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i procrastinated on my bachelor's thesis for ~5 years. the school ended up changing the graduation requirements before i finished it.

never underestimate the power of stubbornness.


maybe, just maybe, having friction in logging into web services is a good thing.

i, for one, am not a fan of the tendency for every web service to require an account in the first place. making it easier for people to log in to these unnecessary accounts is helpful in discouraging this practice, as it will decrease utilization of services which require such superfluous accounts.


On public roads with other people who haven't consented to testing anything, no less.


So I guess this means Volvos will be... crashing... less?


sounds like the devs over at SAP need to unionize if they want to stop pushing user-unfriendly software


enforcement would probably happen at the level of the power utility. large mining operations have agreements with utilities to buy power at wholesale prices, the utilities know what the power is being used for

the real beneficiaries of this would be small miners (small business owners?) who either use their own locally generated power or the residential grid. oh, and all the people who don't mine in the US


    the utilities know what the power is being used for
I did not know this, sounds like something I would probably not do if I was running such company... why would utility company need to know what I'm using energy for..?


Depends how big your operation is.

A basic industrial unit with a 10 kilowatt supply? They'll supply you no-questions-asked.

If you're a huge operation like a steelworks, consuming tens or hundreds of megawatts, they'll want to work closely with you for capacity planning.

If you've got special business requirements, like a hospital or data centre that needs redundant, highly reliable power - you'll have to tell them that's what you need.

If you want to negotiate a discount below their normal prices, an account manager will sniff around your company to try and figure out how price-sensitive you really are.

If you want a big upgrade to your building's power, which needs new cabling installed or the road dug up? The workers might not keep quiet if they see you're a cannabis grow operation.


Because they need to forecast power requirements ahead of time. Maximum efficiency of resources is not just smart for greenhouse emissions it is smart for not spending more money than necessary to supply power.

Additionally, they need to know which clients to restore power to first (hospitals and essential services) and who can wait (commercial buildings on a weekend? Back of the line)

Note: it isn’t that they know exactly what the power is used for, but they sure know the general purpose (residential, industrial, critical service, tech, etc)


Companies have relationships with their large clients. They aren't just suppliers and more like partners in their business.

Maybe it's different in strict commodity markets but this knowledge also allows you for better cooperation. From little things like when to set service windows to large infrastructure investments for which you might want some buy-in before they happen.


Electricity is a limited and vital resources so usually it is tightly regulated who gets to use electricity. If the government doesn't like what you say you will do with the electricity then you wont get more than a typical home connection.


coincidentally, i'm sure the rent freeze has had a positive effect on your ability to pay your bills without stress


The rent freeze that was retroactively cancelled? No. It didn't help anyone.


a proper marxist critique of Graeber's "Bullshit Jobs" hypothesis:

Alienation Is Not ‘Bullshit’: An Empirical Critique of Graeber’s Theory of BS Jobs https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/09500170211015...

from the conclusion:

>This article highlights that alternative theories grounded in empirical research are required to understand the social suffering caused by the feelings of useless work that Graeber observes. Therefore, our third major contribution is to demonstrate the value of Marx’s writings on alienation. We take inspiration from Marx’s understanding of alienation to investigate whether the social relations of work can explain why millions of workers do not feel that their work is useful. In particular, we focus on the ways in which the development of workers’ human capacities may be fettered by social relations at work.


pretty sure it's just HN being HN


right, it's the fault of regulators that every major industry has come do be dominated by a small handful of conglomerates that survive by mimicking each other and consuming every smaller challenger that might one day, through the power of innovation, grow and compete with the existing monoliths.

oh wait, that's the opposite of regulation that caused that. my bad.


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