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350% more _than assumed_ (because people drive them like hybrids and don't charge them)

They aren't inherently more polluting.


> They aren't inherently more polluting.

They could be though, the additional battery on PHEVs is heavy.


Lets not forget manufacturing process, these engines are way more complex. Also more resources over the lifespan into maintenance.


If you emit more to build them yes.


THIS case is exactly why all these companies do this.


... to add to your point, then take companies like Google who rely heavily on ML to improve the quality of the photos further and the distance between "RAW data off sensor" and "the best Samsung/Apple/Google can generate" is a HUGE gap.


Nothing to do with the project, but I read through it, so...

1. It's built natively on Jetty - very tight integration, not just some libs running in a Jetty container.

2. Web is inherently Request/Response - all of this can be handled with dramatically less resource requirements using Virtual Threads. Web is sort of the absolutely-best-use-case for Virtual Threads where as a Game Engine would be the opposite of that (one critical rendering thread and MAYBE a few extra long-lived threads for processing physics, audio, etc.)

3. I haven't tried debugging a Loom project but it's been in incubation for just under 100 years so I have to imagine this has been figured out.

4. About twice the throughput and 1/2 the latency of full OS threads - https://github.com/ebarlas/project-loom-comparison


I used an approach similar to Peter's here to both an old streaming parsing library as well as a GUI (event handling) library -- effectively, re-use the same instance of the event shell with new data every time an event fired and copy the data out if you need to retain it for a long-lived operation or persistence, otherwise calculate and move on... the reduction in object creation overhead was significant and performance increase was around +30% for doing this in the two individual use-cases... BUT, the API was like a loaded gun pointed at your face.

I knew what I was doing (with it) so it wasn't a problem, but if I over open sourced the API and provided it as a library I would envision a large portion of the population trying to handle the events in a multi-threaded context or throwing them into a List only to find the values changing on them during use (while the parser was still running on another thread).

Performance was so tempting, but usability-face-shot-gun was the greater evil.


Reusing your objects can be confusing for other developers. You need to be careful with anything exposed via an API, however internally you can me more optimised.


I would look at sys admin type jobs at law firms, small medical practices and other places that need a “tech guy” but don’t need to hire a full time developer.


Your last sentence nailed it - they feed some of that money back into Uni so it's a win-win.


This won't be successful - ETSY is a publicly traded company, unless corrective action can replace the loss revenue from ads/punishing duplication/aliexpress - it's not going anywhere.

This is exactly what happened to eBay for anyone that remembers when it was garage-sale mania, then it became publicly traded and effectively became Target.com with < 1% of personal things sprinkled in.

No one messing with quarterly earnings.


lol same and would have never thought to comment on it because obviously user-error, then I saw this and thought twice.


With the inflation we've seen in the last 24 months do you think the tuition will still come back to earth or just stay put for a decade or more?


Ideally inflation shouldn’t effect education as much as regular goods. For example if I have an apple and you want to buy my apple, at minimum I want to recover my costs because I will be left without an apple. However, if I have knowledge, I can share my knowledge with you freely and now we both have knowledge, I won’t lose my knowledge like the apple.

If we don’t abandon the the system of guaranteed government (i.e. taxpayer) student loans, you can be sure their costs will continue to go up just like they went up when their was no inflation, and those costs will just be passed along to students and paid for with debt.


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