6 months ago • 100%
I'd suggest using a VPN, if you're in a first works country, basically torrenting can be recorded by your ISP/movie studios etc, whereas streaming typically won't be
Most VPNs typically will have a desktop app (if using windows) that you can use to make sure it's on and functional etc (and can even force apps to not be able to torrent when its turned off)
If you live in a 3rd world country don't worry about the VPN
Beyond that, what you want is in terms of simplicity is something like Stremio with the torrentio add-on installed, this will allow Stremio to find torrents for whatever you want to watch, you can select quality, language, etc with it. It'll work for film and TV.
Install Stremio and then install Torrentio
You can download the apk from the website below: Apk here: https://www.stremio.com/downloads Add-on for Stremio here: https://torrentio.strem.fun/
Uranium_Green 8 months ago • 94%
They're explicitly not sending out review codes until launch suggesting that it's likely a bad game, but also means they're likely just going to try and make their money with unrefundable day 1 sales on Playstation/Xbox store
Uranium_Green 8 months ago • 100%
Are you using PCVR with steam or is this quest exclusively?
If using steam:
Super; you're literally a super hero, there are missions with different powers or a free play mode where you can mix and match different powers in each hand etc.
Garden of the sea; basically a cute animal crossing type of thing grow your plants, make friends with animals etc.
If just using quest:
Neko Atsume; a cute Japanese cat game where the cats just come and visit, you can interact with them, give them treats, also has a passthrough mode if using Quest 3
Tentacular Not played it, but it does look like a fun one with our a major need for coordination
I'll try to come up with some more suggestions
Also re beatsabre, you can turn off death/failing via the cheats as well, it's how I play and how I introduce everyone to it
Uranium_Green 9 months ago • 100%
To freak us out when we're a little bit too high...
Uranium_Green 9 months ago • 100%
Whilst I've got no particular suggestions for it, I'd suggest taking a look at humble bundle, they do games bundles (and other book/asset bundles) at very good prices, normally focusing on a genre/publishes/studio/franchise. This is how a lot of people get going with steam and start to build a library of games, the bundles are often cheaper than the listed price of a single game.
Uranium_Green 9 months ago • 100%
Very true, I don't disagree there
Uranium_Green 9 months ago • 100%
I have no disagreement with your assertion, aside from the neglected aspect of in terms of energy in Vs energy out; the research is likely to help inform nuclear weapons design, yet if they are able to achieve more energy out than in (3mj out Vs 2mj in (though of course they required 300mj to run the lasers to produce this reaction)) then they are providing important data that may help inform different future designs of power generating fusion reactors, this is something that current other designs don't appear to have achieved afaik.
I doubt they will ever really use this style as a functional form of power generation, but if what they learn from the research allows eventually for a longer functioning fusion reaction that has an overall positive energy output, then it may be rather valuable.
Uranium_Green 9 months ago • 100%
Thermonuclear bombs are a mixture of fission AND fusion, the amount of energy required to achieve fusion requires fission to provide said energy.
Lasers igniting fusion is a bit of a more of a stretch to create a weapon from (the lasers require 300 mega joules of energy which in turn is 2mj of energy into the reaction and 3mj energy out); it may provide context and more information for fusion as a whole but that information is relevant to both weapons and energy research, not one or the other.
Uranium_Green 9 months ago • 97%
Researching this doesn't prevent renewables being researched or rolled out? I think the nuclear scientists developing this might be better researching this as opposed to researching fission reactors or researching renewables as this is likely their area of expertise.
Fusion is a long shot but if it was achieved it would be world changing (hopefully for the better)
Uranium_Green 9 months ago • 94%
Outta curiosity, how is fusion viable for bomb research? (Ignoring the fact that the world's current nuclear arsenal is already incredibly powerful, and that 100mega ton bombs have been designed and 50Mton bombs have been tested)
Edit: thank you to all for providing additional context, I see your point regarding more research is valuable for both weapons and energy research, though to say definitively that it is used for weapons research is neither here nor there.
Uranium_Green 9 months ago • 94%
I find it interesting how it appeared clear in 2016 US election that Reddit for example was being a target of Russian interference, (alongside other places like Facebook and Britain during Brexit), even with Russia in a weakened state China appears to have seen what was being done as valuable and taken up the task
The playbook always seems to be to stoke wedge issues, including funding groups on both sides of the political isle; funding the NRA and BLM seems to be two of the most common examples. The reality being that the amount of disruption and destabilisation that is achieved, it must be that these governments must see it as good value for their money.
Uranium_Green 9 months ago • 100%
Can I ask what you like about it?
