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Here's a link to the story about the autistic teen incident

https://www.independent.co.uk/tv/news/police-arrest-autistic...



Only bc it’s Valentine's Day :)

https://peel.fm/33e538b

Nice work, fun and the repeats system is cool


I am really interested in work of this nature since my phd chemist days. One of the key challenges I've seen in similar systems is the oxygen evolution reaction due to the 4e- required to complete the process. How have you resolved this in your system, and do you think this could help other open problems that seem to suffer from OER bottleneck?


From my understanding, OER occurs when splitting water into oxygen and hydrogen and can happen in biological and electrochemical systems. In the former plants use energy from sunlight to extract the electrons from water whereas in the latter, energy from electricity is used. In our process we use hydrogen that is oroduced elsewhere, it isn't part of our technology so we don't run into this issue.


my apologies this was intended to be a reply to the thread on https://www.sunhydrogen.com/technology. Sorry for the confusion!


I too reread this sentence a few time to try and understand the message. I think that the author is trying to convey that he believes his work has a positive impact to the "global health" of the internet. Although this may come across of "full of himself" I think that it may be more of a positive mindset view of his work. If we can't convince ourselves of the value of our work then how we will ever convince the world?

I think the world would be a better place if you could all truly be this proud of our work. Is there anything we can do to make a material difference here?


It sounds like it's just Silicon Valley's "making the world a better place through scalable fault-tolerant payment APIs", except unironically.


I think it's specifically a play on Stripe's mission statement to "increase the GDP of the internet" so in that light he "works for the internet".

I like his writing, but his miss on that Japan covid thing (linked in threads elsewhere) and his knee-jerk (imo, at least overly general) anti-crypto hostility has caused me to down-rank my prior for him a bit.

That said, if you write a lot publicly you're going to be wrong sometimes. I don't expect people to be perfectly consistent or perfectly correct (I'm certainly not).

I also don't care that brilliant people sometimes come off a little abrasively, it's better imo than pseudo-humble crap. I don't even think it really applies to patio11 who comes across earnest and helpful in his writing and goes out of his way to do good (salary negotiation article is still best source on the net, the vaccine availability thing).


without significant aircraft carrier fleet i'm not sure china has dominant control of any seas, despite best efforts in south china seas

[1](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_aircraft_carrier_progr...)


https://www.cnn.com/2021/03/05/china/china-world-biggest-nav...

I am not sure what your point is. By number of ships, they are the biggest. I have no idea how important aircraft carrier fleet is.


Biggest by number, not by capability or weight. There are significant differences as a result.

I.e. who cares if you have the most swordsmen on the planet, if you in a gunfight.


> I have no idea how important aircraft carrier fleet is.

It’s the most important part of a modern blue water navy and has been since WW2. The US also has a world-dominating submarine fleet.


It's quite possible that this is just a spectacular side effect of proteins the fungus produces to prevent ice crystals forming within its cells.



strictly ordered message queues between processes



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