The media in this post is not displayed to visitors. To view it, please go to the original post.

my favorite part of ai is that i can shitpost to it about stuff that is way too nerdy to find irl people to talk about. like the archeological evidence supporting or opposing the poggio brocciolini theory of tacitus forgery.

who is gonna listen to me talk about that stuff? only the robot waifu can slap back. sure she's retarded but that's cute!

cc @p
image.png

in reply to Tard

@Tard @pistolero @touch fluffy tail (Heroic) Hydrogravity shortage is limited by geography and we've already exploited most available geology, sun doesn't shine at night, and it takes up a hell of a lot of land, and it requires rare Earth's in short supply. If we had a world wide supergrid, we could better match intermittent generation to demand and somewhere in the world the Sun is always shining but this would require that we get along.
in reply to Tard

@tard @nanook China's got a lithium surplus, which we do not have. We have Venezuela. Until we have solid-state hydrogen fuel cells (another thing that we have worked out in prototypes but have not turned into mass-produced devices; I think 10-20 years back, right, the guy used some alloy that was good at binding hydrogen to store energy in a stable state; right now hydrogen fuel cells are like nitroglycerin and ideally we can develop TNT).
in reply to pistolero

@pistolero @touch fluffy tail (Heroic) Six years ago, Friendica.eskimo.com didn't exist, I had an account on Farcebook and Twatter. I was 60-61 around that time, diabetic, and I lived in Shoreline, WA. A half mile down from me there was a FEMA tent hospital treating victims overflowing the regular insurance profit, er, hospital system. A half mile in the other direction a crematorium that they were stuffing bodies in as fast as they could and I could smell the burning flesh at my home. So do I get vaxed or not?

I spent some time on VAERS, reviewing the reports, I saw quite a few anaphylactic shock cases (bad allergy reactions), and quite a few neurological side effects as well as regular deaths, severe organ damage, and other issues, and given that I had recently largely recovered from bad peripheral neuropathy and I had allergies to half the known universe and an immune system that was generally over-reactive, I opted not to.

My oldest son meanwhile worked for Fluke and was told, get vaxed or get unemployed, he caved. So time goes on, he gets a booster, gets heart issues that require a CPAP where before he had been fine.

And then the actual disease came, I got it twice, both times for me it was essentially a common cold lasting five days, he gets it three times, one of those times with a fever of 102 something, don't remember 102.7 or .9, something on that order, and nearly needed to be hospitalized.

So at this point it was clear the vax wasn't protecting him, he got it more times than my 25 year old older unprotected self, and much more severe.

I further found not only were most of the people around here who died from it 80+, but also many 80+ getting vaxed were dropping dead.

So I post about this in both Farcebook and Twatter and got banned. This seemed to be some sort of human culling they didn't want interrupted. So ok, I run an ISP, I have hosting resources, and so I tried various platforms that were federated, and finally settled on Friendica with BookFace theme as a replacement for Farcebook less the nazi administration and Mastodon as a replacement for Twatter.

Initially I ran it on an i8-6850k machine, this is a 6-core 12-thread machine with 128mb and clocked at 4Ghz. Performance was inadequate, database could only handle around 300 transactions per second, and so could not keep up with incoming messages and response was sluggish. One of my i7-6700k boxes bit the dust so I opted to replace the motherboard with a x299 gigabyte aorus master and replace the power supply with a 1200 watt Seasonic, and increase RAM to 256GB, add two nvme drives for the root partition setup as RAID one, and equip the rest of the machine with disk that was also setup as raid 1 array. I moved the database to the RAID 1 array, made the innodb cache large enough that the entire database could operate out of RAM, created a tempfs system for overflow tables so even they would happen in RAM.

The result, a database capable of more than 10,000 tps and a Friendica and Mastodon node that were responsive and pleasant to use. So now I have a platform that the deathsquads can't censor me from, or other users who choose to use it and right now that's about 4500 users.

