Are you being sarcastic ?
Same in Croatia for ovens. Usually 3 phase.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LklUVkMPl8g
He goes on about the bigger picture, while I was thinking about just manufacturing and maintenance. That graph cost going down could be due to manufacturing ramping up. You need big machines to make big machines.
It’s interesting how fast the price per kWh went down. I’m glad.
AFAIK wind hasn’t changed much in a long time. Not much to improve really. Cost is materials and labour, both going up. Probably still cheaper then coal.
Can link a video about how they work, and the chalenges tomorow if you want.
On linux middle mouse is traditionally paste, with just selecting text being copy.
Missing “;” on line 148.
It’s actually micromachines, son
You’d think they’d like grapes more.
Yes, except X had reasons for becoming like it is. But now when computers compute and draw on the same computer, wayland is way better. If only those freedesktop people would finalize this after 3 years of looking at it.
Reply was to you, but it’s still a public forum with a topic.
Hmm. I can’t find ehere i got that from, other then it being more general. https://cscie26.dce.harvard.edu/lectures/lect02/6_Extras/ch01s06.html
Either way the whole point is to write programs/code that can interoperate and be composed. SysD programs comunicate over an “implementation is the specification” protocol, so they might as well be one blob instead of separate programs.
Systemd hate is about it consuming things, and doing things badly.
Originally it was about code. Split it into reusable functions, and such.
SyStEMd fans don’t understand, per usual.
Unix domain sockets, shared memory (classic and/or over anonymous file descriptors), file system in userspace, the (ms) ini format.
Was going to sleep when i wrote that.
Uds, shm, fuse for ipc. Ini for configs.
FF7 and supreme commander were complex. And devs then didn’t have the tools we have today, not to mention game engines (there were, but not like today). And ps3 was a pain to program for. And, and…
I think it’s the air in the cloth that isolates, and water just fills the gaps.