Literally every part of my experience having gone there 2/3 times was shite; soggy chips, overcrowded and obnoxiously loud, the chicken burger literally is no better than my local fast food joint (and a hell of a lot worse than the slightly upmarket fast food places).
Most of that could be forgiven if the prices were reasonable but they're not; I seriously struggle to see any redeeming factors or reason for it's popularity beyond the meme of "cheeky Nando's", yet there's not anything cheeky about it beyond the cheek of what they get away with!
/Rant
Uranium_Green 9 months ago • 75%
Honestly Nando's is overpriced crap.
Less likely but if you get the chance to try a Pepe's burrito they're pretty good.
Pepe's is basically a fast food version of Nando's, with better ingredients and price for the portion size. As such it's about as far as I'll stray into fast food.
God Nando's pisses me off.
Uranium_Green 9 months ago • 100%
A literal caltrop
Uranium_Green 9 months ago • 100%
That's mostly just Coventry...
Uranium_Green 9 months ago • 66%
I read through the link, both the details on the air forces vehicle plans and the 'encounter' later.
This one is odd but I do still wonder what the feasible explanations of this may be.
The smell of sulphur can be cause by many things, including burning vulcanised rubber or geological activety. The radiation might be explainable, but I have no indication of what the readings were (background and of the area/objects/burns), which makes it more hard to make any suggestions. Though his injuries did immediately make me think radiation exposure...
Lastly, the molten metal recovered from the site.
What is the composition of the metal? And if they say they pried it from a crack in the rock, the shape that it has taken is too perfect... The angle on each bend is near identical, and the length of each straight is once again identical (something screams not pulled from a natural crack in rock to me).
Nothing concrete can be explained by this, but it is intriguing...
Uranium_Green 9 months ago • 100%
Was in a Tesco's about a month back and saw this bugger flying around my mum's partner whilst queueing for the self checkout, with about 4/5 more flying around, I plucked it out of the air and got a photo of it
Couldn't make a positive ID on it, though I'm unsure if its a local one - I've always heard to be wary of stripped legs
Uranium_Green 9 months ago • 100%
A keychain jewellers loupe, inexpensive but invaluable, can be used for inspect something up close, whether it's writing on computer chips to helping with mushroom identification, to identifying makers marks on old silware.
In a similar vein, cheap usb microscopes, though less versatile are incredibly useful for soldering/inspecting PCBs
Uranium_Green 10 months ago • 90%
Sorry for your loss, she looks a very determined individual in the first picture
Uranium_Green 10 months ago • 87%
This is such a silly one, pylons have been here well before I was born, to me they are a part of the landscape, I literally have one within 200m of my house.
As the other commentor says, unless we're intending on moving to HVDC, then there's not real point as losses will be rather staggering.
Uranium_Green 10 months ago • 100%
At minimum I'd suggest getting something to insulate them from the window sill, this could be PIR board or a silicone mat, but the heat mats I've used in the past have been very effective, the ones I've used are about 18w, which isn't a huge power draw.
No clue how cold it gets where you are, but the tomatoes and beans certainly seem like they'd benefit.
Heating lamps are effectively a waste of power.
Uranium_Green 10 months ago • 40%
...Like you realise most secondary schools have the set of responsibilities and expectations on a single page that the child will sign in year 7, right?
It's basically just symbolic and of course you can choose to not sign it and will still go to the school, but to say that they never agreed to it, atleast in my experience is a stretch. Though obviously there is a lot more nuance in this conversation.
The reality is underfunding of both schools, as well as sports/youth clubs, the schools being unable to make effective punishments, and parents not caring what their child gets up to both online and in school likely are the key things to blame.
Plus the effect on the psyche of children growing up in a world which they know is fucked and seeing genuinely so little to improve it probably doesn't help.
Uranium_Green 10 months ago • 100%
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_with_the_Newts
A short story about this from the same Czech author who (IIRC) gave us the concept and word 'robot'.
Uranium_Green 10 months ago • 100%
Surely when it branches out?
Uranium_Green 10 months ago • 100%
I have experienced this, a grand total of twice, but not for 5-10 minutes (once I was in a towel and came back around vibrating on the floor which was confusing but probably was the longest one at a minute or two).
I was a chronic joint smoker and would get lightheaded standing up in general. Typically since having switched to vaping it no longer happens. Is the high otherwise pleasurable for you?
Do you have a heart/lung/blood pressure condition in general?
Uranium_Green 10 months ago • 100%
I don't know but the blueballs does seem like a viable idea to work from.
It could've been worse, all she left you with was Blueberries...