So the fact that something isn't done yet doesn't mean that it can't be, and I'm not shy about doing it or at least contributing to it. Hopefully others will find encouragement.

reshared this

in reply to bjx

@bjx @Tard @pistolero @touch fluffy tail (Heroic) I think solid state batteries have much promise but there is the issue of adequate ion mobility in a solid material. That said what I've read about these batteries is more rumor than actual test data so I haven't a lot of concrete data upon which to base an opinion but I will note that most commercial solid state batteries aren't completely solid and are some sort of hybrid designs because of the ion mobility in solids issue. That said, I am hoping something positive develops, I personally would love an electric car as a primary city driver since the majority of my trips are under 100 miles in a day, but lithium fires dissuades me. But as grid storage I don't think conventional batteries will ever scale sufficiently. Redox flow batteries I believe are about the only chemical battery technology with enough scalability to be useful at grid levels, but thus far they rely on vanadium and vanadium although about as abundant in the Earth's crust as copper, rarely exists in concentrated form and thus is expensive to extract and most comes from China, Russia, South Africa.
in reply to ルγƒͺγ‚³

@ルγƒͺγ‚³ @pistolero @touch fluffy tail (Heroic) Because many artificial things have benefits and relatively low harm, penicillin, blood pressure drugs, etc, and I do believe MRNA tech has potential, but I think its' ten years away from being mature enough to be safe. I'm not a Luddite, not afraid of new technology, but I also understand things need to be tested outside the human body, then double blind placebo control safety tests first on a small number of cohorts, then if successful on a larger, then efficacy testing, finally when you roll them out you monitor and if people are dying you take the item off the market until the issues can be resolved. But what little testing was done on Covid vax showed it wasn't ready for prime time, but deployed widely anyway, then when people were dying en masse and being maimed, it wasn't withdrawn from the market, or not even restricted to use in very high risk patience, it was even forced upon young children at virtually no risk from the virus and many of them died or were severely injured, and all of this done with the manufacturers exempted from liability, and WHY was liability exempted? Because they KNEW these things weren't ready but the billions of dollars overrode their better judgement as massive amounts of dollars are won't to do. I think for it to be safe several things have to happen. First off the effective dosage varied wildly because individual humans vary wildly in terms of how much protein they generate from MRNA, so to be safe either pre-testing needs to be done or some method of self limiting once a certain concentration of target proteins is generated, and the artificial nucleotide that causes this to be present in some peoples bodies years after vaccination needs to be removed. Lastly the nano-lipid delivery system carried the MRNA to organs that don't regenerate resulting in damaged hearts, kidneys, brain, and nerves. This needs to be addressed. Lastly bodily autonomy ALWAYS needs to be rejected and having something forcibly injected should never be an option.
Unknown parent

pleroma - Link to source

Caleb James DeLisle

All good points. I'm approaching it more like an engineer than a scientist. I'd rather copy the MSRE because it's already been run once and so we know a lot about the pitfalls already (e.g. impurities in the graphite eat neutrons).

The concept is just so rich that you can afford to use expensive fuel and antiquated methodologies, and still come out on top.

in reply to Nanook

@nanook @tard

> I don't believe storage + intermittent will ever be a solution.

Logistically, improvements in storage and transmission technology matter about as much as generation. We wouldn't care about lithium except that lithium ion batteries are currently the best mass-produced storage system we have, and we care about it so much that finding enough lithium in a hill can make a third-world country wealthy (provided they have the domestic infrastructure to dig it up instead of getting bent over by whatever mining company conglomerate).

If we had the cleanest and most abundant power-generation in the world but we got stuck with 1950s battery technology, we'd still be using gasoline for cars. Storage and transmission of energy.

So we have Venezuela.

in reply to touch fluffy tail (Heroic)

@touch fluffy tail (Heroic) @Caleb James DeLisle @bjx @Tard @pistolero Right this is why it's working in China and France, and this with EXISTING unsafe tech, substitute a reactor incapable of catastrophic failure modes and it drops way below China and France costs. But I note the lack of any supporting evidence for your position so you are arguing just for the sake of argument, really almost falls to the level of the Monty Python argument clinic not real argument just contradiction.
in reply to Nanook

@nanook @cjd @bajax @tard
so you've changed your thesis entirely now? abandoned this claim that nuclear power will drive prices down?

