ericjmorey

joined 1 year ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] ericjmorey@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

You seem so certain of that, but the numbers don't add up when I run them.

[–] ericjmorey@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

The car I'm driving is 25 years old

[–] ericjmorey@lemmy.world 3 points 2 weeks ago

How much does it cost to import?

[–] ericjmorey@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (5 children)

Used EVs are looking like not as good a deal as used ICE vehicles due to the battery replacement costs.

[–] ericjmorey@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago

Our research includes linear regression, principal component regression, and spatial error models to provide empirical evidence for the relationship between the adoption rates and socio-economic, geographical, and technical factors while identifying characteristics of adopter groups. The results suggest that the relative advantage factors – electricity prices and solar irradiation – play the most significant role across all regions and market segmentations. Statewide policy indicators are the second most significant factor, followed by socio-economic variables on employment status, remote working, car ownership, and property value. Our results indicate that homeowners do not only differ in their circumstances but also in their motivations.

[–] ericjmorey@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago

Modular interior options would be great

[–] ericjmorey@lemmy.world 3 points 2 weeks ago

Those all seems like very workable options.

[–] ericjmorey@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago

The Caps are off to a much better start than I expected.

[–] ericjmorey@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)
[–] ericjmorey@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago

What are your initial impressions regarding the Mach-E compared to other EV options?

[–] ericjmorey@lemmy.world 7 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

I can't believe that none of these car companies believe that most people don't like the large computer monitor mounted to their dashboard. It looks like shit. It's distracting. It doesn't work for the use case better than other options.

[–] ericjmorey@lemmy.world 8 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

The theoretical explanation:

When RPVSPs are installed on roofs, they absorb a significant amount of solar energy, converting some of it into electricity but also generating heat in the process. This heat is released into the surrounding air, leading to an increase in air temperature around the panels. Moreover, the elevated installation of RPVSP creates two hot surfaces: the top surface of the panels and the underside surface. As air flows over these RPVSPs, it picks up heat more efficiently than it would from typical building or ground surfaces. Observational studies in the literature have shown that areas with RPVSP arrays can experience higher daytime air temperatures compared with reference sites without RPVSP.

In essence, the heat that would be absorbed by the building (requiring more energy for cooling the interior) is instead absorbed by the panels and conducted to the surrounding air which creates a convective heat exchange cycle on a city wide scale. It would be interesting if this were compared to awnings (and pegodas) that have been in use for centuries for passive cooling of space in and around buildings.

Further, It seems like this would call for the use of phase changing material to absorb the heat from the back of the solar panels which would reduce this intensification of the urban heat island effect as the heat energy would be use in the phase change process during the day and slowly released in the reverse phase change at night without conducting more heat into the building.

None of this seems to have any real consequence on the global warming effects of greenhouse gasses (primarily natural gas [methane] and Carbon Dioxide). But it is a more accute concern that is more likely to be addressed through local ordinances, laws, and regulations.

 
 

The current solitary mod of !fountainpens@lemmy.world (@qua) has not responded after 21 days of our reaching out to them. They have not been active on Lemmy.world since August 22, 2023.

Please reassign the community to myself (@ericjmorey@lemmy.world) and @vext01@lemmy.sdf.org.

Thank you!

 

July 1, 2024

Oliver Gordon writes:

Sodium-ion batteries are set to disrupt the LDES market within the next few years, according to new research – exclusively seen by Power Technology’s sister publication Energy Monitor – by GetFocus, an AI-based analysis platform that predicts technological breakthroughs based on global patent data. Sodium-ion batteries are not only improving at a faster rate than other LDES technologies but they are also set to be cost comparable with the cheapest forms of dispatchable power, and therefore enter mainstream use, as early as 2027.

Read Sodium batteries to disrupt energy storage market

 

A tech service named Clerk put together a nice breakdown of how Passkeys work on a technical level. I've found many other explanations too focused on technical definitions rather than a conceptional overview or so simplistic they were unhelpful for me. This one feels like a nice balance between not enough information and too much.

The article is broken down into the sections below:

  • What are passkeys?
  • How does public key crypto work?
  • A practical use of public-key cryptography
  • How are passkeys more secure than a username and password?
  • Clerk supports passkeys [this last section is irrelevant to anyone not interested in the service provided by Clerk]

Clerk provides some sort of user management service; I don't know nor care if it's any good.

