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Easter Sunday

Sunrise, beach. reflection.

Image by Pexels from Pixabay

Apologies for the intermittent site outages today. I know not why. Still investigating….

UPDATE: These are extensive outages. It’s not just you. Hope to have this back to normal later tomorrow. Thanks for your patience and apologies for the disruption.

 

8.9 out of 10 based on 19 ratings

81 comments to Easter Sunday

  • #
    Tonyb

    Last full day in jersey and went to the war tunnels. This was excavated by slave Labour and locals and served as a giant hospital complex for the Germans who had 15000 troops here in a population of only 60000 locals.

    Jersey was invaded in July 1940 when Churchill decided it could not be defended. Things must have looked ultra bleak what with the airborne battle of Britain the collapse of the Belgian and French armies which culminated in the evacuation at dunkirk of 338000 British soldiers.

    Jersey is very much like devon, my county, and cornwall and is very english. It was very chilling therefore to see German troops in the context of English buildings, phone boxes, pedestrian crossings etc.

    All this was of course whilst europe was collapsing, German tanks were driving through Paris and fully 18 months before The Americans joined. Our Aussie and kiwi friends had joined the allies at the start of the war of course.

    The allies landed in Normandy in 1944 but it was not until ve day a year later that Jersey was liberated. As I mentioned yesterday liberation day is still a very big thing here

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    • #
      TdeF

      Jersey was largely ignored. Retaking Jersey was pointless in terms of effort and benefit. It had been turned into a fortress. So had Norway. What was effective was keeping 15,000 troops in Jersey and 250,000 troops in Norway during the Normandy landings. Defending such a huge coast was impossible. What really mattered was control of ports and supply of petrol. These were solved by Churchill’s Mulberry ports and the extraordinary PLUTO petrol pumping all the way from Liverpool to Southhampton to the beach at Normandy and then into the countryside.

      So many things were invented in those times. And after the war had huge impact on the rapid development of the modern consumer society. Cheap free Penicillin in massive quantities was perhaps the greatest result of the D Day landings. And 98% of the wounded soldiers who made it back to England were saved.

      But Jersey had to wait. Like Norway. Logistics were the real battle when invading, not strong points and castles as in previous wars. In modern warfare these could be bypassed.

      151

      • #
        TdeF

        Also hardly known in the rapid technical development during the war was the attempt to destroy the extraordinary superweapon, a German rail gun by crashing an aircraft into the site.

        This cost the life of Joseph Kennedy, the older brother of John Kennedy. Joseph volunteered instead of going home after his survival of his tour of duty as a bomber pilot. The weapon was a remote control Libeator B-24 bomber stuffed with high explosive and flown remotely from an adjacent Liberator using a television camera. This predated the drones of today. But it could not also take off on its own and the takeoff crew including Kennedy were to bail out as the adjacent aircraft took control of the drone. Unfortunately the tricky remote bomb trigger was susceptible to radio interference as a British engineer had warned. So the bomb triggered over Kent, vaporizing Kennedy.

        130

      • #
        Gob

        Excuse me, it’s not the first of April; that PLUTO story beggars belief.

        02

    • #
      Anton

      “America joined the war late in 1941.”

      30

      • #
        TdeF

        After Pearl Harbour. But they had already been shipping massive supplies to the UK and Russia under the Lend Lease program. Neither country would have survived the war without US help. The shipments to Russia were incredible. And when Russia finally reached Berlin, it was on US trucks. The Germans may have had mobility in tanks and aircraft, but they lacked the trucks and their soldiers walked into Russia in Blitzkreig with a million horses pulling wagons.

        Even today along the Trans Siberian railway there are WWII trains as memorials. Check the wheels. All sizes are in inches. And there was enough rail line to build the Trans Siberian three times over. Food in vast quantities. Aircraft. Much came through Iran, a traditional strong connection from Persian days which persists today, something which also influences US policy with Iran. The battleground remains Afghanistan, the key to India.