now your win condition is that it provides some, any, amount of power and doesn't create a mass death incident? which, as far as i can tell, even that much has been contested?

and i'll put aside your completely childish understanding of what it means to construct power facilities, you have this notion like money appears out of thin air. no concept of time discounting, capital costs, etc. you did not even give a cursory glance at the total cost of merely constructing the facility, which even without this (basic financial literacy) would have completely muted you on the topic.

i have a proposition: i will give you $1 per year, forever, all you need to do is give me $1 million now. it's a no-brainer, right? just like nuclear power. long term i lose bigly, but i am a stupid @fluffy and i am offering you this deal, take advantage now!

in reply to touch fluffy tail (Heroic)

@touch fluffy tail (Heroic) @Caleb James DeLisle @bjx @Tard @pistolero No not at all, and yes interest is an issue, but the reason it is SO much an issue is that construction is drawn out and large in conventional plants owing to regulation, and a large expense, the containment dome, is not required in a molten salt reactor because there is no explosive failure mode.
in reply to touch fluffy tail (Heroic)

So you're saying that the safety issues with nuclear power are so intractable that the energy density of uranium is totally meaningless, and sending people underground to dig coal is just going to be the most efficient way to make electricity forever?

This sounds like some kind of "no combustion carriage will ever be a match for the mighty horse"...

in reply to Nanook

Was a reply to fluffy, who seems to think nuclear energy just has no future, first principles be damned.

I can't imagine a future 100 years from now where nuclear energy isn't cheap and ubiquitous - unless it's some post-apocalyptic dystopia, or else some world government tyranny where everyone is forbidden from touching the magic rocks.

IMO once the US empire finally collapses and the IAEA is defanged, sketchy Alibaba reactors will start popping up all over the world - and THEN finally we'll start to see some progress on safer cheaper designs.

in reply to Caleb James DeLisle

@Caleb James DeLisle @pistolero @touch fluffy tail (Heroic) @bjx @Tard Thank you for clarifying. As a US citizen, I rather hope a collapse isn't necessary because social unrest in a nation armed to the teeth with hydrogen bombs opens up a lot of potential for bad things to happen. Rather, I would like to see humanity overcome scarcity and with adequate pie the motivation to fight over it disappears.
in reply to Nanook

The media in this post is not displayed to visitors. To view it, please go to the original post.

> I rather hope a collapse isn't necessary

Picrel doesn't continue forever. It always ends the same way, as in Athens and in Rome, the same in the US.

> armed to the teeth with hydrogen bombs

Will be like the USSR collapse, highly unlikely anything serious happens b/c oligarchs who control the bombs have families too, and they plan on living past the end of the empire. If you go Rambo on the world - you might have a lot of fun, but when you're done, you're gonna be hunted down and exterminated.

> humanity overcome scarcity

🎡 IMAGINE ALL THE PEOPLE, LIVING LIFE IN PEACE... 🎢

in reply to Caleb James DeLisle

@Caleb James DeLisle @pistolero @touch fluffy tail (Heroic) @bjx @Tard I don't care to see anyone collapse, and before you get too excited about debt, consider who the debt is to. That said it isn't my desire to encourage conflicts or collapse, not here, not in Russia, not in Israel, not in the EU, I am hoping for and working towards a better future. I don't represent my country and it doesn't represent me, I simply see a path towards a better future for everyone and am pursuing it to the best of my ability.
in reply to 🌈Magical Thinking

@🌈Magical Thinking @Caleb James DeLisle @bjx @Tard @pistolero @touch fluffy tail (Heroic) I think to those of us who have been paying attention the fraud and waste have always been apparent. What has changed is until recently we had no media that wasn't controlled by those involved in the fraud and waste and so could not expose it, but the Covid fiasco lead to the growth of the Fediverse and the financial ruin of mainstream media to the point where now we can expose it.
in reply to Nanook

It'd be nice if countries didn't have a fixed lifespan, but they don't because they deteriorate.

From the time of its founding, a country only ever gets more laws, more taxes, more subsidies, more corruption, and more debt until eventually it's so stupid and broken that it cannot support it's own weight - and then it collapses.

