sushibowl

joined 2 years ago
[–] sushibowl 6 points 1 day ago

Not so sure. Stuff like ITAR exists to prevent exactly that. The us could also declare SpaceX to be some kind of national security interest.

[–] sushibowl 7 points 2 weeks ago

It will not, actually. This bill is far from budget neutral. The tax breaks for rich people are so massive that they far outweigh the big cuts to vital social programs. This bill will grow the deficit by trillions of dollars over the next decade.

[–] sushibowl 4 points 1 month ago

Butter corn miso ramen is a thing in Sapporo. Probably invented to promote regional products (Hokkaido is famous for corn and dairy) to tourists.

[–] sushibowl 5 points 1 month ago

AC is not common in Europe. There's a variety of heating systems: gas boilers, direct electric heating, district heating, etc. Heat pumps are a growing market though.

[–] sushibowl 8 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Unfortunately, when you do find a text article explaining the thing it's often unnecessarily long and padded out with meaningless fluff, just so more advertising can be stuffed within the contents.

[–] sushibowl 3 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Pretty sure the ace is actually scored as part of a five card straight here, skipping the K, 10, 8.

[–] sushibowl 2 points 1 month ago

Technically any Catholic male is eligible to become pope, it doesn't even have to be a cardinal. But yeah cardinals are the only ones voting so they always elect one of their own (with a few historical exceptions)

[–] sushibowl 3 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Drones work now because they are $1000 (random number in the right range), while a patriot missile is $4 billion dollars each. Sure you could shoot a drone down with one, but if you do the enemy will just send more and bankrupt you.

I agree with the point but these numbers are some orders of magnitude off. A patriot missile is typically 4 million dollars (so not billion). Drones vary widely depending on the type. Man-portable scouting drones can go as low as a few hundred dollars. I don't think a patriot missile would ever target something that small flying that low though. The Iranian Shahed is estimated to cost around $30-50k. Russia produces its own upgraded version (better navigation systems, bigger warheads, etc.) that costs around $80k.

Even then, you can make 50 drones for the cost of a single patriot. The economics are not favourable.

[–] sushibowl 1 points 1 month ago

Given what happened to freelancer, I think the only way you should give Chris Roberts your money is if he agrees to lead the project for two years, then quit and hand it over to someone who can actually finish it.

[–] sushibowl 1 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I've always heard it referred to as infringement, in a legal context. I'm sure game publishers (and music, film, etc.) would like to equate it in the public mind with common theft of physical goods, but it's all just propaganda.

We're just playing games with words at this point. The law is pretty clear, that distributing a copyrighted work such as a copy of a video game is illegal. I don't know why people like to repeat this line, that "if buying a game isn't owning then piracy isn't theft." Maybe it is a moral/ethical argument? It's not going to help you in court.

[–] sushibowl 4 points 1 month ago

As a European, the idea of a bank having a drive-through is just absolutely wild.

[–] sushibowl 5 points 2 months ago

Even if they moved the factory into the US, wouldn't they still need to import all the parts, and get hit by tariffs on those parts anyway? Like, the whole supply chain would have to move into the US. That could be a decade worth of effort.

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