        130

        • #
          Anton

          For obvious reasons the advent of ‘Lend-Lease was represented as an act of unparalleled generosity. In fact it was clearly to America’s advantage that American weapons should be carried into battle by the fighting men of England and the empire rather than by the sons of American mothers…

          The opportunity for the most ruthless of American attempts at hard bargaining during the summer of 1940 was provided by the desperate English shortage of destroyers, of which they possessed only ninety-four, the result of the refusal of the disarming governments of the 1920s and 1930s to hearken to the warnings of the Admiralty that imperial defence and the protection of trade routes demanded all the 433 destroyers which had been at sea in 1918. The Englsh asked for fifty ‘moth-balled’ four-stack destroyers dating from the Great War. The United STates Secretary of State, Cordell Hull, proposed that these fifty ancient vessels should constitute the full purchase price for the naval and air bases which England had offered the United States in Newfoundland, Bermuda, the Bahamas, Jamaica, Santa Lucia, Trinidad and British Guiana; not only that, but, as the British War CAbinet minutes put it: ‘The draft letters proposed by Mr Cordell Hull also included a definite statement that if the waters surrounding the British Isles became untenable to British ships of war, these would be sent to other parts of the empire for the continued defence of the Empire.’ In other words the British were to agree not to use their fleet as a bargaining counter in peace negotiations with Germany, should a German invasion prove successful.

          – from Correlli Barnett’s book “The Collapse of British Power” (1972).

          40

    • #
      Steve4192

      “fully 18 months before The Americans joined. Our Aussie and kiwi friends had joined the allies at the start of the war of course.”

      Sigh.

      America had no reason to join before Pearl Harbor. Americans were extremely reluctant to get involved in another ‘European War’ after getting dragged into WWI a generation earlier for no good reason. Unlike the Commonwealth countries you mentioned, Americans prided themselves on leaving the conflicts of and loyalties to the ‘old world’ behind when they arrived on American shores. Americans were sick and tired of Europe’s never-ending wars of competing empires. It wasn’t until the Japanese forced their hand that they joined in. Heck, FDR still might have had a hard time convincing the American people to fight in the European theater if Hitler hadn’t idiotically declared war on America on December 11th.

      Sadly, after WWII, when America became a superpower, it adopted the European model of maintaining the empire through constant conflicts and wars and hasn’t stopped since. I wouldn’t mind seeing America pull back a bit and embrace the more detached pre-WWII stance of avoiding ‘foreign entanglements’.

      112

      • #
        James Reid

        You don’t think Trump is attempting to do that? Certainly that is the rhetoric. In his first term he declared NATO a waste of money and told the Europeans to defend themselves.

        90

        • #
          Steve4192

          His rhetoric is certainly in that direction.

          But in his first term he didn’t really follow through. The Afghanistan withdrawal didn’t happen during his term. He escalated the Russian-Ukraine enmity by shipping weapons to Ukraine (something Obama wouldn’t do). He got suckered into bombing Syria on what may have been a false flag operation (gas attacks). He didn’t draw down the American presence in Europe or Africa. He dropped a Cuisinart on Iran’s #2 guy and pureed him. It’s true he didn’t start any new wars and managed to pull of the Abraham accords, but he didn’t really ratchet down the American military presence around the world.

          Now in his second term, he’s failed thus far at tamping down the wars in Israel and the Ukraine. He still hasn’t touched the American military presence in military bases around the globe. He’s escalating tensions with China and Iran. Maybe the brinksmanship all works out. But it’s a big damn gamble that could go pear-shaped in a number of awful ways.

          Trump’s peacenik cred is long on bluster and short on results.

          13

          • #
            czechlist

            Trump’s primary focus is on repairing America. It is the old adage that if you don’t take care of yourself you can’t help others.
            Frankly, I say let the others help themselves as the US is $37T in debt partly from helping others who thumb their noses at us and then expect
            more.