It's always been like that, and if you can figure out how to prevent it, then you've made the greatest discovery of at least the past 2 millennia.

in reply to Caleb James DeLisle

@Caleb James DeLisle @pistolero @touch fluffy tail (Heroic) @bjx @Tard China and India have both survived longer than recorded history and yet they are still here, they've grown, shrunk, and grown again, along the way but they still exist. So I don't take the doom and gloom too seriously, I see a path forward, I hope people will choose wisely. I see a way forward, I am working on documenting it in details. People will point out the missing areas or flaws, I will work to correct them, others will realize the validity and we will move forward.
in reply to Caleb James DeLisle

@cjd @bajax @tard @nanook
>you're saying safety of nuclear power is intractable
caleb i am not making such an assertion. in my post, in the brief part where i did mention safety issues, that was mentioned to illustrate the straw man nanook (unknowningly?) constructed.

i wrote that the safety of nuclear power is contested, this is a very weak assertion, we need only find some nontrivial contest. but even if you ill like this, i wrote that part ("which, as far... contested?") as dramatic flair anyway, the post as written loses nothing if you omit that sentence.

ultimately the issue with nuclear power is that it several order of magnitude more expensive to construct, unless you are sitting on huge piles of cash you will be financing it, this means you will raise power costs to pay off the loan, the prices per watt hour then end up flat or higher, it is just a wealth transfer from the state to bankers.

if you have a lot of cash, you could build them and it would be a good idea, at least compared to just letting the cash sit around, but nation states are not apple or mihoyo, come to think of it didn't mihoyo build a fusion reactor? that was quite entertaining, i wonder about the details there.

in reply to touch fluffy tail (Heroic)

@touch fluffy tail (Heroic) @Caleb James DeLisle @bjx @Tard @pistolero Your assuming I am creating a strawman only because of your own lack of understanding of the available technology.

Throughout history prosperity has been a zero sum game, someone had to suffer for others to prosper. For the first time in history we have the potential to change that.

I can't spell out all the details here, but I am working on it, and when it's done those who see the potential will act upon on it, and people like yourself always looking for the cracks will point them out and that's not actually a bad thing as it will enable us to fix them in advance of wide deployment.

in reply to Nanook

@nanook @cjd @bajax @tard
>your assuming
there is no room for this to be true.
why would i make assumptions? you can read my post, i deliberately wrote out all the parts required to fulfill the definition, there is not any room for ambiguity.

it is normal and not strange to accidentally construct straw man arguments. actually, it is much more unusual to stay on topic, you are very normal,

in reply to touch fluffy tail (Heroic)

The media in this post is not displayed to visitors. To view it, please go to the original post.

> several order of magnitude more expensive to construct

Building nuclear plants is not that expensive, $2000 per KW is competitive with coal plants.

Also there are engineering problems which, if solved, will push the cost even lower.

in reply to Caleb James DeLisle

@Caleb James DeLisle @pistolero @touch fluffy tail (Heroic) @bjx @Tard The big expense of nuclear plants today resolves around things like the need for a containment building, not required for a molten salt reactor, plumbing has to withstand 200-300 atmosphere, emergency water dump systems for when the plumbing fails and all the water flashes to steam, emergency backup generators that have to keep cooling going if commercial AC fails.

Molten salt reactors by contrast don't require containment domes because they have no explosive failure modes, don't require active cooling in the event of a failure because first off they are self-limiting because the salt expands as it heats and reduces reaction rates, and that by itself is generally enough, but if it gets too hot anyway, a freeze plug melts and drains the molten fuel into a much larger tank that spreads it out too much for the reaction to continue and because fission products are continuously removed, there is no residual heat from fission products.

There is no water so no hydrogen explosions.

The only real failure mode is get a leak in the plumbing, and the liquid fuel/salt mixture leaks out and solidifies on the floor. And because fission products are continuously removed it is not so hot that it can't be handled so is scooped up thrown back in the reactor, plumbing fixed and life goes on.

These inherent safety features make the insane active features necessary in boiling water reactors unnecessary and with them their expense.

in reply to Nanook

As I said, there are engineering problems which, if solved, will push the cost even lower.

