Rossphorus

joined 1 year ago
[–] Rossphorus 1 points 3 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

Here's the generation statistics of the BN-800 reactor I mentioned before: https://pris.iaea.org/PRIS/CountryStatistics/ReactorDetails.aspx?current=451 It's been operating at about 70% of it's rated capacity basically since it was first turned on, that's large scale power generation. Breeder reactors have been in commercial use for decades (see also: Phenix and Superphenix).

The simple reason why breeder reactors aren't the default is because most reactors don't need to be breeders. The two main upsides of a breeder reactor is a) breeding of nuclear material, which as I said before was only ever a concern in the very early days of nuclear power. We have thousands of years' worth of fuel available now. b) The reuse of nuclear waste for additional power generation. Of course you have to have nuclear waste to reuse first, which necessitates many other, non-breeder reactors already being in use, so breeder reactors are usually restricted to countries that already have significant investment into nuclear power, like France, Russia, China, etc.. If you don't need to breed more nuclear fuel, and you don't have waste to reprocess you might as well keep it simple and build a regular LWR reactor.

[–] Rossphorus 1 points 3 days ago (2 children)

The Wikipedia page for breeder reactors has a whole list you can even sort by output capacity. For example, the BN-800.

[–] Rossphorus 1 points 3 days ago (4 children)

There have been plenty. For example, the CANDU series of reactors developed in the 1950s and 60s. Breeder reactors were quite popular during the early days of nuclear power, as it was initially thought that there was maybe only 100 years' worth of (easily accessible) nuclear material on earth, rather than the thousands (or tens of thousands) of years' worth we know of now, due to both more reserves being discovered and also easier methods of fuel enrichment being developed. The fact that breeder reactors have fallen out of favour due to abundant fuel reserves certainly says something.

[–] Rossphorus 0 points 4 days ago (6 children)

Breeder reactors produce more fissile material than they consume.

[–] Rossphorus 11 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Not many people know the history of the treaty. It basically was signed under duress. Prior to the meeting where it was signed all but one of the Maori tribal leaders were against signing the treaty, even the Maori version. What was said at the signing was purposely never recorded, but considering the existential threat of the New Zealand Company (NZC) on the horizon (the primary reason a treaty was even being discussed), it is believed that the Maori leaders were basically given the choice of 'sign this treaty and be a part of the British empire, or don't and have no legal rights against the whims of the New Zealand Company'.

The New Zealand Company was a private British company with the goal of obtaining as much land as possible at any cost, and the Maori would have had zero legal protections unless they were part of the British empire. Without a treaty the NZC would have been able to push out the Maori entirely with no repercussions. The British people who brought the treaty to the Maori leaders knew this was coming, and wanted to avoid it.

Signing the treaty was a quick and dirty solution to the quickly approaching NZC and was responsible for preventing the worst of the damage, but it is a very flawed document. The translations were rushed, and vague. Basically everyone was against signing it, but they knew it was the least worst option available. It was never designed to be the core document underpinning a nation, merely a speed bump to stall the private annexation of New Zealand.

[–] Rossphorus 1 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

The MSP430 is just the chip I happen to use at work, if you're not convinced you could try looking for an actual ultra low power chip, I found the STM32U0 at 70uA/MHz and the STM32U5 at 16uA/MHz in the first result.

Even ignoring selecting a more efficient micro, a smattering of tiny ceramic caps will buy you a few hundred microjoules for bursts. If you're already operating at 2V you can get a 6V rated 100uF cap in a 1210 package - and that's after considering the capacitance drop with DC biasing. Each one of those would buy you 200 microjoules, even just one ought to be plenty to wake up for a few tens of milliseconds every second to get a reading from some onboard peripheral (as an example) then go to sleep again.

For sure, you're not going to be doing any heavy lifting and external peripherals could be tricky, but there are certainly embedded sensor use cases where this could be sufficient.

[–] Rossphorus 4 points 3 weeks ago (2 children)

It's more than you think. I work with the MSP430 microcontroller, which is capable of a sleep current of 40nA @ 2V, full active mode at 140uA/MHz with all onboard peripherals turned on. With this you could achieve almost a 20% on-off ratio with a 1MHz clock, or keep it in active mode all the time at ~150kHz, which is sufficient for many embedded sensor applications.

[–] Rossphorus 9 points 2 months ago (3 children)

GTA online took ages to load, like 10+ minutes on some machines. One guy got really annoyed and investigated. It turned out to be loading a single 10MB JSON file in an incredibly inefficient manner. The JSON file contains about 60,000 items and they need to extract each item from it, but every time they look for the next item they start from the beginning of the file again, despite already knowing where they found the previous item! All the entries in the JSON list are unique, but the code also checks for any duplicate entries, of course it's also done in the least efficient way possible requiring 1,984,531,500 comparisons for something that has no effect. Not only did this one person find these problems but he also implemented a fix that reduced load times by 70% as a result, shaving off more than 7 minutes of load times for some machines. The fact that Rockstar didn't notice this is frankly shocking and speaks to the fact that they really just don't care.

https://nee.lv/2021/02/28/How-I-cut-GTA-Online-loading-times-by-70/

[–] Rossphorus 2 points 8 months ago

I fail to see the logic here. The article states that snakes are good at storing energy due to having a low metabolism from being cold blooded, thus we should use them as a primary food source. Aren't we going to need to, y'know, feed them other animals that don't have this high efficiency? Each step of the predation food chain loses energy, so if our choice is between an herbivore, or an efficient carnivore that eats herbivores, the herbivore will always be the more efficient choice, right? Thats why all of our main food stocks are herbivores, after all.

[–] Rossphorus 7 points 8 months ago

Nitpick: The relationship between vehicle weight and road damage is a quartic (e.g. x to the power of 4), not an exponential

[–] Rossphorus 3 points 9 months ago

Unfortunately not. The major difference between an honest bot and a regular user is a single text string (the user agent). There's no reason that bots have to be honest though and anyone can modify their user agent. You can go further and use something like Selenium to make your bot appear even more like a regular user including random human-like mouse movements. There are also a plethora of tools to fool captchas now too. It's getting harder by the day to differentiate.

[–] Rossphorus 10 points 9 months ago (4 children)

Topical answer: Bots going around scraping content to feed into some LLM dataset without consent. If the website is anything like Reddit they'll be trying to monetise bot access to their content without affecting regular users.

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