freecad FreeCAD FreeCAD gets a logo upgrade
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    zksmk
    3 months ago 100%

    Have you been following any of the discussions regarding potential issues with the administration and moderation on ml?

    Can't say I have.

    However, I originally made this community back in the day when lemmy.ml was basically the only instance, and have since then moved my account to another instance (2 years ago) specifically for those same reasons of lemmy.ml being... hmm.. politically charged.

    I didn't think of moving the community until now tbh, but that's not really something I can do. At most I could sticky a link to another community, or delete this one (which would be overkill imo), but for that to happen there needs to be a different community to begin with and community interest for it to happen. The power's all yours people. It's up to you guys to show interest and initiative. Maybe make a post about this, and check if there's interest, discuss where to move etc, a meta post like this is totally fine here on /c/freecad.

    Anyway, on a completely unrelated note, the community image did update after awhile, but in the wrong direction! It was the new logo on slrpnk.net/c/freecad@lemmy.ml for awhile, where my account is, but now I see that when the things synced the old lemmy.ml/c/freecad image overwrote the new one on slrpnk.net/c/freecad@lemmy.ml! I guess I can't change the image as a mod from another instance. I will have to mod my old lemmy.ml account here now to change the image (and hopefully it will stick this time around, assuming it works at all) but I will have to make a bug report on github about this when I find the time.

    Sorry for the late reply tho.

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  • freecad FreeCAD FreeCAD gets a logo upgrade
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    zksmk
    3 months ago 100%

    Done. It should take a while to propagate to every instance.

    Keep in mind tho, this is an unofficial community.

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  • freecad FreeCAD How to polar pattern a revolved surface?
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    zksmk
    10 months ago 100%

    I think you'd be better off using the Boolean XOR tool from the same Split submenu (if you approach it from the Part menubar in the Part workbench), on your cube and your array, instead of the Slice apart tool.

    Then on the resultant XOR object use the Explode compound tool from the Compound submenu.

    You'll get a folder with all your sliced parts in it.

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  • freecad FreeCAD Welcomes to FreeCAD on lemmy
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    zksmk
    1 year ago 100%

    I am. :)

    Most of the subscribers here are new as well since the recent reddit exodus, I'd say that makes them active.

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  • energy
    Green Energy zksmk 2 years ago 100%
    An activist group is spreading misinformation to stop solar projects in rural America https://www.npr.org/2023/02/18/1154867064/solar-power-misinformation-activists-rural-america

    > Citizens for Responsible Solar was founded in an exurb of Washington, D.C., by a longtime political operative named Susan Ralston who worked in the White House under President George W. Bush and still has deep ties to power players in conservative politics. > Ralston tapped conservative insiders to help set up and run Citizens for Responsible Solar. She also consulted with a longtime activist against renewable energy who once defended former President Donald Trump's unfounded claim that noise from wind turbines can cause cancer. And when Ralston was launching the group, a consulting firm she owns got hundreds of thousands of dollars from the foundation of a leading GOP donor who is also a major investor in fossil fuel companies. It's unclear what the money to Ralston's firm was used for. Ralston has previously denied that Citizens for Responsible Solar received money from fossil fuel interests. > Ralston said in an email to NPR and Floodlight that Citizens for Responsible Solar is a grassroots organization that helps other activists on a volunteer basis. The group isn't opposed to solar, Ralston said, just projects built on farmland and timberland. Solar panels belong on "industrial-zoned land, marginal or contaminated land, along highways, and on commercial and residential rooftops," she said. >But her group's rhetoric points to a broader agenda of undermining public support for solar. Analysts who follow the industry say Citizens for Responsible Solar stokes opposition to solar projects by spreading misinformation online about health and environmental risks. The group's website says solar requires too much land for "unreliable energy," ignoring data showing power grids can run dependably on lots of renewables. And it claims large solar projects in rural areas wreck the land and contribute to climate change, despite evidence to the contrary.

