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They still recover the fairings. They gave up on trying to catch them out of the air and now just let them land in the water and pick them up.


Fission is the way to go for this for its general simplicity of design and it can self start by manually moving control rods. I never see anyone talking about they are going to restart a fusion reactor if it ever goes offline for any reason.

My thought is to use fission for powering the ship, and fusion for the drive. The fission reactors can start the fusion drive as needed and you can have multiple portable fission reactors like the NASA kilopower designs in an offline/inert state that could be powered on in an emergency.


Glad I am not a Dominion customer anymore. I will happily stick with my coop and pay $0.12/kwh and keep my 1:1 metering.


Edison designs their bill to make it very hard to tell what you are paying per kwh, but I think I'm paying between $0.20 and $0.30 depending on time of day.


.12 kWh sounds great where is that.



That table is pretty accurate. I'm a commercial account in Massachusetts and the price listed is within a penny of what I got paid last month for a kWh.


I am on svec.coop, and have been much happier with them than I was on Dominion.


It seems like SVEC caps residential solar at 20kw vs 25? Am I reading that right in their docs?


Yeah residential is capped at 20kw of production for net-metering. I have array rated at 14.5kw and it tracks that at peak pretty well. I hope to add more panels, but they will not be part of my net-metering and be there to charge the future batteries and inverters I want to add.


I’m in the Shenandoah valley but I have 25kw, so it looks like unless I do something complex I’m stuck on Dominion.


I normally only commit to "We will give an update in X (minutes/hours) to make sure we understand the problem first. Then start giving estimated timelines in ranges with specific call outs for updates and possible changes to the timeline.

I've found that most management just want to be involved in the process and have definite times set for updates and can handle timeline changes as long as information is coming at regular intervals.


I use an Ambient Weather WS-2902 WiFi Smart Weather Station, easy to setup and integrate with wunderground/accuweather etc, plus simple to use with HomeAssistant in a purely local configuration.


Hey thanks for the reply, this seems like a really nice option for me!


I have an Intel Macbook 2019 for work. I've tried a couple different kvm solutions but they all had issues, always on the Mac side. The best I got was <1 sec switching from Mac to Linux and 10-15 seconds switching from Linux to Mac for everything to stabilize.

I ended up going with the nuclear option of an IP KVM https://www.raritan.com/support/product/dominion-kx-iv-101 that will do all the resolutions I want at 60hz. It was very expensive, but on the bright side it lets me keep work laptops completely unmodified and easily swappable.


Looking at it over the long term, it's something we will need to do regardless of co2 emissions as the sun heats up over it's lifespan. The more interesting part of it is that I've you do Earth you have the tech and infrastructure to do the same to Venus and do the opposite to Mars. Combine the solar shade with some solar panels and you are well on your way to becoming a Khardeshev II civilization.


It's a shade the size of Argentina.

Argentina is a very big country


The Kardashev scale is a scale whose smallest unit is our current civilization, the scale easily accommodates Argentina.


Yeah but that scale is fantasy/sci-fi. Baked within it is a kind of assumption that it is a scale we should be moving up through, which is not a given.

So I guess it is reasonable if you think the destiny of life on earth is to “conquer” the “full power” of the sun.


Kardashev scale is a fantasy - a dangerous one because very intelligent people spend their talent and societies' resources pursuing it.


Indeed. Argentina is only 3.5 times smaller than the USA. It's a lot of stuff to send to space.


This is an odd one though, as Argentina's shape is very long an narrow. I doubt that shape is what is needed. So just looking up something with the similar sizes based on area doesn't really help when the shapes are so different.


I've been a fan of the powerdns project for many years. I have used it for authoritative, recursive and load balancing projects with great success. These days I use their dnsdist project to have fine grained control of DNS at my house to account for my various homelab shenanigans and provide that 99.99999% uptime the family demands.


> their dnsdist project

Wow. Never heard of dnsdist, that looks cool. I will shortly be embarking on an infra-refresh that is due to include DNS, so will be sure to evaluate it !

Thanks for highlighting it.


My particular "killer app" for dnsdist right now is at my house I have 2 machines running dnsdist, set to forward to my pihole by default with health checks. If the health checks fail, the dnsdist daemons failover to google/cloudflare/etc.

This lets me run a single instance of pihole (avoiding all the issues with trying to replicate configs across multiple pihole instances) and still having a solid backup if my pihole server goes down as it is by far the most likely piece of infra to just stop working.

I also use it to route requests to my internal authoritative servers and failover to my external secondary authoritative mirrors as needed. This lets me keep all my local traffic local and still have my external failover as a catch all if my homelab infra is down to my own screw ups or some hardware failures.


I owned MMS platform for a carrier back in the day. Everything about it was janky. "Hey let's emulate SMTP commands but over HTTP and then try to track all the different models of phones to transcribe images so they can kinda sorta interopate"

Thenb you got to watch the huge queue build up every Christmas morning and New Years as the inter carrier brokers got backed up hours. All in all, not my favorite carrier app to manage.


Heh, thank you for that perspective, really interesting to see that it did not only fail from completely off the charts expectations based on extrapolating from the SMS outlier.


I use aerc with o365 via davmail and mbsync. Using imap directly was to slow, but pulling mail to a maildir works well. Davmail handles all the o365 interaction and supports mfa directly.


Thanks for mentioning this. I had the same problem as the person you replied to for using alpine, which does support mfa, but then the 'request' for alpine to be authorised as supported software had to be supported by my organisation. The ticket has been open for about 3 months now and apparently they're still discussing.

I don't know what davmail or mbsync are, but I'll look them up and have a go at this when I find time.

If you had any nice links to help me on my travels, I'd be very appreciative :)


* Davmail - https://davmail.sourceforge.net/ * Mbsync (part of the isync utilities) - https://isync.sourceforge.io/

Use Davmail to create a standard IMAP interface to O365, then use mbsync to poll your email account via the Davmail IMAP server and write the messages to a maildir that you can read with most any MUA.


I use davmail on Macos and linux for my uni’s office365 account with MFA, both from inside and outside the uni’s network. No need to ask for an app’s permission etc.

I guess it should also work on Windows.


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