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> Because it's not necessary to have them when you're not doing anything abusive, the amount and hostility of the popups is a direct measure of how abusive your business is.

This is a very important point that most (even tech-savyy folks) don't get: If you don't track your users, you don't need to show a consent pop-up. You don't need a consent pop-up for cookies or session storage that is helping the functionality of the website (e.g. storing session information, storing items you have put into your cart, storing user settings).

Hell, even if you track your users anonymously, you don't need their consent.

This means: If they have a pop-up, they are tracking personally identifiable information. And they sure as hell don't NEED to do that.


(Not an American) Is there no way to get help from the state / federal government?

Ah, good point. Did not even see that...

Thanks, will check it out

I already heard back from the EFF and they agree that it's "silly trademark claim". They will now reach out to their contact at LinkedIn and ask them to withdraw. Apparently, IP enforcement firms like Tracer send out a lot of these claims, even if LinkedIn would not stand behind it and litigate.

I don't know, man. Your comment is neither here nor there.

This looks great!

> When an outage happens, the onboard inverter detects the power loss within 20ms and automatically disconnects from the grid (islanding)

How does this work? Do I need to install anything additional in my grid? Like, how does the fridge "know" that it should now draw power from Pila?

Sorry for my noob questions :D


This is essentially a UPS (uninterruptible power supply) with an app. The UPS basically passes power from the wall to your fridge until there's a power outage. At that point it flips to using the battery to send power to your fridge.

But with the added benefit that it charges during the day on solar and then powers device during the night.

My one question would be: does it work with home assistant? It would be great to integrate in te energy dashboard.


Yes re: Home Assistant. We're stoked to have folks integrate with their own energy dashboards if that's what they prefer to do.

>But with the added benefit that it charges during the day on solar and then powers device during the night.

As an important caveat on solar: if I'm reading correctly, it appears that the main unit only has support for a small amount of solar input directly connected to it (100 W, which makes me suspect it may be using USB PD for input), while larger amounts need the expansion pack, or a separately installed system.


Can also monitor and charge from standard roof top solar when on-grid.

Pila plugs into a normal wall outlet. The fridge plugs into the outlet on the back of Pila. Pila detects an outage in 20ms and automatically begins backing up the appliances that are plugged into it.

No, that alone does not make it a worker-owned coop.

Yes, and ideally we would have no wars, either. But because of fucking psychos like Putin, Trump, Xi Jinping and many more, we do. Therefore, unfortunately, it makes sense for EU to decrease their economic dependence on outside players like the US and China.

I think it's important that we _do_ also include China in this. It's not just that Trump has demonstrated that the US is unreliable. We have also seen (again) that sociopaths in charge of authoritarian regimes can do things that are perfectly capable of acting against their own economic interests for political, cultural, religious reasons.

Depending on global interconnectedness of markets has not and will not save us. We need to divest and disconnect from all economies which are not reliable liberal democracies which broadly share our values.

I would include in this Hungary: We should be giving serious thought to how to kick them out of the EU.


We haven't built quite as much of a security dependence on China so I think this is more like the US becoming "another China."

But we have huge economic dependence which could also be used. We need to wean ourself off the Chinese supply chain. This will take decades, but the lesson here is that it will be used against us in future.

Europe is big enough as an internal market to sustain a good quality of life for the majority of the population — even if our 1% are disadvantaged relative to those in US, Russia. We have the capital and resources to defend ourselves too. We can open outward to Canada, Australia, democratic parts of Asia, Africa. But we need to avoid any dependence on powerful authoritarian regimes like China, India, the US, Indonesia etc.


I understand that but what's nagging at me is this: I think civilisation is about building dependence really.

Civilisation is organising in larger and larger groups - everyone becoming more dependent on each other and having laws and so on to resolve problems instead of fighting.

.....so somehow, for the sake of making Star Trek and all those wonderful science fiction stories possible.....we have to get that dependence back somehow. I'm joking but not joking. Some Americans are reasoable and somehow, for the world to survive, we have to find some way to help reasonable people all over the world to work together. So we can reach the science fiction future.


That sounds great. I'm just not sure it's compatible with current nation states.

As a first step we could perhaps agree that individual people could come and live in Europe and participate in our democracy?

I think physical presence is actually quite a good precondition for participation. At least people physically present have some skin in the game.

With a transition period, I'm not sure I'd have a big problem cutting many other links with non-democratic countries. I agree with your ideals but all evidence is that trading and communication links and other sources of interdependence will be abused. We need to have policies which respond to that.


> I understand that but what's nagging at me is this: I think civilisation is about building dependence really.

As it looks now, there might be a limit on the scale of global collaboration. There's nothing that says that the trend of global depenence and collaboration will continue (in fact, it is reversing now).


So Romania should be kicked out as well? They’re denying ballot access to a candidate that has broad popular support. Is that democracy when the people can’t vote for a candidate of their choice?

Possibly. I'm ignorant of Romanian politics. But the idea that EU should strengthen policing of democratic norms and sanction members who don't conform to them is important.

Replying to myself. I just looked up what gp was talking about, and I think it's this: https://apnews.com/article/romania-georgescu-election-d0541a...

In this case, no I don't think Romania should be kicked out. Restrictions on party membership are complicated, but it seems here the courts have applied Romania's electoral law. We are going to have to be smart to avoid situations like this in other EU countries, where Russian, Chinese or US money are used to support non-democrats.


They were doing something wrong. In many European cities I have lived and visited, electric buses are all over the place.


If you look at engineering salaries in Germany, 90-100k is what you pay for a senior engineer or PM, not a mid-level one.


Salary is not the same as paying a contractor. So, while salaries for senior engineers is 100k, as a contractor they might be charging 150K per year ($75/hr).


Yes, true.


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