            00

  • #
    Tonyb

    A major UK supreme court ruling states that women’s biological sex and gender are the same thing and trans people can not use women only space. The result has been relief by many and some small demos

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14627823/Thousands-trans-activists-protest-emergency-demonstration-against-Supreme-Court-gender-ruling-London.html

    192

  • #
    Tonyb

    Germany awash with solar power and exports the surplus but shortage at other times

    https://notrickszone.com/2025/04/16/solar-madness-in-germany-gigawatt-hours-of-subsidized-electricity-gets-dumped-abroad-for-free/

    Solar farms in the UK routinely include large solar batteries but I think they are only intended to smooth out intermittency and not as a massive storage faciloty

    70

    • #
      Anton

      But smoothing out intermittency between natural supply and human demand is what a massive storage facility is for.

      60

      • #
        yarpos

        You two are thinking on different timescales. Batteries are hardly ever for bulk supply over long duration (days) and more importantly the have a key role in our now fractured grid for sinking unwanted generation, instantaneous support and frequency stability.

        10

        • #
          robert rosicka

          There is no battery big enough to provide baseload for Germany – period , maybe in 100 years plus maybe but now it’s boom and bust and skyrocketed power prices .

          20

  • #
    bill

    So because its the cheapest power in the world power prices can come down 80% to consumers!!

    40

  • #
    Peter Fitzroy

    According to an article published in New Scientist, the aerosols produced by human dumping into the atmosphere have the effect of slowing global warming. When china cleaned up this pollution, warming increased.

    112

    • #
      Strop

      So when pro AGW people argue that the rate of warming is the compelling factor that means it’s CO2 causing the warming, does this cessation of aerosols mean the rate of warming was artificially inflated by the atmosphere playing catch-up once the aerosol suppression was removed?

      100

    • #
      David Maddison

      Why didn’t the climate “modellers” mention or predict this, assuming it s true at all?

      I don’t believe anyone that identifies as a climate “scientist”.

      Their “models” have no forecasting or even hindcasting ability whatsoever, therefore they are not valid and they are meaningless, despite billions of taxpayer funds being spent on them.

      222

    • #
      el+gordo

      Thanks Peter

      ‘A recent surge in the rate of global warming has been’ caused by a submarine volcanic eruption. There, fixed it.

      31

    • #
      yarpos

      So they agree then, its the Sun not CO2

      20

    • #
      robert rosicka

      Peter do you really believe that China has removed its pollution?

      20

  • #
    David Maddison

    Did anyone else have problems getting on this site this morning?

    I got a message something to the effect that I didn’t have permission.

    .
    [Yes. The site does appear a bit temperamental at the moment. This includes Jo experiencing some posting issues too. – Raquel]

    110

    • #
      Earl

      I got some message saying if I could see this page (not Jo’s page) then the page I was seeing was properly installed. Figured it was result of new/updated security software Jo was/had installed. Cleared down and retried and in like Flynn.

      40

      • #

        Apologies. There are lots of disruptions for everyone today it appears, including me. Hopefully we will get this sorted tomorrow. Personally I would prefer if site glitches could schedule themselves on business days Eastern Standard Time, but it was not to be…

        Thanks for patience, and apologies from me. We still don’t know why this is occurring.

        20

    • #
      Graeme4

      Absolutely. As Ian says, problems started last evening. Quite a battle to restore the connection. Did so by starting again through Google.

      40

    • #
      RexAlan

      Hi Jo,

      If I disable my VPN sometimes your site works, if not this is the message I get.

      ——

      Forbidden

      You don’t have permission to access /2024/04/saturday-54/ on this server.

      ——

      Plus your red and green are not working properly.

      I have sent you an email of a screenshot I took a few minutes ago when trying to access your site re Testing 123, Apache HTTP Server.

      RexAlan

      41

      • #
        Annie

        I had that a few times yesterday, starting in the afternoon.

        41

      • #
        Greg in NZ

        Thought the e Kommisar had come knocking on Jo’s door… but she’s back! Happy Feaster Sundae 🌞

        140

        • #
          David Maddison

          Agreed.

          We don’t even know what the e Safety Kommisar is censoring.

          Any site outage could be due to either censorship or technical issues.

          The censor must be required to publish a daily log of what she has censored and why.

          And also what she has attempted to censor but has not been able to.