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    energy
    Green Energy zksmk 2 years ago 100%
    Fusion Research: W7-X new record plasma with gigajoule energy turnover generated for eight minutes via average coupled heating power of 2.7 megawatts phys.org

    cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/258267 > > On 15 February 2023, the researchers reached a new milestone: for the first time, they were able to achieve an energy turnover of 1.3 gigajoules in this device. This was 17 times higher than the best value achieved before the conversion (75 megajoules). The energy turnover results from the coupled heating power multiplied by the duration of the discharge. Only if it is possible to couple large amounts of energy continuously into the plasma and also remove the resulting heat, a power plant operation is possible. > > > The energy turnover of 1.3 gigajoule was achieved with an average heating power of 2.7 megawatts, whereby the discharge lasted 480 seconds. This is also a new record for Wendelstein 7-X and one of the best values worldwide. Before the completion works, Wendelstein 7-X achieved maximum plasma times of 100 seconds at much lower heating power. > > > Within a few years, the plan is to increase the energy turnover at Wendelstein 7-X to 18 gigajoules, with the plasma then being kept stable for half an hour.

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    fusion
    Nuclear fusion zksmk 2 years ago 100%
    W7-X new record: Plasma with gigajoule energy turnover generated for eight minutes via average coupled heating power of 2.7 megawatts phys.org

    > On 15 February 2023, the researchers reached a new milestone: for the first time, they were able to achieve an energy turnover of 1.3 gigajoules in this device. This was 17 times higher than the best value achieved before the conversion (75 megajoules). The energy turnover results from the coupled heating power multiplied by the duration of the discharge. Only if it is possible to couple large amounts of energy continuously into the plasma and also remove the resulting heat, a power plant operation is possible. > The energy turnover of 1.3 gigajoule was achieved with an average heating power of 2.7 megawatts, whereby the discharge lasted 480 seconds. This is also a new record for Wendelstein 7-X and one of the best values worldwide. Before the completion works, Wendelstein 7-X achieved maximum plasma times of 100 seconds at much lower heating power. > Within a few years, the plan is to increase the energy turnover at Wendelstein 7-X to 18 gigajoules, with the plasma then being kept stable for half an hour.

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    opensource Open Source CAD Sketcher | Blender Parametric Precision Modeling
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    Nice, it uses Solvespace's solver. Good choice, it's very intuitive.

    I still prefer FreeCAD (over Blender and SS) for CAD for its NURBS abilities (which SS lacks) but this is a great fit for Blender's poly modeling! Better than whatever FC's solver is (I forgot).

    👍

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  • linux Linux *Permanently Deleted*
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    Would just as soon recommend Debian or Linux Mint now.

    KDE Neon also doesn't have a snap Firefox, it comes out of the box with a Mozilla PPA Firefox (despite being Ubuntu based).

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  • privacy Privacy How giving up Privacy Affect Normal People?
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    It's about all our data in aggregate, not about your friend's data in particular.

    And yet it still affects your friend. How? Through other people. By having access to all that data the IT powers-that-be can easily build data models to manipulate people into many things, without them even realising it. Making political topics trend, encouraging harmful habits (like doom scrolling) and so on. That all leads to worse people getting elected, which leads to worse roads, worse taxes (higher/lower, whatever your friend thinks), more pollution and so on. That all affects your friend.

    Also, what your friend said is that they basically don't care if other more vulnerable people get manipulated into all those things he said (wasting time, money, time is money btw, etc...) because they themselves aren't affected. Do they think of themselves as a person that's that self-absorbed/selfish? Probably not.

    And your friend might also say, yeah fine, whatever, but I'm also just a fish in the sea, me changing my approach won't change anything for society. But do they vote?

    You have to lead by example. It has to start from somebody, it has to start from all of us. That's how black people no longer had to sit in the back of the bus in the US. It started small. That's how gay people get to marry. It started small. And that's how people won't get manipulated by their online feeds. It starts small.

    And if your friend is still, yeah, whatever, it doesn't affect me, tell them about the: first they came for x, but I wasn't an x, then they came for y, but I wasn't a y, then they came for z, but I wasn't a z, then they came for me, but there was nobody left to stand up for me.

    Your friend is encouraging behaviours that will bite either them in the ass, or their descendants one day. It will be a war, it will be a law, it will be climate change and a forest fire, that could have been prevented if people cared.

    And all it takes is a new messenger, new browser, a single add-on in it, and maybe a new website or two. They're not being asked to be a superhero, just to use a different computer programme. And that's all.