You can't get that much cheaper than coal without running into things like "turbines and generator heads cost money".

But India is building $1700/KW nuclear plants already, even with dumb PWR, so that's very encouraging. If China commodifies molten salt, they might get it under 1000/KW, which is really good.

But even now, nuclear fuel costs are so low that if you just built one nuclear plant per year, eventually power would <1 cent per KWh.

in reply to Caleb James DeLisle

@cjd @bajax @tard @nanook
those indian numbers are certainly surprising, i will make a note to check what is going on. there certainly exists a possibility that india of all places has innovated and thrown out the paradigm. it deserves a closer look.

>Building nuclear plants is not that expensive, $2000 per KW is competitive with coal plants.
when you write 2000 per kw, this is neither the cost[1] , nor is this competitive with coal [2].

>engineering problems
indeed, i hope that things do change, it would be great for everyone to have cheap power.

1. on your own chart, ending in 1990, the most recent number is ~8000.
2. coal is ~800 per kw

in reply to touch fluffy tail (Heroic)

@cjd @bajax @nanook @tard
i will also remark, since i made a coffee and thought about it, that the 800 is in modern dollars, that chart is in 2010 dollars, this 800 for coal should be about 500 in 2010 dollars, meanwhile the chart goes from about 1000 to 8000 in 25 years, it has been 35 years since 1990, so plotting a linear trend in the chart, we would (naively) expect the cost to be about 18000. this is about 35x coal,

of course this is just the most naive way to compare it, but i felt that it was necessary to at least make a naive comparison

in reply to Nanook

@nanook @cjd @bajax @tard
>i am not sure what melted down means
just think about it before posting, then? even if you are some sort of, caveman, who has never seen this word used before, you can easily infer its definition from the behavior it is used to describe.

>[you] are irrational negative and hate humanity
see, these hysterical accusations. are they absurd hallucinations? or just emotional outbursts?

get a grip. it was bad enough when you jumped into here talking about sex with chatbots and accused me of being ai. worse was that, episode, of your pseudo-intellectual babble. when i finally dropped in to provide primary source testimony ("i saw the balance sheets and they looked like this") you just became increasingly hysterical, until we reached this point.

it is very likely that you are trying to salvage your ego by painting me as some evil guy. unfortunately, this is so far removed from reality that it is not likely to work even if you say it out loud to yourself.

in reply to touch fluffy tail (Heroic)

@touch fluffy tail (Heroic) @Caleb James DeLisle @bjx @Tard @pistolero I do think about it before posting.

I have a positive view of human potential, I don't hate humanity.

I have a realistic view of some of the problems we currently face, some of which if not solved are existential in nature.

I see solutions to these problems and I wish to promote.

Sometimes people like yourself with fatalistic views, self hatred, or perhaps just hatred for humanity, don't want them to succeed.

I get that but I can't allow your negativity to stop me because it is an existential crisis we're talking about.

in reply to Nanook

@nanook @cjd @bajax @tard
>still can't stay on topic
>spurgs out, producing 100 words about how he thinks he is, for no reason
>(it's nothing like how he has behaved)
>and about how everyone else is a hater
>especially you @fluffy specifically you are the one to stop my success, you hate humanity, your negative [sic], also you hate yourself (???)
>goes on to self-declare that he is realistic
>while saying all humans will die if we don't--
yeah i think you've had enough today bro
in reply to touch fluffy tail (Heroic)

The media in this post is not displayed to visitors. To view it, please go to the original post.

Yesterday I went to ChatGPT to try to get down to the first-principles cost of a reactor, and as a result I've moderated my opinion somewhat.

My original position was that nuclear is *cheap* because getting rocks to get hot is easy, if you're permitted to buy said rocks. And the only reason it's not ubiquitous is regulation and bullshit.

GPT's claim is that there are two true first principles problems:
1. Neutron economy as cores are scaled down.
2. Moving heat away from the core as cores are scaled up.

This makes enough sense to me, and I will reform my position the the following: "Nuclear should be relatively cheap, but there are engineering problems to solve, and they are not solved because of regulation and bullshit".

