“marriage” is often just a cover word for having sex though, especially in conservative circles where they avoid the word “sex”.
Bet you the bread is so dry that it could be used as a spill kit
Better than the bread is somehow wet.
you can use all of my system resources if you like to 😏
The issue I have with this that basically, now users need to “pay” (with compute time) to speak their mind. This would be similar than if you had to pay to vote in political elections. It favors the rich. A poor user might not be able to afford 20$ additional electricity bill a month, but a large agency (such as state sponsored, corporate agendas) might have a 1000000$.
I don’t think that would work well, because I knew no one when I came here.
Yeah, after all, we post on the internet for it to be visible by everyone, and that includes bots. If we didn’t want bots to find our content, then other humans couldn’t find them either; that’s my stance on this.
just like me!
Edit: I don’t really have a full answer, but I hope that we can get the problem fixed with community-based video hosting, like the one linked above.
I think it goes to the moral panic in the 1970-today. But I don’t have a link unfortunately.
I’ll give you a short introduction to the power grid (btw. it’s called “stromnetz” (electricity network) in german). The power grid has many “levels”, where each level represents a network of cables that transport current at a given, specific voltage. For example, you might have one 220kV level, and then a 5kV level, and a 230V end-consumer level.
Between these levels, there have to be translations. These are “transformers” today, transforming high-level AC into lower-level AC or the other way around. For AC networks, they are basically a ring of iron and a few coils. However, for DC networks, other transformers exists, such as Buck/Boost converter.
My question basically is: is there anyone who can give me experimental data on how well DC networks would work in practice? Personal experience is enough, it doesn’t have to be super-detailed reports.
All that aside yes in the future there’s probably going to be a high voltage DC network in Europe. Less so for private consumers, at least not in the foreseeable future, but to connect up large DC consumers, that is, industry, with DC power sources. If you’re smelting aluminium with solar power going via AC is just pure conversion loss.
Thank you, that was exactly what I was looking for. I know about aluminum production processes, and that it requires large amounts of DC power.
do you have a source for that?
I know about the buck/boost DC-to-DC converters, but they don’t really use AC internally.
agree
Okay, these are short term problems. “power lines as thick as your wrist” depend on the voltage. If voltage conversion works well enough, that issue disappears.
But, take note of how many DC voltages you use in your house. Devices in mine range from 3v to 25v and some weird one like 19v for a laptop.
Yeah, that’s why we need some kind of standard for these things.
well, a large part why I asked the question is because I hope that somebody knows more about what buck/boost-converters can do today. I know they work well enough on small scales, but I have no experimental data for them on larger scales.
I assume they would work well, but I’d like that somebody links me to the right datasheet or something.
Edit: you have a very important point there. " Seems like the […] voltage converter should be the prime determinant, rather than specific applications of generation/consumption." YES. So, let me rephrase my question: does anybody have experience with high-power DC voltage converters?
Transbian - you heard it here first!