The way this is usually done is through a radiating wire that goes on the wall from station to station. This solution requires a lot of power. The stations in London are very small, leaving very little space for a transformer that can provide said power.
Because of that they rely on directional antennas that cover sections of the tunnel - but those need to be straight, otherwise another antenna is required to cover that corner. There is also very little head-room in the tube tunnels in London. You can see how things get more and more complicated as you dig deeper into the problem.
Depends. Leadership will constantly tell people how important their work is and how they are changing the world. I expect a leader to motivate the people under them in all cases otherwise folks become confused and leave.
According to the latest data I found online [0], they are earning ~25k/minute, at the moment. With 1 hour of revenue they can pay 3 people to fix the technical debt that caused this and prevent more failures in the future.
Thanks for trying it and calling out problems — it helped us find and fix the bug. The issue has now been resolved and DevicePrint should give much more sensible results going forward.
Yet, globally, the world is moving towards renewables regardless of big-oil interests. I don't think even the most hard core activists are expecting to close everything coal, gas and oil related overnight, so we need to wait until the energy transformation is finished. It won't be led by the US, Russia and the Middle-East, that's for sure, but it will happen.
Even if that's true, we're already facing negative consequences from climate change, and it's affecting developing countries the most. The oil companies knew about the risk of climate change in the 70's, and actively suppressed it and pushed pro-petroleum narratives instead.
Certainly the selfish greedy ambitions of corrupt politicians and short-sighted corporations aren't good for the people dying and being displaced. I mean, we can play with numbers and try and argue a "greater good", sure, but it does seem a little convenient that we can act like greedy self-interests are helping everyone when there are current victims.
I don't think the problem is the kernel. Kernel bugs stay hidden because no one runs recent Kernels.
My Pixel 8 runs kernel a stable minor from 6.1, which was released more than 4 years ago. Yes, fixes get backported to it, but the new features in 6.2->6.19 stay unused on that hardware. All the major distros suffer from the same problem, most people are not running them in production
Most hyperscalers are running old kernel versions on which they do backports. If you go Linux conferences you hear folks from big companies mentioning 4.xx, 3.xx kernels, in 2025.
I'm not advocating cage matches here. Just that the objective of any military action should be capturing or killing opposing leaders as efficiently as possible rather than any other objective.
Did the US allow all the other nuclear countries to develop nuclear weapons? There are quite a few states that could easily and quickly develop their own nuclear deterrent and the US is in a much worse position now to deter them from that.
The current administration WANTS Europe to develop the military necessary to defend themselves so we don’t have to pay for it. We’ll probably send them the schematics if they haven’t already infiltrated whatever servers we keep them on.
Every sovereign nation should do. The notion that uppercase D "Democracy" is the only valid type of sovereign state is uppercase L liberalism propaganda.
The rest of the industry relies on following a CVE list and ticking off vulnerabilities as a way to ensure "owners" are correctly assigned risk and sign it off - because there is nothing else that "owners" could do. The whole security through CVE is broken and is designed to be useful to create large "security organizations" that have the single purpose of annoying everyone with reports without solving any issues.
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