sunsparkda
sunsparkda t1_is9nn6o wrote
Reply to comment by JeromeGnome32 in Solar silicon manufacturing about doubling from 2022 into 2023 - predicted to lead to another cycle of oversupply driving solar panel pricing down by ForHidingSquirrels
Grid level solar is affected as well, and communities can work together to install microgrids when it's too costly for most individuals in the consumers.
People too poor to install solar on their homes still benefit.
sunsparkda t1_irzdrk4 wrote
Reply to comment by Goldenslicer in Major milestone for Greek energy as renewables power 100% of electricity demand by Always__curious__
>Which is kind of a sobering thought really. That even if we sourced all our electricity from renewables, we are far from done...
Given that plans for carbon neutrality stretch out decades, not years, it'd be kind of shocking if we weren't still a good long ways from being done.
sunsparkda t1_irx0om5 wrote
Reply to comment by platoprime in Geothermal May Beat Batteries for Energy Storage: Enhanced geothermal systems are well suited to store excess renewable power as heat. by filosoful
Digging a hole that has enough volume to store significant gravity based energy storage and won't collapse in on itself when the bottom reservoir is empty raises the price for it, both construction and maintenance. Presumably enough to make geothermal storage cost competitive.
sunsparkda t1_irwzd7i wrote
Reply to comment by pastor-raised in Geothermal May Beat Batteries for Energy Storage: Enhanced geothermal systems are well suited to store excess renewable power as heat. by filosoful
That's pumped hydro storage, and it's already implemented in most of the places that have the geography for it. It's the most widely deployed power storage system at the moment.
sunsparkda t1_irt0326 wrote
Define consciousness, please.
Then prove that any sufficiently advanced AI will not have that property.
We kind of have to default to assuming that it does to avoid creating slaves instead of tools by accident.
But who am I kidding? We will 100% do so. See the backlash about AI art and the human chauvinism on display there.
sunsparkda t1_irfqpoa wrote
Reply to comment by SentientHotdogWater in Moneyless economy simulator by shanoshamanizum
Then most people will choose not to use it since money is more efficient and has vastly less overhead.
Either you force people into this system, or it will not destroy money which is the stated goal.
sunsparkda t1_irfp4wz wrote
Reply to comment by SentientHotdogWater in Moneyless economy simulator by shanoshamanizum
If you can't see how requiring all commerce to go through the system that's described without massive surveillance and punishments for people who decide to act outside it to prevent it from collapsing under it's own weight and massive inefficenencies, I'm not sure what to tell you.
sunsparkda t1_irfkxy0 wrote
Reply to comment by SentientHotdogWater in Moneyless economy simulator by shanoshamanizum
It's an unstated implication of what he describes, even if the OP doesn't understand that to be the case.
sunsparkda t1_irbl61m wrote
Reply to comment by mymar101 in Belarus Leader Bans Price Rises to Tackle Inflation by AlxIp
At which point you are still paying the higher prices (probably even higher than if the government hadn't engaged in price fixing), and you have all the fun and games of dealing with criminals instead of a legal business.
sunsparkda t1_irbka3k wrote
Reply to comment by mymar101 in Belarus Leader Bans Price Rises to Tackle Inflation by AlxIp
Because if the price the person you are buying from has to pay goes up (because they are buying from outside the market with price fixing) to the point where it's more than he's legally allowed to sell to you + the expenses in selling it, he either "loses" it to the black market or just stops selling it altogether. Either way, you don't get to buy it for the price set, and all sorts of very bad knock on effects happen that make you immensely worse off.
sunsparkda t1_ira6713 wrote
Reply to comment by shanoshamanizum in Moneyless economy simulator by shanoshamanizum
Money exists because it is useful - far more useful than your system with it's massive overhead and requirement for a draconian police state to prevent people from engaging in economic activity outside of approved channels.
Using regulation to deal with the downsides of money will be orders of magnitude less harmful that what would be required to implement your insane little thought experiment.
sunsparkda t1_ira4rmn wrote
Reply to Moneyless economy simulator by shanoshamanizum
So people are forbidden from ever talking to anyone else because they might collude, set up exchanges outside of THE SYSTEM, or generally engage in activity that is unapproved.
Right, as cyberpunk dystopias masquerading as purported utopias, this is certainly one of them.
sunsparkda t1_iqwalje wrote
Reply to comment by SlingOfDavid in Will lab-grown meat be an animal friendly and sustainable future food? - Copenhagen Institute For Futures Studies by CPHfuturesstudies
I'm sure that there will be people like you who are holdouts. Just not many when a cultured steak is twice or more the price of an animal grown one.
sunsparkda t1_iqwad0g wrote
Reply to comment by Lazy_Jellyfish7676 in Will lab-grown meat be an animal friendly and sustainable future food? - Copenhagen Institute For Futures Studies by CPHfuturesstudies
Humans are messed up, my friend.
sunsparkda t1_iqukwvj wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in The US's largest ever combined wind+solar/battery electricity plant has opened in Oregon with a generating/storage capacity of 350MW/120MWh by lughnasadh
Then invest your life savings in a nuclear project.
What's that? You don't what to risk losing your money if the project goes bad, and don't want to or can't afford to wait for a decade plus to see any returns if it does come online?
Gee, wonder why other people aren't doing what you aren't willing to.
sunsparkda t1_isbwsoo wrote
Reply to Rooftop wind energy innovation claims 50% more energy than solar at same cost by ObtainSustainability
I'm not seeing LCOE figures, which makes me think that the cost they're talking about is installation cost, not overall cost. Ongoing maintenance is probably where the downsides of this for homeowners comes in, because as it is this sounds too good to be true, and it probably is.