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  • socialism Socialism We Should Be Measuring Well-Being Catalysis, Not (trying and largely failing to measure) Economic Productivity
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    memes
    solarpunk memes zksmk 2 years ago 94%
    Futurepunk alignment chart

    Thoughts?

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    politics Politics More Britons want to scrap first-past-the-post elections than keep the status quo
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    And that's cool and all, but good luck with that endeavour if people can't even seem to agree to tweak their electoral system a bit. The UK, of all places, tends to be very revolution averse when it comes to politics.

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  • privacy Privacy community based ads
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 80%

    Those are called context-based ads or contextual targeting.

    The downside is it needs human intervention. It's hard to automate it online, without it preserving the typical track-y nature of online ads (the ads would still be getting served from an ad server to the browser directly, and therefore still no privacy.

    It works if the ads are hard coded into the webpage by the publisher server-side, but then the advertiser has no idea how many views the ad got, and therefore how much to pay for the ad space... which means the advertiser needs human intervention to decide how much to pay by a guesstimate, which means this whole scheme can't work for small random websites in an automated fashion.

    It might, and that's a mighty precarious might, work with some kind of crazy blockchain scheme (y'know, that whole distributed consensus thing... lol... an actual use for blockchain for once?!), but unlikely, very unlikely....

    Basically , I'm all for it as an alternative to donations or volunteering if they aren't possible , but you need to actually attract advertisers that want to advertise on your website first.

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  • fusion
    Nuclear fusion zksmk 2 years ago 100%
    Improved Stellarator Coil System compared to Wendelstein 7-x (cambridge.org) | A single-field-period quasi-isodynamic stellarator | Journal of Plasma Physics | Cambridge Core

    https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-plasma-physics/article/abs/singlefieldperiod-quasiisodynamic-stellarator/9B2A5FDCCD7774E4F91BE45E75FDC6B0 > A **single-field-period quasi-isodynamic stellarator configuration** is presented. This configuration, which resembles a twisted strip, is obtained by the method of direct construction, that is, it is found via an expansion in the distance from the magnetic axis. Its discovery, however, relied on an additional step involving numerical optimization, performed within the space of near-axis configurations defined by a set of adjustable magnetic field parameters. This optimization, completed in 30 s on a single CPU core using the SIMSOPT code, yields a solution with excellent confinement, as measured by the conventional figure of merit for neoclassical transport, effective ripple, at a modest aspect ratio of eight. The optimization parameters that led to this configuration are described, its confinement properties are assessed and a set of magnetic field coils is found. **The resulting transport at low collisionality is much smaller than that of W7-X, and the device needs significantly fewer coils because of the reduced number of field periods.** https://arxiv.org/abs/2205.05797 https://arxiv.org/pdf/2205.05797.pdf

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    energy Green Energy Main obstacles facing the adoption of kite sails, the modern day answer to the Age of Sail, are not engineering-related, but social.
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    Indeed. However, they are also very slow (usually around 30 km/h) and more importantly very slow to change that speed (cargo ships starts braking 5-10 km before port). The ships' engines aren't doing a ton of work themselves either, per unit of time.

    Work per time is power in physics. A ship like this has an engine of about 100 000 horse power per google, which is about 400 cars' worth of power. And 10th of that is about 40 cars. Which matches thereabouts a huge sail in a strong wind at large altitude in the open ocean like this, I think. Back of the envelope math checks out.

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  • librewolf LibreWolf librewolf community on jeremmy.ml
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 80%

    Ooo, a general purpose lemmy instance with no politics allowed, and a catchy name. Interesting.

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  • asklemmy Asklemmy Does the median voter remain a relevant concept?
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    "The average is calculated by adding up all of the individual values and dividing this total by the number of observations. The median is calculated by taking the “middle” value, the value for which half of the observations are larger and half are smaller."

    So for example, in a country with 99% poor people, and 1% insanely rich people, the median person's wealth is actually really small (like the poor people), but the average person's wealth is kinda big (except a person with that mid-ground wealth doesn't actually exist in the country).

    In the case of voters, this means that in a country of highly polarized views and power, so of imbalanced sides, the median and average voter can be very different. One is what the people want, the other is what the power wants.