---

> 800 for coal

Okay I'll take your number, 2000 was GPT's estimate and it sounds like you know this for a fact.

> meanwhile the chart goes from about 1000 to 8000 in 25 years

The point is that nothing's supposed to get MORE expensive with time, so it means the US got lost in the weeds of over-regulation and loss of will.

There's another chart I can't find with reactors from different countries, and you see that China today is pushing the bottom of those 1970s numbers. Picrel is the same story.

Now if $1700 is the cost of a PWR, and China has a molten salt thorium breeder (they have an experimental one and plans to build a 100MW small production unit), then we should expect that getting rid of the whole pressure vessel and all of the crap that comes with it will at least halve the cost, if not quarter it. So there should come a time when coal becomes uncompetitive - and then at that point, economies of scale will drive the cost down probably another 50% again and coal will be very dead.

in reply to Caleb James DeLisle

@Caleb James DeLisle @pistolero @touch fluffy tail (Heroic) @bjx @Tard With respect to neutron economy, this can be an issue with fast spectrum reactors, a solution is to use either beryllium or lead neutron multipliers, this takes one fast neutron and spits out two semi-fast neutrons, still faster than thermal and still in a range where there is a good cross section for most actinides.
in reply to Caleb James DeLisle

@cjd @bajax @tard @nanook
>The point is that nothing's supposed to get MORE expensive with time, so it means the US got lost in the weeds of over-regulation and loss of will.
i am not sure this is a true statement. plenty of things get more expensive in time. furthermore, putting that aside, this alone would not conclude over-regulation. in fact it is neither necessary nor sufficient to conclude it.

>"Nuclear should be relatively cheap, but there are engineering problems to solve, and they are not solved
certainly nobody could disagree. that was the original promise of nuclear power. cheap, ubiquitous, reliable. the basic thesis is solid, but the details are muddled. actually, long term, my hypothesis is that this sort of atomic power will dominate: we just need to innovate.
>they are not solved because of regulation and bullshit".
do you have a "smoking gun" for this?

>China today is pushing the bottom of those 1970s numbers
can you pro-rate that to us construction costs? that is, take the cost of an identical building in china and usa, and look at the ratio. whatever is easily available, airport, high rise, whatever, just the same building. i think that chinese construction in general is cheaper, but tis way we can estimate its equivalent, i am interested in this pro-rated cost.

in reply to touch fluffy tail (Heroic)

@touch fluffy tail (Heroic) @pistolero

The point is that nothing's supposed to get MORE expensive with time, so it means the US got lost in the weeds of over-regulation and loss of will.


This is for sure true, but molten salt breeders are an entirely different game. Existing boiling and pressurized water reactors have catastrophic failure modes that are completely lacking in molten salt designs.

in reply to touch fluffy tail (Heroic)

> my hypothesis is that this sort of atomic power will dominate

My original point was that power prices will come down by an order of magnitude (i.e. 10-20 cents -> 1-2 cents), and then after this, petroleum will be more uncompetitive vs. electric transportation.

If nuclear power dominates in the future as you say, and power demand (datacenters) continues on it's current trajectory, then I don't think this is unrealistic at all.

Nuclear is really interesting because its ongoing operating cost is so low that over time, it can eventually push prices into a whole other dimension. But demand growth is key because without it, you can't build supply or else you get a glut and then you're unable to pay for any of your reactors.

> i think that chinese construction in general is cheaper

It's an interesting question. I suspect some things are reasonably competitive (e.g. a car factory in Alabama) but some things are essentially impossible to do in the US - the California high speed rail project comes to mind. But that's kind of my point: If the US can't build nuclear reactors, this doesn't mean nuclear reactors are actually that expensive.

in reply to sj_zero

The problem is:
1. Retail price only loosely reflects wholesale generating cost
2. Cost of nuclear in Canada might not reflect actual cost of nuclear. If you want the actual cost, you have to look at India and China who are actually trying to do it as cheaply as possible.

Obvious example: Just because it costs California hundreds of billions of dollars to build high speed rail doesn't mean that's the cost of high speed rail...

in reply to Nanook

The media in this post is not displayed to visitors. To view it, please go to the original post.

