patwater10's comments

patwater10 | 15 hours ago | on: Global warming has accelerated significantly

Look at the Colorado River situation to see how it's affected the US already. Now that hasn't really impacted consumers per say other than through indirect water conservation and higher consumer grocery prices (slightly not a primary driver on the latter). But it's a massive deal that will ripple out more and more in the coming years.

patwater10 | 8 days ago | on: Banned in California

Reading through this discussion and speaking from professional experience I have to say that the real challenge isn’t just specific bans, it’s the administrative cost and the inertia of a permitting paradigm designed in the 1960s and 70s. We’re still managing complexity with relics of a regulatory architecture built for a different era — one with paper files, siloed agencies, and a bias toward “check-the-box” compliance rather than real world outcomes.

That’s why so many solutions feel like de facto bans: not because the environmental goal isn’t valid, but because the cost of compliance in time, paperwork, and legal risk creates a barrier that only well-resourced actors can navigate. The real economic deadweight loss isn’t always in the policy text — it’s in the thousands of hours and tens of thousands of dollars spent just to prove you did the minimum.

There’s enormous opportunity right now with data tools and AI agents for qualitative assessment. We don’t have to keep defaulting to rigid checklists that presume every context is the same. With modern sensors, realtime monitoring, and AI that can synthesize qualitative evidence with quantitative data, we can finally shift toward performance-based permits that look at actual impacts rather than adherence to outdated procedural triggers.

Imagine a system where:

Sensors and connected data streams show real emissions or ecological outcomes,

AI agents help translate diverse evidence into risk profiles,

Permits adapt based on performance instead of fixed thresholds divorced from context.

That’s not just a tech fantasy — that’s a pathway to reducing administrative drag while improving environmental protection. The status quo isn’t sustainable environmentally or economically. If we cling to 20th-century process dogma, we’ll keep seeing well-intentioned policies backfire into de facto bans, regulatory bottlenecks, and inequitable access to compliance.

patwater10 | 2 years ago | on: Satya Nadella on the bigger vision behind Microsoft's new battery

File under big if true though perhaps an area where the hype has outrunned reality.

"Their prototype battery uses a novel combination of lithium and sodium, generating enough energy to power a lightbulb, as an initial proof of concept.

Researchers acknowledge that the chemistry has yet to be fully proven, and might not work at a larger scale. They say it’s nonetheless a promising development in the quest for alternatives to traditional lithium-ion batteries, which are widely used but have drawbacks such as scarcity, cost, environmental impact and safety." https://www.geekwire.com/2024/microsoft-and-pnnl-make-a-bett...

https://arxiv.org/pdf/2401.04070.pdf

patwater10 | 3 years ago | on: Airflow's Problem

<shrug>

ETL seems just like one of those perennial challenges that resist humanity's efforts to categorize the world into need and tidy boxes

patwater10 | 3 years ago | on: Ask HN: Computer Vision for Collective Good?

There's a lot of need for classifying aerial and satellite imagery. Those uses range from crop optimization to decarbonization.

See Descartes Labs, Planet, etc. Also see theCaDC.org for water data needs though I believe they're still too small to need a CV expert.

patwater10 | 3 years ago | on: Why America can’t build

Yeah I hear you though note that given how backwards, arcane, obsolete and convoluted the way we plan for and agree upon future urban development is, there's really a TON of opportunity to BOTH better listen to residents and actually get things built.

See my friends startup InCitu.us for a great example of the opportunity for win/wins in the space: https://www.incitu.us/

patwater10 | 3 years ago | on: Research answers what Bronze Age daggers were used for

Is the use of daggers for processing animal carcasses exclusive to their use as ceremonial items? Why not both?

Anyway articles like this are humbling about how little we know about our in the scheme of things not too distant ancestors.

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