This would have been even more troll with a 0% answer, because that would add another layer of paradox.
I once met a person that never drank water, only soft drinks. It’s not the unhealthiness of this that disturbed me, but the fact they did it without the requisite paperwork.
Unlike those disorganised people I have a formal waiver. I primarily drink steam and crushed glaciers.
This would have been even more troll with a 0% answer, because that would add another layer of paradox.
*mooshrooms
The actual quantities are pretty small
In pure, stable form, yes. A hundred or so grams released in my house won’t be noticed or cause any problems.
But a few hundred grams of burnt fluorine hydrocarbons? 😬 That’s a whole other story.
Most modern domestic fridges stick with a plain hydrocarbon refrigerant anyway (akin to butane) these days.
I’m yet to see R600a in Australian domestic fridges, I thought we were lagging in that department? Can you just get them at retailers now?
if you’ve got burning refrigerant there are much bigger problems going on seeing as the refrigerant circuit is hermetically sealed
Strong disagree xD Inhaling burning fluorine compounds > fridge not cooling any more
That kind of thing would also provoke a product safety recall.
I’m not diagnosing the most likely cause of a normal fridge failure, but considering some interesting causes that align with the unusual scenario depicted in the article. Don’t panic, I’m not going to go all “fridge bad” on you.
I worry that bicarb+vinegar may have become a cultural phenomenon because it looks and sounds satisfying, not because of actual measured and compared effectiveness.
You want that in a drain though: the chemical reaction causes a great deal of foaming and agitation, which clears shit off the inside of the pipe.
Is it more effective than pouring hot water down the drain? I thought the foaming and agitation was quite gentle.
The PH you end up with also retards fruit flies and other nasties.
If you’re not controlling the mix then everyone will end up with a different PH. Some neutral-ish, some acidic (bad), some alkaline (and possibly only minorly so, the NaHCO3 might create a buffer, not sure).
Could be burning refrigerant (some are flammable AND fluorinated).
A lot of phone modems ship with their own SoC (processor) running its own OS. It’s much smaller and slower than the main phone SoC but, depending on its implementation, it can have full access to all of your main processor’s memory through DMA.
I was amazed that we transitioned from one GPU heavy bubble (Crypto) to another (LLM/AI). Whilst the hype for crypto imploded the use for the hardware sort of didn’t. I wonder if the next bubble with be the same, or if we get some refreshing variety to our money sinks?
Microsoft et al are subsidizing GenAI to an insane degree. […] prices shoot up for their customers and serve as a rough awakening to all the websites that integrated a crappy chatbot.
I’ve run some much simpler chatbots on just my desktop PC, so they will have some fallback (if they really choose to take it). Still it locks up my entire computer for a few second for each reply, so even a few hundred users per second peak would be an expensive service.
(Insert joke here about customers not noticing or caring about the difference between website chatbots built on big company services vs smaller ones, because they have exactly the same problems just in different hues.)
I’m confused. Sacholding?
What state? If NSW: you will want an L2 (level 2) electrician to carry out works on the wires between your property and the grid.
Yes and no.
Different approximate voltages: yes, different connectors are a good idea. Don’t put 150VDC into an input that expects 12V, its protection circuitry might not be able to block it.
Custom connectors for exact voltages, cell numbers and charging currents: next to impossible. Even within the traditional Li-ion family there is too much variation, let alone now that we have LiFEPO4, high-voltage Li-ion and sodium-ion on the market. You still need to integrate the charging controller OR at least a protection circuit into the pack itself.
I don’t know exactly what happened in this fatal fire based off just the coroner’s report, it mentions that much of the evidence was burned and destroyed. It’s worth keeping an open mind for unexpected things like adaptor cables that come with the charger or mislabelled connectors that both say the same (wrong) things.
I do not like the central focus of the ABC article on just the incompatible charger. Events like this are not caused by a single point of failure, multiple failures have to occur (including electrical, social & regulatory) for this to occur.
Link to full copy of the coroner’s report (8 pages, contents are about the same level of intensity as the ABC article, mentions burns and treatment).
The coroner concludes with TWO recommendations, not just one:
The circumstances in which Tyson died serve as a tragic reminder of the importance of only using chargers that are supplied with the equipment or device, or certified third-party charging equipment that is compatible with the battery specifications. Using chargers with incorrect power delivery (voltage and current) can cause damage to the battery that can lead to rapidly developing, intense and self-sustaining fires. The circumstances in which Tyson died serve as a tragic reminder of the importance of only using chargers that are supplied with the equipment or device, or certified third-party charging equipment that is compatible with the battery specifications. Using chargers with incorrect power delivery (voltage and current) can cause damage to the battery that can lead to rapidly developing, intense and self-sustaining fires. Large batteries and equipment such as e-scooters should be charged away from living spaces and in an area equipped with a compliant smoke alarm.
Two points of failure for us to improve on is better than only one. But I still think it’s poor for the coroner to not mention all of the other factors that could have individually prevented this.
Using the wrong charger should (ideally) be something that any big battery pack can survive – every big battery pack should (ideally) contain protection circuitry that shuts it off when abnormal conditions are detected. But I know this gets omitted (it costs a few dollars) and it’s something we need to change.
I also wonder if it was a charging system without a cell balancer. Those can work safely sometimes (with very matched cells), but again that single layer of protection can be the difference between fire and no fire.
Let’s not put all the blame on the poor guy that died because of this. Using the wrong charger is only one mistake, there should be other layers to protect you.
Image uploads not working? I’ll try again here:
Does the NBN actually provide the discount, or is the retailer eating the loss?
Thankyou, didn’t have a clue.
No idea, but it gives me this energy:
Replacing a TCP socket with a UNIX socket doesn’t affect the amount of headers you have to parse.
We rented our technology and could not read nor write.
Moose bumped me up to $14.80/month recently, prior to that it was about half the cost.
I’m lucky to use 1GB/month so this looks perfect, thankyou.
It looks like Catch support is useless though, lets hope nothing breaks during the port. https://forums.whirlpool.net.au/archive/2706810 <- also has some info about how to disable voicemail.
Cheapest VPS I’m using in Aus so far is BinaryLane. $4.13/mon ($50/year). Seems OK, has dedicated IPV4 (yes you can get VPS behind CGnat4 + IPV6), IPV6 works after a bit of finangling. No backups. I only put it under low stress though.
Robtec does OK shared hosting (notably they offer an alternative to Cpanel) and was happy to permanently whitelist my home IP for SSH access. Quantumcore used to do this on request too but now it’s only temporary, I have to keep contacting them every 6 months or so.
then delete everything and then upload on the old host
It’s really annoying that good file transfer protocols (like rsync) also tend to require ssh access :| I wish shared hosts were a little less garbage sometimes, but I guess they have to deal with too many abusive customers for that to be cheap.
Neocities isn’t Australian but looks kind of cool. Apparently a “neocities supporter” can use rsync, here is a person doing it specifically with Hugo.
I click on my “From” address and then select “Customize From Address…”. I can then type anything I want up there. It’s a little annoying when replying to an email chain with an alias, but not too many steps.