@nanook

> So do I get vaxed or not?

All I needed to know was the liability shield. If the federal government gives an untested substance a blanket liability shield, you don't take it. Sixty-six years ago is 1960, which means you would have been about 16 in 1976, which means that you would remember this: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1976_swi… . Complete with politicians taking the vaccine on TV and everything. I don't know what this has to do with the price of fish.

> So I post about this in both Farcebook and Twatter and got banned.

I was never on Facebook; I left Twitter in 2016. I do not know what this has to do with anything, either.

> Initially I ran it on an i8-6850k machine, this is a 6-core 12-thread machine with 128mb and clocked at 4Ghz. Performance was inadequate

Interesting walk down memory lane.

FSE started on a bottom-tier Frantech instance (512MB RAM, single core, something like that) in September 2018. Handled FSE up to a couple dozen users, we kept upgrading, eventually we maxed out the capacity on two Frantech boxes and got this giant Dell R820, 384GB RAM, NVMe for Postgres, RAIDed SAS, etc.; hardware issues killed the thing ( blog.freespeechextremist.com/b… ), it was a refurb. FSE now runs on a much smaller RK3588 SOM. Pleroma (sensibly) is I/O-bound rather than CPU-bound (at least once you disable the undesirable features like fucking with people's uploads), and uses Postgres heavily; I don't recommend InnoDB, MySQL/MariaDB are not generally suitable. Revolver now handles a significant portion of the traffic. (Revolver took FSE from throwing 5xx-errors at 200reqs/s to saturating the pipe with no errors at 900+rps). The RK3588 handles FSE fine. (Although due to disk provisioning issues, I'm likely to split the database onto another machine again shortly.)

FSE has dealt with Gab's bot flood, multiple DDoS's (some originating from DDoS companies), the FBI ( blog.freespeechextremist.com/b… ), scrapers, covert activity from NSF-funded "hate speech" "researchers", false reports of CP to the datacenter ( media.freespeechextremist.com/… ), bugs in Pleroma (as, until Poast arrived, FSE was the highest-traffic Pleroma instance and most of the devs run small instances or single-user instances, so we would regularly hit bugs that nobody else had encountered, some of them are linked to in blog.freespeechextremist.com/b… ).

fedilist.com (and media.fse) now operates on its own dedi provided by graf and CrunchBits. That box is now dealing with a flood of residential proxies (1.4m IPs so far) delivering an effective DDoS as some extremely aggressive scraper is saturating the pipe. I forget the specs on it, because it's a very big box and the actual limiter is network I/O.

On the other hand, I don't know what any of that has to do with challenges that China might encounter when trying to move from prototype to production.

> So the fact that something isn't done yet doesn't mean that it can't be

I have not once said that it can't be. I said that it was plausible that it *does* get done. The fact that it's not done yet *does* mean that it's not done yet and this means you can run into unexpected difficulties. Shit, the uranium centrifuges have existed for eighty years and Iran still doesn't have working ones because they got Stuxnetted and bombed and whatnot and ICBMs are even simpler to construct but I can guarantee that Iran does not get an ICBM. (They do have IRBMs, of course, because those can be launched from a truck.) A lot of things can happen even with *proven* technology.

I spoke very precisely: I said it is not done yet and I will believe it when I see it. I will not believe it until I do. If I say "possible", "plausible", "likely", you can assign probabilities. Say 70-90% chance it happens within the next five years, 10-30% chance it doesn't. You wanna argue that the 10-30% is fictitious, and if you've been running an ISP since the 90s, you ought to know the very basic engineering principle that it's not done until it's done. Unforeseen difficulties crop up in anything that's never been done and a nuclear reactor is a complicated enough machine that you can nearly *rely* on some critical problems to solve as you turn a prototype into an assembly line.

Even after it's done and it's all up and running, you have more data that comes in, you run something in production five years, ten years, and if you don't learn something new, you are not looking.
02--dead_kennedys--government_flu.mp3

in reply to Caleb James DeLisle

@cjd @nanook @bajax @tard In order to no longer have 336 unread notifications, I figure this thread, although it has many interesting facets, is probably the least likely to be related to any action I take in the near-term, so I am the hell out; I post this so as to avoid people thinking that I am ignoring posts, and then they will be aware that I have muted the thread. It's been fun, gentlemen.
in reply to Nanook

The media in this post is not displayed to visitors. To view it, please go to the original post.

