andrewducker: (Default)
andrewducker ([personal profile] andrewducker) wrote2023-04-12 12:00 pm

Interesting Links for 12-04-2023

rhythmaning: (cat)

11.

[personal profile] rhythmaning 2023-04-12 12:51 pm (UTC)(link)
Proof that the boss isn't always right. Just look at Musk.
dewline: Text - "On the DEWLine" (Default)

[personal profile] dewline 2023-04-12 04:01 pm (UTC)(link)
1. Oh...shit.

3. The civilians of Russia are in trouble. :-(

4. How do we make sure that such are elected? In any country?
calimac: (Default)

[personal profile] calimac 2023-04-12 04:39 pm (UTC)(link)
1. The same thing is going on in Republican states in the US. Trans people are becoming the demons of the moment - to people who don't know any, I guess. Biden has been moving in some disturbing directions also, but US political parties are decentralized. The President can't make Congresspeople of his party adhere to his positions, and there's lots of Democratic Congress members who won't accept any anti-trans policies.

2. This is about as clear an explanation for lay readers as you'll get of a highly techy subject, but it's still more than I want to absorb. I knew that the three-body problem is too complex to solve, but giving up on stacked Feynman diagrams because it's too hard - isn't that what computers are for?

4. We're getting a lot of this in the US also - random abuse of politicians for supposedly wanting bad things - but it's mostly coming from Republicans.

8. Look on the bright side: the UK can't be the worst economy in the EU any more, because it's not in the EU any more. (g)

hairyears: Spilosoma viginica caterpillar: luxuriant white hair and a 'Dougal' face with antennae. Small, hairy, and venomous (Default)

Less-than-zero-sum economics

[personal profile] hairyears 2023-04-13 06:53 am (UTC)(link)
That 0.3% contraction is an aggregation across the whole economy, and it almost certainly conceals an increasing share of income going to the top decile and the top percentile.

Betcha living costs (especially rents) are rising steeply at the bottom of the market, for people who are least-able to afford it, and have no leverage to get a pay rise.

darkoshi: (Default)

#10 Truck carrying 40,000 pounds

[personal profile] darkoshi 2023-04-13 07:35 am (UTC)(link)
40,000 pounds = 20 tons/truck

"The rail operator said that as of April 10, nearly 20,000 tons of waste soil have been removed from that site, but according to the Ohio Emergency Management Agency, there is still more than 17,000 tons of soil that needs to be removed. "

20,000 tons = 1000 truckloads
So 1000 truckloads have already been removed and there are 850 more to go. I wonder where it is all being moved to.
At those numbers, it doesn't seem that unusual to me for there to have been a crash. But they should at least put covers on the tops of trucks carrying toxic soil.
simont: A picture of me in 2016 (Default)

[personal profile] simont 2023-04-13 09:15 am (UTC)(link)
#11: I got confused by the title, because it made me think of emacs, which maps ^F to 'forward' in a different sense, namely 'go forward one character in the current buffer'. (Goes with ^B to go backwards, and Alt-F and Alt-B to move by a word instead of a character. Also imitated by GNU readline, and other line editing systems that imitate that in turn, such as gnuplot.)
trailer_spot: (Default)

3. Russia's civilian economy

[personal profile] trailer_spot 2023-04-14 07:05 am (UTC)(link)
While I don't think the article backs up the headline in any meaningful way, the article itself is very interesting and provides a lot of data.
I think chances are very slim that there will be an uprising from within the country. But it's at least good to know that its citizens experience the consequences of the war.
trailer_spot: (Default)

Re: 3. Russia's civilian economy

[personal profile] trailer_spot 2023-04-14 08:17 am (UTC)(link)
The one that shows up in your entry: "Russia's civilian economy is down around 50% as the country shifts to a war economy"
I'm also not sure where it comes from. The link first goes to the Russian version, but you can then switch to the English one. I was wondering if maybe the headline changed later. The article then provides a number of statistics. But I don't think it's fair to extrapolate from those numbers that a large part of the civilian economy is down by half.