    "The median voter theorem is a proposition relating to ranked preference voting put forward by Duncan Black in 1948.[1] It states that if voters and policies are distributed along a one-dimensional spectrum, with voters ranking alternatives in order of proximity, then any voting method which satisfies the Condorcet criterion will elect the candidate closest to the median voter. In particular, a majority vote between two options will do so. A loosely related assertion had been made earlier (in 1929) by Harold Hotelling.[3] It is not a true theorem and is more properly known as the median voter theory or median voter model. It says that in a representative democracy, politicians will converge to the viewpoint of the median voter.[4] "

    Emphasis mine.

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  • "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearZK
    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    ...but do not seem to bear any tangible meaning. Like, what is force, work/energy, field, matter?

    Contrary to what some people might expect from physics, it's a lot more philosophical, than just tangible. These terms are in some ways more philosophical than material, and I guess that' s the part that's confusing you.

    I guess in general, with physics you're dealing with a different set of philosophical categories than with maths, it's less abstract logic and sets, and is more about actions and reactions.

    And in the words of people more eloquent than me, physics is a story written in the language of maths, that's their difference, as well. It's like grammar vs a screenplay. Technically, they're both linguistics, but very very different at the same time.

    On those notes, force is just defined as an "influence that can change the motion of an object", sort of like in common every day parlance. Force is a thing that makes changes in the world. Energy is the ability to create those forces.

    Field is something that fully permeates 3D space and exists there with its changeable local properties. It's what enables the existence of matter in space. Matter is an "excitation", a value lump, a value spike, in that field in a specific location. Think of it like a math graph with a small bunch of values in a specific part of it, matter in a field. And so on...

    ...mystical/mythical (dark matter, anti matter...

    I don't think these two are particularly mystical. Dark matter is just a phrase we invented for the fact we notice the gravity of a lot of matter when observing the way the galaxies rotate, but we don't see any of that matter. Therefore we conclude, there must be some matter that has mass/gravity but can't be seen, i.e. doesn't interact with electromagnetic waves. That's all, nothing spooky, just instead of protons, electrons etc... it's a different type of matter.

    Similar with antimatter. Matter atoms are made from massive "positively" charged protons and small-massed "negatively" charged electrons. Antimatter is the opposite, made from massive "negatively" charged antiprotons and small-massed "positively" charged positrons. That's it, it's like chemistry or whatever. Different lego blocks. It's just that matter and antimatter, once they collide, go boom and turn into photons and stuff so basically all the matter we have around us is regular matter because there was more of it in the early days of yore.

    ... spacetime...

    I guess this one might bit a tad mystical, in the sense that time and space are philosophical concepts. I actually feel tho that once they're combined like this into spacetime they become a lot more tangible and mathematical/geometric and easier to digest. In some ways.

    ...I just don’t think Bell’s theorem has taken into account the entire possibility of hidden variables ... I doubt myself on this one since Redditors downvoted this.

    Well considering the Nobel Prize in Physics for 2022 was just awarded two days ago to three scientists for establishing the violation of Bell's inequalities, I'd say your judgment on trusting the more knowledgeable people on reddit was right. Unless you think you know more about the topic than Nobel laureates. ;)

    How do you get any pleasure (lol) from all of these?

    Some people enjoy chocolate, some enjoy vanilla, some enjoy strawberry. Some enjoy physics, some enjoy maths, some enjoy philosophy. We're all different.

    Also, any study references? I found Feymann’s Lecture on Caltech’s website a bit too wordy.

    I actually think it'd be better for you to not dive straight into textbook style rigor, and instead watch some more fun physics youtubers once in a while, like the ol' classics of Veritasium, Steve Mould, Smarter Every Day, PBS Spacetime, Fermilab etc... to build that physics intuition and perspective you seem to missing here, first. There's a treasure trove of accessible fun content there.

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  • asklemmy Asklemmy I know I have asked this before but what other feed averses Have the same layout as lemmy?
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    You can make mastodon have a somewhat more similar feel to lemmy, if you do the following:

    Go to preferences > appearance and activate ”advanced web interface". Now if you do a search for a hashtag it will pop out a new column in the interface that you can now also pin, to stay. And in that column's own settings you can now add multiple additional hashtags that will all display their results simultaneously in the same column.

    So now it's like as if you have a home feed of multiple hashtags, the feed is topic based, and not person based, and in that sense, more similar to lemmy. It gets very laggy tho if you add more than 5-ish tags, the backend code is not designed for that.

