It seems like it's best use case would be in conjunction with nearby buildings. Where the waste heat can be used for heating.
They've had fab problems for years, in that it cost them a ton on money and much longer than desired to shrink nodes, so they've fallen from a leader in fab production to being behind.
Not to mention there's not much money to be made from fabs, unless your tsmc.
AMD, Qualcomm, Nvidia, Google, Apple, are all huge tech companies that design their own cutting edge chips, and only Samsung is another company that both designs and produces chips.
Ehh mastodon and lemmy don't see a ton of cross talk. Threads is mainly going to affect mastodon instances.
Huh, well I got myself a galaxy watch 6 for like $200, and so far it seems solid.
It easily lasts a day, could probably go for 2 if I tried.
I'm confused, that looks like an m.2 slot, and it's not like it could really be anything else. Msata is a dead standard and looks quite different. The slot would be too wide.
. 5% in a swing state is not nothing, could very much make the election in a state like Pennsylvania.
Beans, I hate pretty much everything about beans, taste texture, they look gross and smell gross.
Yeah the strategy is : don't cannibalize ice profits by releasing sensible evs.
Diversity is important, but it's still better to go after larger sources of energy first. There's just not much energy to be recovered from falling rain or waste from cars.
Make the cars waste less energy, or the transit system in general is much easier and will actually save money long term.
The actual paper https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11100893/
It's still a preprint, and I didn't see the exact figure but definitely concerning.
Ehh it's still a rubbish idea, that money would be much better spent going after primary producers of energy, like solar, wind, geothermal, or nuclear.
Some napkin math and an equivalent area of solar, say over a road or parking lot would produce 3.5 million kwh in a year.
Grid storage wouldn't be lithium ion, something like lithium phosphate would be better.
Step one, buy in bulk to get a price closer to $150/kwh
Step 2, use for much longer than 2000 cycles, lfp have much longer expected lifetimes, and since space/weight aren't a huger consideration, you can replace individual cells when they go bad.
Step 3, produce your own energy, if you have your own energy generation, you don't need to pay grid prices, and profit is much better.
Disclaimer, I am not an expert in this at all, but this is how I imagine it could make sense.