          And remember, she is even trying to censor your elected representatives. Here is Senator Babet’s comment, federal senator for Victoriastan.

          https://x.com/senatorbabet/status/1910209952733663558

          I submitted a Freedom of Information request to the Office of the e-Safety Commissioner, and the response is in. It’s now confirmed that the e-Safety Commissioner attempted to have my content removed from Meta (Facebook/Instagram) and Twitter.

          This authoritarian overreach and censorship should not be directed at anyone, least of all a sitting Australian Federal Senator.

          The office of the e-Safety commissioner must be shut down immediately. Maybe Julie Inman Grant can call the CIA and finally take them up on that offer to be a spy.

          40

          • #

            Thanks for the emails and for the reports here. Perhaps the problem is more intermittent than I realized?

            I don’t know why it broke, nor why it was fixed. My tech requests have not solved this, and yet it has solved itself?

            The feedback helps. Thank you.

            00

    • #
      David Maddison

      I am now able to sometimes post from Chrome on my phone but not always on the Samsung Internet browser.

      And like and unlike comments not working.

      Effectively random.

      41

  • #
    another ian

    DM

    That started last night

    60

  • #
    David Maddison

    New Official White House website on Covid lab leak narrative.

    https://www.whitehouse.gov/lab-leak-true-origins-of-covid-19/

    It’s discussed by Dr John Campbell:

    https://youtu.be/AwbBJexNQT0

    Bad news for those promoting the lab leak theory to protect the Chicomms.

    71

  • #
    Graeme No.3

    No problem at all, but you reminded me that I couldn’t get any ABC channels on my TV on Good Friday. All other channels showed up as available.
    (Wasn’t a problem although I occasionally switch to Channel 20 (or 21) for Antiques Roadshow repeats during ad breaks on the commercials).

    Can any one explain this? Can we get the ABC to continue – it would save money and inconvenience very few.
    Then I got this.
    Forbidden
    You don’t have permission to access /wp-comments-post.php on this server.
    Cancelled and closed Browser and then checked that the above had been posted anyway.

    60

    • #
      Graeme4

      When our group of units loses TV, it’s always ABC and SBS first. In our case, it’s either a masthead amplifier or splitter plug pack – usually a plug pack. It seems the TV distribution system can still distribute the other TV channels, even when faulty.

      30

  • #
    David Maddison

    Just when you thought that climate projects couldn’t get any more crazy.

    This is apparently NOT a joke. It’s dated from two days ago, not an April Fool’s joke.

    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cr788kljlklo

    Project to suck carbon out of sea begins in UK

    A ground-breaking project to suck carbon out of the sea has started operating on England’s south coast.

    The small pilot scheme, known as SeaCURE, is funded by the UK government as part of its search for technologies that fight climate change.

    There’s broad consensus among climate scientists that the overwhelming priority is to cut greenhouse gas emissions, the chief cause of global warming.

    But many scientists also believe that part of the solution will have to involve capturing some of the gases that have already been released.

    These projects, known as carbon capture, usually focus either on capturing emissions at source or pulling them from the air.

    What makes SeaCure interesting is that it is testing whether it might be more efficient to pull planet-warming carbon from the sea, since it is present in greater concentrations in water than in the air.

    It’s a pipe that snakes under the stony beach and out into the English Channel, sucking up seawater and bringing it onshore.

    The project is trying to find whether removing carbon from the water might be a cost effective way of reducing the amount of the climate warming gas CO2 in the atmosphere.

    SeaCURE processes the seawater to remove the carbon before pumping it back out to sea where it absorbs more CO2.

    We’re the first broadcast journalists to visit and Professor Tom Bell from Plymouth Marine Laboratory is tasked with showing us around.

    He explains that the process begins by treating some of the seawater to make it more acidic. This encourages the carbon that’s dissolved in the seawater to turn into a gas and be released into the atmosphere as CO2.

    “This is the seawater stripper” Prof Bell says with a smile as we turn a corner.

    The “stripper” is a large stainless steel tank which maximises the amount of contact between the acidic seawater and the air.