    On your phone you can do the same, if you use Tusky. Just add a hashtags tab, and add multiple of them there. But not too many.

    Lemmy, however, is the only one with upvote based sorting, and truly designed for the general reddit feel.

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  • privacy Privacy 20 Eye-Opening Tor Statistics That You Need To Know In 2022
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    Just one. The traffic gets randomly routed through the nodes. Gather your stats over a single exit node and you've got your stats for the whole network. The longer you gather your stats over the node the closer they are to the precise stats for the whole network.

    Just like you can poll 1000 random people and have a good, almost accurate, guess who's the entire country gonna vote for.

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  • asklemmy Asklemmy How, or CAN you, connect your mastodon instances to lemmy?
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    If you're trying to follow lemmy's content from your mastodon account you should type "https://lemmy.ml/c/asklemmy" (without the quotes... and also omitting https:// should work as well, as well as typing "@asklemmy@lemmy.ml", again, without the quotes) into the search field on mastodon, and it should pop up there, and you should be able to follow it. Repeat for any other lemmy community you might be interested in.

    You won't be able to post to the community, but you'll be able to read it, and reply to posts and comments in the community, from your mastodon account.

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  • energy Green Energy Main obstacles facing the adoption of kite sails, the modern day answer to the Age of Sail, are not engineering-related, but social.
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    This is one of those situations where the free market doesn't give desirable results, and where a government could step in and give subsidies for this goal, assuming it were serious about decreasing GHG emissions.

    There would be no profit for the state, beyond less climate change, but the shipping industry would profit, having to spend less fuel.

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  • privacy Privacy 20 Eye-Opening Tor Statistics That You Need To Know In 2022
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    they know precise statistics. How is that is simp asking himself?

    They just need one exit node?

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  • urbanism
    Solarpunk Urbanism zksmk 2 years ago 100%
    How Valencia Turned A Crisis (And a River) Into a Transformative Park

    In 1957, Valencia experienced a devastating flood that forever changed the city’s relationship with the Turia River. Nearly 3/4 of the city was inundated by floodwater and over 60 people lost their lives. The following year, the city embraced a plan to divert the river around its western outskirts to the Mediterranean Sea. A park wasn’t the city leadership’s first idea—in an effort to alleviate traffic congestion, they envisioned an elaborate highway system through the heart of the City. But by 1970 the citizens pushed back and protested the highway proposal under the motto “The bed of Turia is ours and we want green!” By the end of the decade, the City approved legislation to turn the riverbed into a park and commissioned Ricard Bofill to create a master plan in 1982. The plan created a framework for the riverbed and divided it into 18 zones. Currently, all but one of the zones has been developed. The resulting design establishes a monumental 5 mile green swath within a dense and diverse urban fabric, including the historic center of the city, and has an average span of 600 feet, from bank to bank. The park comprises over 450 acres and is characterized by bike paths, event spaces, active recreation fields, fountains, and many notable structures. A bit more [history](https://metropolismag.com/projects/how-valencia-turned-crisis-river-into-park/) and a [lot of pics](https://www.students.rent/the-park-that-crosses-valencia-in-the-old-riverbed-of-the-turia-river.html) of the park in the former riverbed. Fun fact: now the traffic bridges don't go above the river, they go above the park. [Openstreetmap](https://www.openstreetmap.org/search?query=valencia%20turia#map=14/39.4670/-0.3790), for those interested in a detailed view. Do you know of any other weird parks like this?

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    energy
    Green Energy zksmk 2 years ago 100%
    Main obstacles facing the adoption of kite sails, the modern day answer to the Age of Sail, are not engineering-related, but social.