I don't think carbon capture will *ever* be efficient.

Agriculture and trucking are actually not the worst application for batteries, because nobody cares how heavy their tractor gets, it's just the cost.

AFAIK a big combine holds about 1000 liters of fuel and that lasts a day (unless it's a long day). 10Kw/liter, 30% accessible, so basically you need 3MWh of storage. So storage cost needs to get to like $10/Kwh to be realistic.

IMO it's possible we get there, possible we don't.

Bigger issue is aviation because in the sky, you need the energy storage to be lightweight too.

But oil isn't going away, it's just not going to be competitive for a ton of applications.

in reply to Caleb James DeLisle

@Caleb James DeLisle @SJ Zero @pistolero @touch fluffy tail (Heroic) @bjx @Tard Canada's approach to nuclear is for sure different with the Candu designs using deuterated water rather than regular water as a moderator / coolant. This allows a neutron economy that makes enrichment unnecessary but D2O on this level isn't cheap either. I do not know how the economics of that work out.
in reply to Caleb James DeLisle

@Caleb James DeLisle @pistolero @touch fluffy tail (Heroic) @bjx @Tard I agree with respect to efficiency but I don't see batteries as a solution that can work for farm equipment, so I think it comes down to synfuels or starve, and when energy is cheap enough efficiency becomes less a factor, After all nature only achieves 1-2% efficiency through photosynthesis yet with the small exception of some iron and sulfur reducing lifeforms, it drives all life on Earth.
in reply to pistolero

@pistolero @touch fluffy tail (Heroic) All I needed to know was the liability shield. If the federal government gives an untested substance a blanket liability shield, you don't take it.
Was not all that I needed to know but certainly wasn't a strong endorsement. If they give a liability shield then you know that at least the "safe" part of safe and effective is probably a lie, and as it turned out both were.
in reply to shironeko

@shironeko @Caleb James DeLisle @bjx @Tard @pistolero @touch fluffy tail (Heroic) You do not understand the issue at all.

We depend upon modern agriculture that involves a lot of large machines burning a lot of diesel to grow enough food to sustain a world population of 8 billion.

Subsistence farming with oxen and plow simply will not yield enough product from the land to sustain this population.

We depend upon diesel fuel to transport that food by truck, and in the US also by train.

The nature of extractive technology is to start with the most readily available and higher quality ores, use them, and then work towards the lesser quality harder to get at ores.

At some point the amount of energy in exceeds the amount of energy returned and at that point economic viability is zero. As we approach that point fuel, and thus food, becomes increasingly expensive and as it does people start to start from low economic strata on up.

We are at the point where we have exhausted all surface reservoirs and most deep reservoirs, we are now largely dependent upon tar sands and shale oil. Neither of these is rich in the distillates that are necessary to run our farm equipment and both are not far from exhaustion.

When they exhaust there is really nothing left to fall back on except nuclear energy and syn fuels, wood gas won't run your tractor.

in reply to shironeko

@shironeko @Caleb James DeLisle @bjx @Tard @pistolero @touch fluffy tail (Heroic) I am saying after we burn up all the concentrated sources the least concentrated source will be the only one available, so either you prepare for this inevitability or you starve to death, personally I favor the former but I do realize some people won't get it until bread is $10 a loaf and they've only got $5 and an empty belly.
in reply to Nanook

There's no evidence that we're "running out" of oil. My thesis is that extraction, refining, and transport sets a price floor that will be surpassed by nuclear energy.

IF oil does actually start to become scarce, alternative fuels will be pursued in the following order:
1. Coal based
2. Hydrogen (e.g. adsorption or chemically bound storage)
3. Biomass from waste or genetically engineered algae

Trying to extract the 0.04% CO2 from atmospheric air is like going back to horses.

This website uses cookies. If you continue browsing this website, you agree to the usage of cookies.

⇧