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Article is about US blocking energy from wind. You are (correctly) saying that China is increasing energy from coal and oil.

What is your point? Can you elaborate how this is relevant?


There are still enough pedophile-supporters here.

Cultures? You do not even need to be mammal to notice that. Try next years - stop scrolling and notice if you can spot it.

Not sure what your point is. With POW inefficiency is by design.

You got the point. It's "by design" - you've both said it.

a home can leak heat to the environment because of bad insulation. a datacenter doesn't leak heat because leaking is normatively bad.

> couple of lines of CSS

This is bit too much to ask. Just check the source it is swollen with Tailwind.


Interesting, never seen "swollen" used to describe code bloat, but it creates powerful imagery now that I read your sentence.

Tailwind maps directly to CSS (well, it is pure CSS) and doesn't require a loading progress for a one-line animation: https://tailwindcss.com/docs/animation

Sure but if someones duplicates 50x this:

> flex-shrink-0 transition-transform duration-300 hover:scale-105 w-[160px] h-[144px] 2xl:w-[200px] 2xl:h-[180px]

just to avoid CSS, not sure they would bother with CSS animation.



https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/live/2025/dec/19/jeffrey...

> Latest Epstein files release ‘grossly fails to comply with both the spirit and letter of the law’, says congressman

> Thomas Massey, Kentucky Republican and Ro Khanna, California Democrat, who co-wrote Epstein Transparency Act say releasing heavily redacted files on rolling basis does not comply with law


I wonder if there are any traces of the text inte file. Seems like a fun forensics exercise.

It appears so.

In this case though, the coverup is likely not even worse than the crime.

Hey, you found the file with Trump.

No wonder they spent millions redacting everything.


> two weeks, two months ago

I remember reading about droughts in Syria every year since ~2006. Somehow those news stopped after 5 years. Did they sort it out?


> The answer seems to be: "No."

It is actually "Yes."


> You could also achieve this by spinning up multiple NodeJS instances and putting an nginx server in front to do load balancing - which is pretty standard practice

How does it compare in terms of HW resources?


I've done this in production plenty of times. Under load, nginx is insanely efficient. Practically all the CPU time ends up spent in your nodejs application server.

The worst part of a setup like this is deployment. There's just a lot of little moving pieces - like nginx needs to keep track of which frontend servers are up and which are down. How are you doing load balancing? You want to have websocket connections? That makes it more complex. How do you deploy code? Etc. Its great, but its not at all simple. Configuring nginx feels like its a little puzzle all of its own.


Question was about non-Chromium browsers. Although Brave's custom ad-blocker is not bad.

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