    A conventional ship with an easily deployable and retractable kite sail system burns less fuel than one without it. It's a type of hybrid vehicle, that has two propulsion methods, the main reliable one, and the supplementary one, for fuel efficiency. With the system installed and the kite in use, the ship saves an estimated 15% of fuel. However: >"There's a structural problem slowing down the process: ship owners (who have to make the investment) often don't pay for the fuel – that's the charterer's duty. The charterer on the other side doesn't charter the ship for long enough a period to make installing low-carbon, but potentially expensive, untested technologies pay back." The lack of carbon emissions regulations for shipping and low fuel prices have added to these difficulties. The shipping industry is responsible for around 940 million tonnes of CO2 annually, which is about 2.5% of the world's total CO2 emissions. A company behind these (SkySails GmbH), while technically successful at cutting shipping costs and carbon emissions, has faced economic difficulties. Since then, the company (reborn as SkySails Group GmbH) has switched to land-based airborne wind energy systems for electricity production from high-altitude winds. What do you think? Yay or nay? Is this technology dead in the water? Not worth the effort? Will we see ships like these in the near or distant future? What needs to change? Some good reads: http://www.vos.noaa.gov/MWL/apr_09/skysails.shtml https://rctom.hbs.org/submission/lets-go-fly-a-kite-skysails-and-climate-change/

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    nuclear_power Nuclear Power Chinese molten-salt reactor cleared for start up
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    There are many reasons for and advantages to it!

    The molten salts mixture is multi-purpose, it serves both as the coolant and contains the molten radioactive fuel in this type of reactor, compared to more conventional reactors that use solid uranium rods as fuel, and regular water as coolant.

    Most of the dangers with conventional reactors stem from the high pressures of the coolant steam, as well as the build up of high pressure gases next to the fuel, which in the case of an unattended runaway reaction tend to break things and cause radioactive juices to splatter all over the place, in the ground and in the atmosphere. And then the uncooled fuel also melts through the protective barriers, with the same effects.

    Salts, on the other hand, don't evaporate at 100 degree Celsius, one atmospheric pressure, like water does, so they can get heated to much much higher temperatures at normal pressure. And considering they contain the fuel too, if they expand a bit, they pour out of the core into a safety container, and therefore separate most of the fuel away from itself, and therefore stop the radioactive runaway reaction.

    The fact that the fuel is liquid also makes the fuel reprocessing and refueling easier (can even be done while it's turned on), which is very important when dealing with all the radioactive intricacies. It even lets us use a different more abundant and in some ways cleaner fuel, thorium, instead of direct uranium, because it being liquid lets us turn it into uranium "on the fly" inside of the reactor itself, this is called "breeding" uranium, which simplifies the entire process immensely.

    The big downside is, well, hot molten salts are extremely corrosive, as you can imagine. And that's why we haven't had reactors like this so far. This one is also experimental.

    For more fun reading: 1, 2

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  • energy Green Energy This 100% solar community endured Hurricane Ian with no loss of power and minimal damage
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    nuclear_power Nuclear Power Chinese molten-salt reactor cleared for start up
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    And another great thing about LFTRs is that they don't use water as coolant, so they can safely operate in situations of drought, and even in deserts.

    A powered grid that would utilize mostly this type of reactor wouldn't face the types of problems the French grid did during this summer's heat waves.

    All in all, a promising technology.

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  • asklemmy Asklemmy Should the study of non-Western philosophy be a requirement for a philosophy degree in the UK?
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    I'd say yes. On the same note:

    Should the study of non-Western history be a requirement for a history degree in the UK?

    Also yes.

    Even if it were specialized as a western history/philosophy degree, and not just a general history/philosophy degree, some level of knowledge should still be required (and probably is already, I wouldn't know).

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  • asklemmy Asklemmy If you could, how would you improve lemmy?
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    I'd like to reference this blog post by the mastodon devs from a few days ago. Joinmastodon.org just had a redesign/relaunch. Considering they're further ahead in the same game, there's probably some useful insight that can be gleaned from there.

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  • asklemmy Asklemmy Which concept is more fundamental, shape or colour?
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    I'd just like to take this one step further and say that color has nothing to do with electromagnetic radiation and its wavelengths. Not at its core.

    You could easily have a robo-eye that reacts to water waves or anything else that might carry similar information and converts it into a bio-chemical signal that goes into the optical nerve and into the brain and you'd see color. In fact, you can see color in your sleep/dreams with no input from outside the brain. Or less abstractly, you can see flashes of color with your eyes closed after going in a dark room after being in a bright space, because of the state of the ”irritated” chemicals in the back of your eyes. The subjective perception of color, the qualia as it is called, is something that correlates in the physical world, or has its physical correlate (noun) only to something in the brain. The EM waves are just carriers of information that supply us with information that gets experienced as color once it finds it's appropriate home in the information structures of the brain, and the mind.

