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It can be formed, just not in the vast quantities it was back then. It requires unusual conditions to stop fungi making a meal out of it, before it gets buried deep enough.
cynar@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•Smoking ban for people born after 2008 agreed as ‘landmark’ Bill clears ParliamentEnglish
1·5 days agoI live in the UK. At this point, most of the polite smokers have moved over to vapes. Those left are almost entirely rude wankers who don’t care where their smoke goes and who it affects. The smoking ban came in because 1 smoker can affect dozens of unwilling people.
I have zero issues with vapes. The effect on others is quite minor, outside a few fog machines disguised as vapes.
cynar@lemmy.worldto
Trans Memes@lemmy.blahaj.zone•We're either shy and in our rooms, or stealthing for safetyEnglish
30·6 days agoIt’s a universal problem. Good men/women/other spend far less time “available” than their fellows. A (straight) man like that would likely be snatched up and hung onto by the first woman smart enough to realise what she’s got. If she’s also a good option for him, then both are off the market permanently.
It’s like a box of chocolates. It’s not that the good ones don’t exist. The box just gets picked clean, and you’re left with the weird nuts to choose from.
(P.s. I stumbled in here from /all, so only have experience with how it plays out for straight foke. I presume it likely plays out similarly for queer etc too)
cynar@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•Cheap Batteries Are Taking Over the World’s Power Grids | Falling costs, rising electricity demand and the Iran War are nurturing a boom in energy storage.English
3·7 days agoMost home storage is Lifepo4, rather than lithium ion.
It’s a bit more expensive, and only has 80% of the capacity. In tradeoff, it gains 3-5x the lifespan, and an inability to burst into flames.
Bigger brands tend to be more reliable in capacity and lifespan. Cheap ones are more hit and miss. It might be fine, it might fail after 3 years, rather than 10.
cynar@lemmy.worldto
Comic Strips@lemmy.world•The only thing you want to see on the websiteEnglish
62·7 days agoIt could be worse. A “more information” button that automatically starts a voice/video call to the restaurant.
cynar@lemmy.worldto
Funny: Home of the Haha@lemmy.world•When you've already had the bestEnglish
161·7 days agoThe chances of a “missing” tourist’s body being found are also low, but not zero!
cynar@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Students are speeding through their online degrees in weeks, alarming educatorsEnglish
132·7 days agoHe just really likes pressure.
cynar@lemmy.worldto
Comic Strips@lemmy.world•Just eat it! (How do you get your toddler to eat?!)English
12·7 days agoIf it’s something new, stolen food is best food. Have something different yourself and let them try some from your plate. There’s no expectation that they have to eat more, if they don’t like it.
If it’s something they chose then they have a choice to eat it or not. It doesn’t get replaced however.
If it’s something you chose, then that’s more on you. As soon as my minion was talking, she started getting a say in what she wanted. Even if it did mean a mixed bowl of peas and sweetcorn became a staple for a while.
cynar@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•China’s ‘land aircraft carrier’ charges flying drone with microwave beamEnglish
6·7 days agoAssuming 1MW of transfer, and a 10m diameter beam, your looking at 12.5kW/m^2 . Not instant vaporisation, but dangerous in seconds to humans. The penetration was also mean the energy is delivered internally, where it’s harder to deal with (short term).
Any viable power transfer beam also, inherently, makes a good anti personnel weapon.
While the maths is slightly better for short range transfers, like drones, it would still definitely not be something you want hitting your body.
cynar@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•NASA Shuts Off Instrument on Voyager 1 to Keep Spacecraft OperatingEnglish
2·8 days agoImagine you have a paper balloon setup. It randomly takes hits from a high powered rifle. In theory, you could harvest the energy. However, it’s delivered in such powerful, random bursts that capturing it is difficult.
Gamma rays punch straight through the structure of the craft. The actual energy is small (around 1/1,000,000 of a joule), but it’s so focused that it damages anything it hits. If it hits the atoms in a transistor, that transistor gets ripped up at an atomic level.
Makes me think of Crawley, in “Good Omens”.

cynar@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•NASA Shuts Off Instrument on Voyager 1 to Keep Spacecraft OperatingEnglish
5·8 days agoPlenty. Unfortunately it’s mostly the nasty damaging kind, rather than the sort that can be turned into power. It also doesn’t take much damage to add up, when you’re dealing with large millennia time scales.
cynar@lemmy.worldto
London@feddit.uk•E-bike fires are killing Londoners. Nothing can put them outEnglish
3·9 days agoThey need a moderate spike to get the motor moving, then a steady current to keep it going.
E.g. my ebike is 250W @ 36V. That’s 7A at full (continuous) power. A lithium ion battery can be discharged at around 10C while a lifepo4 battery can only do 1C discharge. My 13Ah battery could handle it, even with the 20% capacity loss at 0.67C (7/(13*0.8)). A 500W version would exceed the battery rating however, if it’s lifepo4, while being fine with lithium ion.
Basically, lifepo4 batteries could handle a low end ebike, but would likely still want some super capacitors for spikes. They would need to scale up significantly in size to handle more powerful motors.
The ring around it makes that less likely, though still plausible. It would also have to leach through the paint.
cynar@lemmy.worldto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•Do babies have fight-or-flight response? Cause they can't do either.English
4·9 days agoThe sleep deprivation of early parenthood does a lot to break you of social norms.
Someone is about to have a bad day, when they go to get a mug of beer!
Most likely.
The box tends to sit slightly proud of the wall. When they plaster it in (particularly retroactively) they need to build up the plaster around the socket.
Thicker plaster means more insulation, and less condensation. Less condensation, less mold.
The ring around the socket also supports this. The edge where the new plaster gives way to the old. That point tends to be rougher, and so more prone to capturing mold.
It could also be thicker paint causing the same effect. Most people do the wall with rollers, but sockets with a brush, leading to a thicker coat.













Have you found an app that still works with an IR blaster? My phone has one, but none of the apps work anymore.