Tender Blueberries from fertile ground, had their spirits raised but were ultimately crushed to bring you this beverage. Best served with an ice pack applied.
Uranium_Green 10 months ago • 100%
I imagine it's order is:
Ink
Engrave
Wipe off excess ink.
So basically you use a little bit of ink roughly where the typeface will be, when the laser melts the plastic, some pigment will diffuse into the melted plastic, but the unmelted/undiffused stuff is still removable.
If I had to guess this is how it's actually done on the nicer older keycaps.
Though I could be entirely wrong here...
Uranium_Green 10 months ago • 100%
But storage without inpacting available energy requires an excess, and the current shortfall of renewables is that there isn't enough energy produced for a significant excess (same goes for nuclear). Either way I was addressing the literal aspect of energy generation being 24/7 with nuclear.
Not to mention I could see viable uses for nuclear still, especially in processes that are effectively 24/7 hot water production via heat exchangers for providing heating to literal cities, energy production for large arc furnaces.
And don't mistake my view of nuclear as not seeing the benefits of renewable, my father lived on a boat where the heating and appliances were all run via solar panels and forklift batteries for more than 10 years of his life.
Uranium_Green 10 months ago • 57%
I mean you can vary it pretty significantly depending on the reactor type, but even if you couldn't you can still put the energy to work in alternative ways, such as pumping water up into reservoirs/damns to generate energy at other points, or using the excess energy to split water. There are many ways to use excess energy.
Uranium_Green 10 months ago • 100%
Wow, that's pretty stunning; I don't want this to come across the wrong way but it reminds me of the Arizona Ice tea designs (this is obviously better), something about the design reminds me of Native American weave designs
Uranium_Green 11 months ago • 100%
I can't tell if this is a real person posting this or not, but the article posted reads like AI generated content.
Even if it's not, I wouldn't trust an article that gives advice on choosing roofers and then uses corrugated abestos fibre cement roofing in their title picture. It probably means the person writing it doesn't have a clue (assuming it is a person and not AI spam)
Uranium_Green 11 months ago • 100%
Did you read the description of the book the guy linked?
This is an objective biographical study of Crowley written by someone who lived and worked intimately with him. Dr. Regardie observed "The Great Beast" at close quarters while serving as his personal secretary. The Eye in the Triangle was written many years later, after long contemplation. Regardie combines the psychological insight afforded by his professional training as a Reichian analyst with his grasp of Crowley's magical personality.
It's likely that the passage wasn't written by Crowley himself, so a source like the one linked may be useful.
Also Libgen if you'd rather download the book and ctrl+f the passage you're looking for
Uranium_Green 11 months ago • 88%
To add, the government wanting to do this mere weeks after basically saying they want to backdoor encrypted messaging services, makes me feel somewhat uncomfortable. The reality being that they are almost certainly not connected, but you still can't help but have that niggling feeling at the back of your mind.
Uranium_Green 11 months ago • 100%
So you normally can be ok for a day or so, might be a little bit more sensitive, some people get panic attacks/heightened anxiety, some get a feeling of emptyness or depression. It really varies on the individual, where they are and what's going on in their life.
There were days were I'd have a meltdown if I missed a day. By comparison; one day about a month or two after having stopped smoking tobacco due to having COVID, I felt like I didn't need it and just stopped with basically no negatives, though I was also in a good place in terms of my life which likely helped.
Personally if people are curious about SSRIs, I'd suggest they look into Vortioxetine, it's technically not an SSRI, which means it has much fewer side effects, but still does the same job as them, just with less foggy cognition/groggyness
Uranium_Green 11 months ago • 100%
I could believe it, in my dad's case it was combination of things, but in essence came down the cancer that paralysed and wasted him to nothing.
In any case, it cuts to your core seeing something so unique to an individual decaying with them.
Uranium_Green 11 months ago • 100%
They can work, though I'm always reluctant to suggest using them, unless you have one that you can spare without worry of ruining the oven (offgassing from components/PCB/flux), the other problem is ovens can be a lot more variable in temperature than you'd think, and in this scenario where it may even be the chips showing their age, subjecting them to very high temperatures isn't recommended.
Honestly when I bought a small £20 heatgun (smaller than the type you'd use to strip paint), I was kicking myself for not having bought one sooner, they make surface mounted components an absolute breeze Vs using a soldering iron.
The one exception for using ovens is if you're having to do an intricate board with hundreds of components, then I'd suggest buying a small/medium toaster over, and an oven thermometer for more accurate readings.
I don't know much about it, it's the only piece I've got that is made from two distinct layers of glass.