    Another example of this is how people with amputated limbs can feel "phantom pain" sometimes in the non existent body parts, because the stump nerve is being appropriately irritated to send a signal to the brain, that becomes pain in the brain, independently of the existence or non-existence of the body part.

    Same with irritating the ear bones, without any air waves, as with tinnitus. The air waves just carry the info usually, they're not sound itself.

    You can indeed hear EM waves' info too, not see it, just listen to a radio.

    Shape is something we experience because of the existence of space, the perception of the "category", the concept of space in the mind.

    Which one is more fundamental depends, I guess, which one you believe is more fundamental, if any, quality or concepts, perception or reason.

    This would be of equal true value, whether you label things as a materialist or as an idealist, just label it then as, let's say, matter arrangement, or laws of arrangement. Or maybe simply, matter and spacetime.

    I'd say they're of equal footing, and don't quite go, one without the other, in the human mind, or the physical world, as we know them.

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  • creative
    Creative zksmk 2 years ago 100%
    GIMP 2.99.12: CMYK, canvas interaction, and more librearts.org

    “Long overdue changes landing to what will eventually become GIMP 3.0. This new development version of GIMP is a bit of a game-changer as it arrives with some long-anticipated CMYK-related features. The way they are implemented will make some users happy, but some users might feel annoyed. It’s got to do with early binding vs late binding. So let’s talk about it. In layman terms...”

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    gimp
    gimp zksmk 2 years ago 100%
    GIMP 2.99.12: CMYK, canvas interaction, and more librearts.org

    “This new development version of GIMP is a bit of a game-changer as it arrives with some long-anticipated CMYK-related features. The way they are implemented will make some users happy, but some users might feel annoyed. It’s got to do with early binding vs late binding…”

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    artanddesign
    Libre Art & Design zksmk 2 years ago 100%
    GIMP 2.99.12: CMYK, canvas interaction, and more librearts.org

    "This new development version of GIMP is a bit of a game-changer as it arrives with some long-anticipated CMYK-related features. The way they are implemented will make some users happy, but some users might feel annoyed. It’s got to do with early binding vs late binding..."

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    fossart
    FOSS Art zksmk 2 years ago 100%
    GIMP 2.99.12: CMYK, canvas interaction, and more librearts.org

    "This new development version of GIMP is a bit of a game-changer as it arrives with some long-anticipated CMYK-related features. The way they are implemented will make some users happy, but some users might feel annoyed. It’s got to do with early binding vs late binding..."

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    health health Yes, this is a thing
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    Cycleball, as it is known, the sport of the gods.

    According to Ancient Greek myth, this was the sport played on Mount Olympus by the gods themselves.

    It is also recorded that the Egyptian pharaohs were legally obligated to be good at the sport considering they were believed to be the intermediary between the deities and the people.

    There are also, unconfirmed, writings that the Buddha also got the idea for Nirvana by observing a player spin his wheel so fast and smooth the wheel flew of the bicycle.

    #truehistoricalfacts #cyclingfacts #totallynotmadeup

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  • energy Green Energy Wind turbine installation vessels (WTIV) are specifically designed for the installation of offshore wind turbines
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    Types of platforms, not shown in the above video:

    [1] [2] [3]

    The sheer size of these things, specifically the "jacket" type: https://i.imgur.com/pj0qsN4.gifv

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  • news World News Can you inoculate people against misinformation before they even see it? This study says yes
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    As far as I understood it, and based on that one sample video, these videos mostly deal with and spotlight the usage of logical fallacies and manipulation tactics, used by any ”side” engaged in a misinformation campaign. So the only way they could be biased is by the generalised examples they use to explain the concepts, which should be minimal, if the people watching them actually do learn a new skill that can be applied to various scenarios (even the prebunking videos themselves!).

    I really like this, and hope it kicks off, and doesn't get corrupted too much. It's teaching people critical thinking skills, and even more importantly imo, more emotional self-awareness.

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  • aww cute dogs, cats, and other animals Fennec foxes have fur on the bottoms of their paws to protect them from the scorching sand of the desert.
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    Huh, now I wanna know if arctic foxes also have fur on their paws to protect them from freezing ice and snow as well... brb, gotta do a lil search.

    Edit: reporting back with my findings, it's true! Furry little paws.