    “When you open a fizzy drink it froths, that’s the CO2 coming out.” Prof Bell says. “What we’re doing by spreading the seawater on a large surface area. It’s a bit like pouring a drink on the floor and allowing the CO2 to come out of the seawater really quickly.”

    The CO2 that emerges into the air is sucked away and then concentrated using charred coconut husks ready to be stored.

    The low-carbon seawater then has alkali added to it – to neutralise the acid that was added – and is then pumped back out into a stream that flows into the sea.

    Once back in the sea it immediately starts to absorb more CO2 from the atmosphere contributing in a very small way to reducing greenhouse gases.

    SEE LINK FOR REST

    54

    • #
      David Maddison

      British pensioners are literally freezing to death due to energy poverty.

      Where will the energy and money come from to implement this insane idea?

      122

    • #
      Sambar

      Reminds me of something my English parents used to say
      “The old mad lady would go down to the sea every morning and pee into the ocean, this will raise the sea and help my sons ship off the rocks”

      90

    • #
      wal1957

      Do scientists know what effects this will have on the ecological system in the oceans and everything else that depends on the health of these oceans?
      I’m asking as an uninformed idiot because I really don’t know.
      This strikes me as an experiment that could have an awful lot of detrimental consequences.

      120

    • #
      Greg in NZ

      The only ‘ground-breaking’ is the brazenness of such a novel pie-in-the-sky (or sea in this case) scam. Genius!

      Thar’s a fortune to be made
      out of them thar seas, arrr…

      70

    • #
      James Reid

      Unintended consequences much? What do they add to acidify and then add to neutralise? How much extra salt goes into the sea? What effect does that have on the local ecology? What is the source of energy to drive this process?
      Talk about perpetual motion machines!!

      90

    • #
      Honk R Smith

      This is from a country that is celebrating a court decision to ‘settle’ the definition of human ‘woman’.
      I’m glad the Western intellectual tradition has ascended to the point where learned jurists can parse such difficult questions.
      Though I doubt much ‘settling’ will result.

      They also can no longer produce steel because they have no coal …
      though they sit on a mountain of coal.

      The contagion spread from the wet market across the street from Parliament.
      Not from the chocolate factory.

      51

    • #
    • #
      MeAgain

      How much energy getting charred coconut husks to the UK?

      10

    • #
      yarpos

      Never in the field of human futility, has so much been expended by so few, to achieve so little , for no purpose.

      100

  • #
    David Maddison

    The only party which is strongly pushing awareness of the anthropogenic global warming fraud (and have the budget to do it) and that Australia must have cheap and reliable energy or we won’t survive as a viable nation is Trumpets of Patriots.

    I see heaps of ads for them on YouTube.

    I rarely watch TV, do they advertise there as well?

    71

  • #
    David Maddison

    Here is a very good 20 min video looking at earlier plans to colonise Mars, from the 1940s onward.

    https://youtu.be/qnnY_7piaro

    00

  • #
    Skepticynic

    Bombshell document about Victoria’s Covid curfew finally revealed after lengthy legal fight

    A bombshell document kept secret for more than four years shows Victoria’s public health commander was not consulted before Daniel Andrews’ “crisis-cabinet” announced a curfew on Victorians almost five years ago.

    https://www.skynews.com.au/australia-news/politics/bombshell-document-about-victorias-covid-curfew-kept-secret-for-more-than-four-years-can-now-be-revealed-after-legal-fight/news-story/82950defde57ec38b611985f533eaff1

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X64cZBYwSMM

    81

    • #
      Honk R Smith

      Question …
      are (were) Climate and Pandemic fears actual threats over which oh so concerned with ‘public health’ public servants were forced to make difficult heroic decisions to ‘save’ us …
      Or …
      convenient cover for global authoritarian hegemony?
      Asking for a friend.

      (If you’re asking me, and nobody is, the answer is clearly observable in that Dan Andrews guy’s face.)

