

There is no hope.


There is no hope.


That’s fine, but even if it was 100% safe, a centralized energy source can be taken over (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zaporizhzhia_Nuclear_Power_Plant#2022_Russian_occupation_of_the_plant) or destroyed (like a lot of other Ukrainian energy infrastructure) and then, people are without energy. Decentralized energy solves that problem.
Destroying or taking over 1 nuclear power plant is far easier than taking over or destroying the solar panels on every house in a country.


But still worse than renewables.
Far more expensive, it’s centralized and therefore a war target (good luck trying to destroy 100 million solar installations on 100 million different houses instead) and the source of fuel rods for Europe is currently a sanctioned country that is running amok in Ukraine.
It’s useful to establish a base of energy when Renewables don’t produce enough and there are no other decentralized options, but otherwise, it should not be considered IMO.


I don’t want either please.
Centralized energy sources should be considered a bad idea in Europe after what happened in Ukraine.


A number that always works is 28 by the way…
2026 - 28 = 1998 2026 + 28 = 2054


Noobs, just buy the calendar after the year it represents is over, simply wait 27 years and voilá, you have a calendar that shows the correct days, days of the week, etc.


Sure. Thanks.
I guess, future will tell. The author is very focussed on the system card. Maybe, we get a CVE list in a few weeks. Who knows…
The Firefox test is not Firefox. It’s a SpiderMonkey JavaScript engine shell in a container, with “a testing harness mimicking a Firefox 147 content process, but without the browser’s process sandbox and other defense-in-depth mitigations.”
I’m for sure not an expert in this field, but I recently saw videos Form LiveOverflow about FireFox bug bounties and I think, it was the same setup. Finding a bug in one of the components was enough for them to take it very serious.


So?
“Aaaaaaaaaaaaah, warum??? Warummmm???”


Or you create a post on your blog and post the hyperlink to it on Lemmy and maybe some other platforms. Pretty much what I have done here, except that it is not my blog in this case.
And whoever likes you website can decide to follow you on Lemmy or some other platform or to subscribe to your RSS/ATOM feed.


Me neither… Maybe, the person is drunk… I dunno. Blocked and reported that… Not what we need on Lemmy or anywhere else…


Good that we don’t have karma here…


Even here, the guy you’re responding to is getting down voted to oblivion (for Lemmy anyways) for an opinion that I have echoed elsewhere and gotten the opposite response.
I’m on a Lemmy instance that has downvotes disabled. I can only see that the person I replied to has 3 upvotes and that me previous comment has 2. I don’t even see the negativity on Lemmy.


Well, Austria is right next to it. It’s tiny, too. So why is it not as good?


Hmm. Using the search term “small website discoverability crisis” . . .
Well, do you think that it’s a realistic that the average user types that into the search engine’s website ? When you already know the exact title of the post on that website, you probable already know the full URL and don’t need a search engine. So, that has nothing to do with “discovering” in my opinion, which the blog post is about.


The average user does not have the exact title of the web page.


My experience was that every sub reddit itself was an echo chamber.
Not having the majority opinion of the subreddit meant getting negative scores because of downvoters, which lead to deleted posts because of that stupid karma system.
But yeah, suggesting a permanent solution for both sides of the Israel-Palestine conflict on Lemmy by criticizing BOTH sides doesn’t get you sympathy points here eather.


Even if he lost with a close result, he could have blocked lots of change. Fortunately, his opponent has a 2/3 majority, so Orban can’t do anything. 😃


Most important: it’s even a 2/3 majority. Without that, Orban could have still blocked most of the changes. Now, he cannot.
Finally