nazrulmum10 | 4 years ago | on: 38% of remote workers work from bed
nazrulmum10's comments
nazrulmum10 | 4 years ago | on: Toyota is quietly pushing Congress to slow the shift to electric vehicles
so maybe from 2035 to 2042 (something like that), only EV’s and 60+ miles plugin hybrids can be sold new to consumers (the requirement for commercial customers would start at around 2042 or thereabouts). After that, only new cars sold would be EV’s. That would be my preferred timeframe.
nazrulmum10 | 4 years ago | on: Autofill in password managers can allow login credentials to be stolen
nazrulmum10 | 4 years ago | on: My First CSS
nazrulmum10 | 4 years ago | on: Signal on Android: Images sent to wrong contacts
nazrulmum10 | 4 years ago | on: Freenom, the free domains website, is a scam
nazrulmum10 | 4 years ago | on: Why Japan Didn’t Create the iPod (2008)
nazrulmum10 | 4 years ago | on: Google results for PHP tutorials contain SQL injection vulnerabilities
nazrulmum10 | 4 years ago | on: TSMC eyes Germany as possible location for first Europe chip plant
nazrulmum10 | 4 years ago | on: Show HN: Website changes design each time you blink
You can collect postcards with the artwork from online applications. You can collect postcards with different artworks, but you have to choose your artworks from a certain source. This is a different approach. I am trying to collect artwork from different sources, such as different online applications. You can choose artworks from different sources. That’s why you have to take care of your artworks. If you collect artworks from one source, then you have to make the artworks you collect public.
nazrulmum10 | 4 years ago | on: Self hosting is important
Self hosting is not a perfect solution, you have to buy the hardware, replace faulty components, do the system maintenance to keep the software part alive.
nazrulmum10 | 4 years ago | on: Electromagnetism is a property of spacetime itself, study finds
Maxwell's equations are the key linear partial differential equations that describe classical electromagnetism. The equations relate the electromagnetic field to currents and charges. On the other hand, in general relativity, the Einstein field equation is a set of nonlinear partial differential equations describing how the metric of spacetime evolves, given some conditions, such as mass density in the spacetime. Both equations are ultimately of second order, if seen properly.
Therefore, we thought that perhaps we are talking about the same governing equation, which could describe both electromagnetism and gravitation. Indeed, it becomes clear that Maxwell's equations hide inside the Einstein field equations of general relativity. The metric tensor of spacetime tells us how lengths determine in spacetime. The metric tensor also thus determines the curvature properties of spacetime. Curvature is what we feel as "force." In addition, energy and curvature relate to each other through the Einstein field equations. Test particles follow what are called geodesics—the shortest paths in the spacetime.
nazrulmum10 | 4 years ago | on: To H-E-Double-Hockey-Sticks with Facebook
This trend roughly coincides with Facebook’s introduction of “boosting” for pages; in this new model, according to the stats we can see, Facebook stopped showing our posts to approximately 94% of our followers, demanding a fee to “boost” each post into an ad, which would make it visible to more of our audience. We lost contact with tens of thousands of fans practically overnight. We don’t mind paying for a service if it is valuable, but we absolutely don’t want to reach our audience by buying ad space on Facebook. Yuck. But no other option is given to reach the many people who previously followed our posts, and who presumably want to continue to do so.
We established our Facebook page in 2008 as the fledgling social media site was gaining in currency, and we continued to maintain our page on the side, mostly as an afterthought. In the intervening years Facebook evolved from a dubious curiosity into a megacorporation that is firmly in the service of bad ideas. In a move that feels long overdue, we at Damn Interesting are abandoning all interactions and connections with Facebook.
We really should have done this back when it was revealed that Facebook used the ubiquitous embedded “Like on Facebook” buttons to follow people’s movements around the web without their knowledge or consent. We should have done this when Facebook literally toyed with people’s emotions by showing some people more positive stories in their newsfeeds, and others more negative stories, to see how it would affect their emotional states. We should have done this when it was revealed that Facebook allowed advertisers to target ads to people who expressed interest in topics such as “Jew hater.” We should have done this so many times before.
To the tens of thousands of fans who follow us on Facebook: our sincere apologies. You’re probably not seeing most of our posts there, anyway. For the few who do still see them, we no longer wish to share content on Facebook which might cause people to spend time there. We hope you’ll stay in touch via one of our multiple non-Facebook options
nazrulmum10 | 4 years ago | on: Form Energy reveals the chemistry of its long-duration battery
Or as Greg Lydkovsky, global head of R&D at steel giant ArcelorMittal — Form Energy’s latest investor — put it, the technology “holds exciting potential to overcome the intermittent supply of renewable energy”.
Form Energy president and chief operating officer Ted Wiley said: “We’ve completed the science, what’s left to do is scale up from lab-scale prototypes to grid-scale power plants.
“[At full production], the modules will produce electricity for one-tenth the cost of any technology available today for grid storage.”
The battery is said to work through “reversible oxidation of iron”. In discharge mode, thousands of tiny iron pellets are exposed to the air, which makes them rust (ie, the iron turning to iron oxide). When the system is charged with an electric current, the oxygen in the rust is removed, and it reverts back to iron.
Wiley said that a 300MW “pilot” project for Minnesota-based Great River Energy will be commissioned in 2023.
nazrulmum10 | 4 years ago | on: Modern C++ for C Programmers (2018)
nazrulmum10 | 4 years ago | on: BirdNet – Identify Birds by Sound
nazrulmum10 | 4 years ago | on: How to spot a good fake ID
nazrulmum10 | 4 years ago | on: Intrinsic, a new Alphabet company
nazrulmum10 | 4 years ago | on: My Steam Game Revenue Stats
nazrulmum10 | 4 years ago | on: Children are spoofing Covid-19 tests with soft drinks