      20

  • #
    Greg in NZ

    From 17 April 2025:

    https://www.snow-forecast.com/whiteroom/massive-snowfall-in-the-alps/

    Val d’Isere 120cm / 4ft
    Tignes 105cm / 3.5ft
    Chamonix 100cm / 40in
    Avalanche Rating 5 (max)

    Despite most ski resorts closed due to Climate Anxiety, the remaining ones are now closed due to TOO MUCH SNOW.

    90

    • #
      Skepticynic

      > clearly observable in that Dan Andrews guy’s face

      That’s why I cannot believe the Victorian election results.

      I cannot believe that 37.1% of the voting public were so visually and mentally impaired as to consciously vote for that jug-eared obvious fr@ud. Blatantly obvious. Blindingly.

      Can it really be true that they are all such pathetic judges of character?

      10

  • #
    another ian

    Testing

    I’ve been getting “Forbiddens” all morning till now.

    Unless something else has been fixed just recently –

    If this posts

    Might be coincidental that has happened after I just applied a Brave update

    50

  • #
    another ian

    FWIW

    “Help a Mann Out

    10 hours ago Charles Rotter 54 Comments

    Because sometimes, the science isn’t settled—but the bill is due.”

    And a “legal disclaimer”

    Plus comments

    https://wattsupwiththat.com/2025/04/18/help-a-mann-out/

    32

    • #
      yarpos

      I would like to donate $0.01c , just to indicate how much I value his work.

      31

      • #
        RickWill

        A red thumb from me – only a negative number would be suitable. This Mann’s contribution to the scam has underpinned the destruction of more wealth than anyone preceding him.

        10

    • #
      Lucky

      The Hockey Stick is in the tradition of
      the Piltdown Man, and the fabrication of IQ test data on twins to produce identical correlation coefficients.

      20

  • #
    another ian

    “FWIW

    A helpful tip for anyone contemplating reading or who has read “Romancing the Primitive” by William J. Lines –

    “This is part the myth of the noble savage being at the very basis of their philosophy — Marx would be as nothing without his theories having mated with Rosseau — and the fact most people ATTRACTED to leftism, particularly at the level of becoming activists being… well… wrong ‘uns.”

    From

    “Sympathy For the Devil”

    https://accordingtohoyt.com/2025/04/18/sympathy-for-the-devil-2/

    42

  • #
    another ian

    FWIW – reduced to basics

    “IF YOU THlNK THAT WOMEN HAVE P*NISES,

    I WON’T BELIEVE A SINGLE WORD YOU SAY ABOUT ANYTHING ELSE.

    BECAUSE IF YOU WILL LIE ABOUT SOMETHING SO OBVIOUS,

    I WILL ASSUME YOU LIE ABOUT EVERYTHING!

    SALL GROVER”

    https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjMQp99SgKbf_-61zMZp2ngzsagCt_saccPzJc2rgjF7j2_nGPzK3Mffh657gpz_IgGGUbZUjwOlJhlcLgcNwJwfSxCoGdB3BNAR0LL-RlZKBUvOM3YzogeX1-fE18hAKrtd-Y6smm66jl7H9vXzBPf8aV6w2v6i1DZVskrRVunG5QQ3G2e3pX4sawz-hU/s16000/Meme%20-%20women%20with%20penises.png

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  • #
    John Connor II

    AI has grown beyond human knowledge, says Google’s DeepMind unit

    The world of artificial intelligence (AI) has recently been preoccupied with advancing generative AI beyond simple tests that AI models easily pass. The famed Turing Test has been “beaten” in some sense, and controversy rages over whether the newest models are being built to game the benchmark tests that measure performance.

    “Incredible new capabilities will arise once the full potential of experiential learning is harnessed,” write DeepMind scholars David Silver and Richard Sutton in the paper, Welcome to the Era of Experience.

    https://www.zdnet.com/article/ai-has-grown-beyond-human-knowledge-says-googles-deepmind-unit/

    Don’t remove the limiters!

    https://www.elevenforum.com/attachments/22086040-webp.131578/ 😎

    30

  • #
    John Connor II

    German bakery sells ‘armored Easter bunnies’ in Nazi throwback

    For this Easter season, Cafe Lieb in Tubingen, Baden-Wurttemberg decided to showcase long-forgotten versions during a two-day sale, according to media reports this week. The molds feature bunnies operating military hardware such as tanks and cannons – shapes deemed inappropriate since World War II.

    https://swentr.site/news/615947-german-easter-bunnies-nazi/

    10

    • #
      Hanrahan

      Maybe it is time for Germany to take off the hair shirt and rejoin [Is that simply “join”?] civilisation and pull their weight against Russia.

