DIBE25
DIBE25 t1_ja6qxtw wrote
Reply to comment by SuspiciousStable9649 in As Tokyo Electric Power Co. moves closer to discharging tons of stored water from its stricken Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant, local opposition has intensified and cries of betrayal are being heard by DoremusJessup
tldr and you can even not read the rest: safety before returns on investment is better than no return on investment because lack of safety
and to have more stable and safer nukes those paying for it just need to accept the fact that having a plant meeting or exceeding safety requirements is better than a plant being on maintenance half the time
also the radiation of a nuclear plant is lower than that of a coal plant due to the uranium in the coal's ashes - iirc
so if the reactor vessel isn't completely crap along with the other meters of concrete and whatnot there shouldn't be any concerns with radiation
I won't touch proper waste disposal since that's fairly.. you dig a hole far away in a special kind of rock and fill holes in the hole with the sticks and the sticks are in dry ceramic and multiple metal layers and all that is covered in concrete
man I'm tired sorry if this makes no sense
DIBE25 t1_j6hwxqy wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Takahama nuclear reactor in Japan's Fukui halted after alert goes off by Saltedline
alert worked, it alerted the right people of an out-of-the-norm situation
the automatic shutdown worked, it shut itself down automatically
the alert is not periodical per se, but since it did happen and I can't comment on what happened and why I'll just be happy the alert system worked properly
DIBE25 t1_j6hjnpq wrote
> The No. 4 reactor was halted at 3:21 p.m., the Osaka-based utility said, adding that there has been no indication of the incident causing environmental contamination. The reactor's cooling function is normal, according to the Nuclear Regulation Authority.
nothing to worry about, plant did what it was supposed to do
DIBE25 t1_iydviwu wrote
Reply to comment by 1BannedAgain in China could have 1,500 nuclear warheads by 2035: Pentagon report by cobicoo
the goal is to never have to reach that
there's that cycle of armament and disarmament of which we've mostly seen one high and one starting low and another low now
this is to say and I hope it makes sense
it's to supposedly be good at something you hope you'll never have to do because it's a damn good way of signing your own death certificate
tldr: be good destroying your enemy in theory and hope it works out
that's MAD explained in a really bad way
DIBE25 t1_iycwhra wrote
Reply to comment by peterpeterpeterrr in Letter bomb explodes in Ukranian embassy in Madrid by The_Food_Scientist
it's also supposed to be scanned in the postal system many times
something's missing.. delivered in person?
also the website is cancer
DIBE25 t1_iycwaro wrote
Reply to comment by kongartist in China could have 1,500 nuclear warheads by 2035: Pentagon report by cobicoo
they require a smaller number of warheads to cripple a city
so.. it's cheaper and easier
gravity bombs are plenty destructive, along with conventional explosives
but nukes almost guarantee you're going to also kill your targets (see: a hypothetical scenario where you need to kill everyone in your enemy's country, or try) unlike gravity bombs or conventional warheads
so it's better from a logistical perspective to use small medium range nukes along with gliders and the like than risk failing by having your planes fail to deliver your bombs
tldr: more kaboom per volume and you can be far away when that happens..
..it's not like you'll live long anyway
edit:
I know MAD is a thing
just wanted to say that nukes are used instead of conventional warheads - the point of MAD is to never get to the tipping point, however close you may get
DIBE25 t1_iychjv5 wrote
Reply to comment by ButlerFish in UK removes China from Sizewell nuclear project, as ties with Beijing sour by Saltedline
thanks for the additional information, nice read
didn't connect the dots, the us can either provide money for anything they want or brains for their reactor designs
DIBE25 t1_iyc73d8 wrote
that's a good thing, but also a bad thing since sizewell is taking ages to finish
hopefully they'll be able to employ some American company and get both knowledge and expertise to be able to speed up construction
you can replace "American" with any other country that's not directly aligned with China
DIBE25 t1_iukbfvd wrote
Reply to comment by lollysticky in Workers leave iPhone factory in Zhengzhou amid COVID curbs by Substantial_Camera_8
if you're talking of shitty authoritarian regimes then a logic like theirs works
you quarantine entire cities at a time, push spyware to your citizens and monitor their every move and while you're at it you can keep gathering more information (other than for prosecution and profiling idk for what) and not have to worry about having a working vaccine
or something idk
DIBE25 t1_iuk9bfn wrote
the more the merrier
or something like that
either way poland can only gain from energy not generated from gas or coal and 6-9GW of nuclear can definitely help
DIBE25 t1_iuisoxd wrote
Reply to comment by n3ws4cc in US convenes over 30 countries to address ransomware as hacks of hospitals, critical infrastructure continue by cobicoo
yes but Bethany from accounting needs to run an app her son grabbed from a Chinese website that copies her bookmarks from her computer at home and it needs to be run from a usb key and it needs administrator privileges
I'm exaggerating but until technological literacy is as common as linguistical literacy you're going to have unpredictable scenarios because a ton of exploits rely on human engineering (can't remember the proper term sorry) and not exclusively on the use of exploits in the software (which also boils down to human error)
DIBE25 t1_itn3g07 wrote
Reply to comment by PandaMuffin1 in Ukraine Accuses Russia Of Deliberately Delaying Black Sea Grain Exports by KimCureAll
thanks for pointing it out! :)
smilies can have a great impact on a bad couple of days, thanks pandamuffin1
DIBE25 t1_itn1tus wrote
Reply to comment by PandaMuffin1 in Ukraine Accuses Russia Of Deliberately Delaying Black Sea Grain Exports by KimCureAll
reader mode shows and showed an entirely different article... for some reason
DIBE25 t1_itmdsul wrote
my hands are not doing all that well so I won't be paragraphing it all, sorry
here's the article
edit:
apparently clipboard funkeries went on
reader mode shows another article apparently
Cargo ships carrying grain and other foodstuffs to and from Ukrainian ports must be inspected by teams organized by the four-party Joint Coordination Center (JCC), a group set up under the UN-Turkey brokered deal with Ukraine and Russia that was signed in July amid concerns that the blockage of Ukrainian grain exports was contributing to a global food crisis.
The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry said it had reason to believe the delays were politically motivated and were once again threatening food security for millions of people.
"Russia's actions undermine global food security, in particular in the Global South," the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry statement added. "The inspection delays have already prevented Ukraine from exporting an additional 3 million tons of grain. Ten million people across the world have not received food in time because of Russia's political agenda."
Russia has previously threatened to pull out of the deal, which also gave Moscow guarantees for its own grain and fertilizer exports. The deal is up for renewal next month.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on October 24 that Moscow has asked the United Nations for data on the destination and end-consumers for Ukrainian grain exports. Lavrov said "corrections" needed to unblock shipments would depend on Russia receiving this information.
UN spokeswoman for the Black Sea Grain Initiative Ismini Palla said urgent steps were needed to relieve the backlog.
DIBE25 t1_jdnvxe6 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in LPT Firefox can run ad block on your phone! by SlenderClaus
Firefox does allow you to have more granular control
ublock is far more powerful and allows hundreds of blocklists with minimal performance impact (up to like 3M filters, 10M was slow.. logically - but you're gonna have 100k or 500k rules at most usually)
brave.. brave deals with YouTube ads and such but doesn't stop you from going on a newly created/activated domain that would execute funky JS
each to their own ig