 

It seems like there are 3 of you here that have sprouted the beginning of an active community. Would any or all of you like to be moderators? I'm also open to turning over ownership of this community as well. Let me know what you all think.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/11503282

February 2, 2024 JP Gambatese writes:

Every season, the story seems to be the same — the Toronto Maple Leafs consistently perform well during the regular season, comfortably keeping themselves in a playoff spot year-round, only to fall short in the playoffs. This season, though, their regular-season success is faltering. They sit in the first wild-card spot, though they were expected to frontline the Atlantic Division again. Their problem? Depth scoring.

General manager Brad Treliving was brought in to pilot the team in May 2023, and his biggest priority was adding what he called “snot” or grit. The narrative was that the Maple Leafs were too “soft” to compete for the Cup and that their lack of grittiness was holding them back from postseason success. After all, hits increase in the playoffs.

Whether or not that’s the case — that grit means postseason success — is beside the point. There’s nothing inherently wrong with gritty players, but those players need to perform on top of their physical play. Skilled grit is a coveted asset in the league, with players like Timo Meier, J.T. Miller, Tom Wilson, and the Tkachuk brothers revered for holding their own physically while providing offensive as well.

That’s where Toronto has gone wrong. The grit they have added and targeted over the past few seasons has been somewhat skillless. Rather than focus on adding depth scoring, regardless of physicality, the team has focused far too much on the latter, and it has cost them dearly.

Read Maple Leafs' Focus on 'Grit' Proving Costly to Addressing Depth

 

February 2, 2024 JP Gambatese writes:

Every season, the story seems to be the same — the Toronto Maple Leafs consistently perform well during the regular season, comfortably keeping themselves in a playoff spot year-round, only to fall short in the playoffs. This season, though, their regular-season success is faltering. They sit in the first wild-card spot, though they were expected to frontline the Atlantic Division again. Their problem? Depth scoring.

General manager Brad Treliving was brought in to pilot the team in May 2023, and his biggest priority was adding what he called “snot” or grit. The narrative was that the Maple Leafs were too “soft” to compete for the Cup and that their lack of grittiness was holding them back from postseason success. After all, hits increase in the playoffs.

Whether or not that’s the case — that grit means postseason success — is beside the point. There’s nothing inherently wrong with gritty players, but those players need to perform on top of their physical play. Skilled grit is a coveted asset in the league, with players like Timo Meier, J.T. Miller, Tom Wilson, and the Tkachuk brothers revered for holding their own physically while providing offensive as well.

That’s where Toronto has gone wrong. The grit they have added and targeted over the past few seasons has been somewhat skillless. Rather than focus on adding depth scoring, regardless of physicality, the team has focused far too much on the latter, and it has cost them dearly.

Read Maple Leafs' Focus on 'Grit' Proving Costly to Addressing Depth

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/9602123

If so, how should we go about it?

It's mid season and there doesn't seem to be much interest in this community (Lemmy.World/c/Hockey) while Lemmy.ca/c/Hockey seems to be more regularly active. I was going to give it a full season, but I think the trend is pretty clear already.

 

Responses from owner Michael Andlauer:

https://fxtwitter.com/frank_seravalli/status/1719801295039586660

#Sens owner Michael Andlauer says #NHL did not advise him of either investigation - botched Dadonov "no-trade" clause or Pinto sports betting incident - before he closed on purchase.

“Maybe they didn’t want to disrupt [it] to make sure the seller got the best price possible."

https://fxtwitter.com/frank_seravalli/status/1719799125636514281

"Why I inherited this is beyond me," #Sens owner Michael Andlauer says of #NHL punishment forcing team to forfeit first-round draft pick from an incident 591 days ago.

He doesn't understand why it took the league so long to render a decision.

https://fxtwitter.com/frank_seravalli/status/1719800828267999441

Resigned? Fired? #Sens owner Michael Andlauer says he met with GM Pierre Dorion last night and said the penalty for forfeiture of pick should be "no less" than his job.

"This could have been avoided."

Dorion agreed and they agreed to part ways.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/1592969

Stepping into a true starter role for the first time in the league at age 28, Dominik Hasek entered the limelight in 1993, a time in which Patrick Roy was cementing himself as an NHL great and Martin Brodeur was already the next up-and-coming star goalie. Hasek wasn’t supposed to be in the starter’s net — a Grant Fuhr injury forced him into the position — but the Sabres’ goaltender forced his way into a permanent slot being the workhorse.

https://thehockeywriters.com/dominik-hasek-the-nhls-greatest-goalie/

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