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  • asklemmy Asklemmy Why do I have to subscribe to a channel to write an article?
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    You can also unsubscribe from the community as soon as you've made the post. Agreed it's unintuitive, but it's a workaround that works for me.

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  • physics Most Excellent Physics Community. A summary of modern physics in one table
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    The person that made that paper is a bit out of the mainstream, for what it's worth. Interpret as you wish, doesn't mean they're wrong, but y'know...

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  • art art *Permanently Deleted*
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    Honestly? Duckduckgo (or other privacy respecting search engine of your choice; Startpage, Qwant, Ecosia, SearX...) image search: "solarpunk art" , display: last month.

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  • physics Most Excellent Physics Community. Strange new phase of matter created in quantum computer acts like it has two time dimensions - What happens when you mix a time crystal and a quasy crystal?
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    Interesting. Either something bugged out or I pasted the wrong thing (a blank), but this link should be the OP link: https://phys.org/news/2022-07-strange-phase-quantum-dimensions.html

    Edit: I've edited it into the OP now.

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    Philosophy zksmk 2 years ago 100%
    Analytic versus Continental Philosophy https://philosophynow.org/issues/74/Analytic_versus_Continental_Philosophy
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    energy
    Green Energy zksmk 2 years ago 100%
    What do you think about the renewables vs nuclear debate?

    Some key points: - nuclear causes fewer deaths, both animal and human alike - nuclear takes up far less space, and therefore destroys far less of the environment compared to solar farms, hydro, or wind farms - nuclear is stable and not an intermittent source, no issues with grid storage, unlike renewables, which currently solve this with fossil peaker plants - nuclear is hard to turn off so to meet fluctuating demand solely on it, you'd need an excess of nuclear, which is a waste - nuclear excess could encourage other use of electricity, such as electric heating or transport, however - nuclear when it does go bad, goes really bad, mostly in that a large area has to be abandoned for a long long time (historically still fewer deaths than renewables per unit of energy produced tho) - nuclear can cause the proliferation of nuclear weapons - nuclear is a lot harder to spin up, requires extensive education and is hard and takes a long time to build a plant, compared to renewables - all that nuclear waste and no plan other than shove it in somewhere, in a mountain, and keep it secret, keep it safe. Yay or Nay? What say you?

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    freecad
    FreeCAD zksmk 2 years ago 100%
    Any FreeCAD v0.20 UI testers interested in testing out a new Theme/Preference-pack called 'Dracula'? fosstodon.org

    Instructions are in the this ticket: [https://github.com/dracula/freecad/iss...](https://github.com/dracula/freecad/issues/2)

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    ubuntu_studio
    Ubuntu Studio zksmk 2 years ago 100%
    As of July 14, 2022, Ubuntu Studio 21.10 has reached EOL https://ubuntustudio.org/2022/07/ubuntu-studio-21-10-has-reach-end-of-life-eol/

    >If you are using Ubuntu Studio 21.10, and if you have not already done so, please upgrade to Ubuntu Studio 22.04 LTS via the instructions [provided here](https://ubuntustudio.org/ubuntu-studio-22-04-lts-release-notes/#Upgrading).

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    urbanism Solarpunk Urbanism What do you think about these? I have seen a few in Germany doing any kind of deliveries. I think they're cool, but probably not that much fun to drive.
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    zksmk
    2 years ago 100%

    That's human-powered right? I think i can see the chain there (plus why else have that seating setup if not for pedaling).

    Judging by the size of that cargo section it must be pretty hard pedaling all that stuff in the back, assuming it's heavy packages. Seems like a workout. But then again, it's sort of like a rickshaw I guess, so doable? I hope the driver is paid extra accordingly. I assume it also has some gearing system that makes it easier on the legs but extra slow.

    If it has an extra electric engine somewhere in there tho, why even have the pedals? Maybe the pedals are just for the empty trip back.

    Overall I don't hate it (let me rephrase that: I like it!), but I'm not the one pedaling. :D

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  • energy
    Green Energy zksmk 2 years ago 100%
    Perovskite solar cells. New breakthrough. [11:30] www.youtube.com

    Perovskite structures are notorious for breaking down very rapidly in real-world use. Now a research team from Princeton University has developed a process for overcoming that problem, making perovskite a **real competitor to existing silicon PV technology.**

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