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Merkley introduces "Car Privacy Rights Act" in bid to protect drivers' data
  • It's the before times, analog days, and the Internet was in it's infancy. Stephan Hawking, a theoretical physicist, cosmologist, and author, said the following:

    For millions of years, mankind lived just like the animals. Then something happened which unleashed the power of our imagination. We learned to talk and we learned to listen. Speech has allowed the communication of ideas, enabling human beings to work together to build the impossible. Mankind's greatest achievements have come about by talking, and its greatest failures by not talking. It doesn't have to be like this. Our greatest hopes could become reality in the future. With the technology at our disposal, the possibilities are unbounded. All we need to do is make sure we keep talking.

    Computers have been very effective applied to vehicles. In my life I've seen the advent of the aluminum block, anti-lock brakes and stability control, variable ignition and valve timing, more aerodynamic body, paddle shift and continuously variable transmissions, drive by wire, now even hybrid and electric drives. This has allowed leaps forward in safety, efficiency, and performance.

    Then, we enshitified. Today there's barely choice in the vehicle market. Toyota/Honda; Hyundai/Kia; Ford/Chevy/Chrysler and a trim package defines everything but trucks. 1/2 ton trucks as symbols of identity break repeatedly if regularly used for payload and towing. "Choice" is a 1/4 Ranger, 1/2 Chevy diesel, or 3/4 Ford/Chevy/Ram. They didn't make the first two for decades, still scarce and expensive for what they are. And, for all vehicles one now often needs to remove inaccessible bolts in tight spaces, for several parts, to get to the part that's broken.

    Profit optimization through technology is why there's little choice in vehicles; Why you can envision a Walmart and Lowes strip mall and every American knows exactly what it looks like and where the closest couple copies are; Why we can't replace phone batteries and screens. An out-of-the-box idea from AI that's also conveniently practical for humans will probably cure cancer. AI is also what's analyzing all the data being collected, just as inhumanely. The vehicle manufacturers want their cut.

    Did Herbert envision that the spice of prescience was computational cycles?

  • Congratulations to Hanke for their Pic of the Week!
  • It looks like a twist because it does a twist.

    No, it's an illusion at scale. You almost say so yourself in your next sentence.

    There’s no angle where you realize the windows don’t actually change planes.

    Discreet flat planes constitute an illusion of a curve at scale. There are no curved components. They used offsets and angles in the outer layer. All the windows are flat planes. You can see the rectangles yourself just as you can see the triangles in a geodesic structure's approximation of a complex curve.

    A modern true curve is still often made from wood. If there's money it's laminated I-beam. But, curving or twisting structural steel is breaking all sorts of cardinal rules. Assuming safety is valued, cost rises exponentially from construction through build out and into maintenance and repair. An exception is large ships. That's why they're so expensive.

    It’s very obvious you’re now trying to make a point

    An artist and an engineer were given a modest budget and found a way to ask an obvious question to which the is answer is: It depends upon the perspective each of us chooses.

    If you look closely you can see the flat planes and angles. There are no curves. You can see the truth of it yourself. It's right there.

    They're obviously some intelligent people to be designing such things at all. Imagine how many times they've been talking about some subject or another and said, "Hey, friend, if you look more closely you can see (whatever truth) for yourself."

    Then the other person says, "It twists."

    Amazing piece of art, huh?

  • Congratulations to Hanke for their Pic of the Week!
  • I'm "on about" the quality of communication that defines humans from the other animals, which has been in a nosedive for a quarter century, which is now so heavily corrupted it's leading us to our doom.

    What are you on about? Minimization and what else?

  • I make games and this literally happened to me this morning
  • Neither is publicly traded. Neither of us know the numbers.

    Does Steam make money on hosting indie games?

    How does one research such a question?

    I don't need answers. I had them before I made my second post above.

    Good luck to you.

  • Don't fall for it
  • Hijacking a phone connection like that is fucking HARD

    Man in the middle at the demark, flower pot, or ped. It's "clipboard and safety vest" easy until underground or past the mux.

  • Congratulations to Hanke for their Pic of the Week!
  • I know enough about aerodynamics to speak generally about typical designs. But, this isn't a typical design. Insight needs an aero engineer with some experience.

    I think the architecture is really cool because it looks like a twist at first glance, but isn't.

  • Trump suggests giving Vladimir Putin whatever he wants
  • Somehow reaching that conclusion is one of the stupidest thing I've read in awhile.

    When the majority were aware of injustice we sang in the streets, "Fuck Donald Trump and fuck Biden, too! Neither of them give a fuck about you!"

    That's was an incredibly good thing. The trade unions were paying attention. Now is our time. A few years later the US has more strikes than we've seen since between the world wars.

    Seems you're not paying attention to We the People. That's a critical mistake.

  • Choosing a used truck

    I'd guess my net environmental impact is just now lower than US average because, despite my fuel consumption when moving my home, it's tiny, energy independent, and it doesn't move far or frequently. I don't really know. I just don't want to be judged unfairly, particularly when seeking help trying to do it even better.

    I want to downsize my truck for cost and fuel efficiency. I've had this truck, my first, for a year, 3.5k miles. I've towed the trailer a short thousand miles without incident and including city, highway, and interstate.

    Current setup:

    '19 Chevy 2500 6.0L 4WD

    Hitch towing ~2.5 tons GVWR (14', enclosed, tandem, brakes)

    Getting 8mpg @ 70-75mph

    Next truck budget is $10-20k. I'll keep it probably until the frame rots. I'm planning on replacing shocks & wearable steering components, am not averse to some work.

    Should I target a 1/2 ton gas (leaning Ford 5.0L 4WD), a different 3/4 ton gas (which and why), or a 3/4 ton diesel (leaning Dodge Cummins)?

    The paper numbers say I should get a 1/2 ton gas. But, my more experienced friend thinks I'll be a lot happier spending more for a diesel because diesel engines can last a long time, it'll at least double my fuel efficiency, and it's a little extra overkill for an easier tow.

    I'm open to all informed perspectives. What's my best plan and why?

    Edit: I kept the Chevy 2500 6.0L because the local market didn't support transition on the sale side. I also bought a '98 Dodge Cummins 12v diesel that needs work. It'll eventually replace the other truck.

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    SirDerpy @lemmy.world
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