In what countries is it illegal?
I could imagine this defence to actually work in some hillbilly court.
You also get mad when you think they would have rearranged the grocery store, but actually you just forgot where that one item you needed was.
Trump is too unironically placed next to two important persons from US history here. Ethically questionable.
As great as this article may state it, new medical procedures are always subject to some risk. I am sure the person knew what the risks are. But given the history of black people in the US, this still comes with a bit of a bitter side taste.
They are white doctors and tried it on a black person first?
Oh nice! Does this exist for EU as well?
Security can’t be a reason for locking out all competition.
Sure, that’s very easy to argue. If they don’t want “anyone’s” software to run, then they need to offer a certification process. Without making that hilariously hard or expensive of course.
[Apple] App Store forbids third-party browser engines
This sounds like food for a major anti-trust lawsuit.
Hope at least EU cares for that.
#nixos
Is south Korea a democracy? East Germany has never completely recovered, and is now one of the neo-nazi hotspots in Germany. I wonder what would happen if all the north Koreans would suddenly be allowed to vote in whole Korea. Would they tear all the progress down that the south has made so far?
Couldn’t they just accept the current two-state solution and stop grousing about it?
Realise that you have not booked first class and move through the closed door to the economy seats. Spend no time reading any signs on that other door, because you are convinced the other way is wrong.
Sounds like they were just not aware of how planes look from the inside, and thought that was the way to their seat? But to fall out, they must have been a bit next to themselves. Wonder if some sort of mental issue, fatigue or drugs was at play, or if it was really just not knowing what they were doing.
What is supposed to be happening here?
I mean that the startup uses high-temperature superconductors and hence uses even less energy for their cooling. Wendelstein 7-X uses “normal” superconductors, and hence requires more energy for that. And a tokamak uses an order of magnitude or so more energy for the magnetic field, than a stellarator does.
But yeah, no idea how much more energy a higher power tokamak magnet picks up from the reaction chamber compared to a lower powered stellarator magnet. But surely the less cool high-temperature superconductors are more tolerant to this than the “normal” ones, since they have more temperature tolerance to work with. Hence, for building a reactor that generates a gigawatt or so of heat, this approach seems really the best that we have now.
Yes, and the reason why they are good is that they are using high-temperature superconductors for their magnets, which makes it as efficient as currently possible. The tokamak models of the US are doing the opposite, they use even more energy for their magnetic field.
True. How could it be a free market if corporations are not allowed to form a cartel and agree on a price for a product that is literally vital for many people?