      02

  • #
    John Connor II

    “We Didn’t See This Coming”: U.S. Stunned as $134 Billion European Hydrogen Megaproject Becomes Largest Construction Site on Earth

    GeoPura, in partnership with Siemens Energy Ventures, is at the forefront of hydrogen innovation. Founded in 2019, the company produces renewable hydrogen in the UK and supplies it to hydrogen power units (HPUs) leased to construction sites and events. By 2025, GeoPura aims to expand its fleet to 3,600 HPUs by 2033 and invest in green hydrogen production facilities.

    https://mediacentre.hs2.org.uk/news/hs2-reveals-successful-results-of-hydrogen-generator-trial

    Still gonna hate…for now…

    40

    • #
      RickWill

      The link is about railway lines.

      11

    • #

      Hydrogen appears to be brought in contained in cylinders, on a teailer. The trailer MAY be brought in by a diesel powered truck – it doesn’t say.
      Nor does it clearly say how the hydrogen is produced … or compressed …
      But still, HS2 have taxpayers’ money to civer thrir cists, I suppose.
      Was it £100,000,000 for a bat tunnel? Maybe not a necessary, bat tunnel, but hey …

      Auto

      10

  • #
  • #
    John Connor II

    China unveils world’s fastest hard drive

    In a world fixated on the race for superior artificial intelligence (AI), Chinese scientists have cracked the code to memory speeds once deemed impossible – with a device smaller than a grain of rice.

    While the existing prototype holds only kilobytes – barely enough to display this story – its revolutionary design shatters the speed barriers of modern storage by 100,000 times, promising a future where AI brains can read and write as fast as they think.

    https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science/article/3306971/china-unveils-worlds-fastest-hard-drive-poxiao-dawn-new-flash-memory

    It’s NV RAM too so no power needed to maintain state.
    In 20 years current tech will be as obsolete as 1950’s tech is now.

    20

    • #
      Hanrahan

      Whoever they stole the patents from is still ahead.

      Stealing patents means, by definition, you are always behind in technology even if you gain a commercial advantage,

      10

  • #
    Hanrahan

    A question of our English friends: Are knighthoods still being handed out on a whim?

    Here in Oz we have rejected the idea and even rejected a PM who dared believe it appropriate to dub the Royal Consort. [This had a lot to do with his ousting.] I’m sure the rejection here started with Sir Paul McCartney and Sir Elton John. Conceptually “Sir Humphrey” is a matter for the Brits.

    Personally, I reckon that while we have a King we should be able to give such a title to exceptional people. Our GG should be a military man of high standing should and be a Knight or Dame, befitting the station. I’m sure they are not hard to find.

    10

  • #
    Skepticynic

    > Are knighthoods still being handed out on a whim?

    A historian friend assures me that knighthoods were once a mark of honour and a rare privilege. Nowadays they seem to be sprayed around indiscriminately and you can even buy them on the internet.
    I can’t afford one and I don’t want one, I’d feel tarnished. I’m happy in winter with my humble nighthood.

    20

  • #
    Skepticynic

    Hey, maybe Jesus was right!
    From the not-quite-what-we-expected department:

    A recent study suggests that unmarried individuals may have a lower risk of dementia compared to their married counterparts. This challenges the traditional view that marriage is a protective factor for cognitive health. The study, which tracked over 24,000 older adults for up to 18 years, found that widowed, divorced, and never-married individuals had a lower risk of dementia than married individuals.

    Study Design:
    The study, published in The Journal of the Alzheimer’s Association, followed a large cohort of adults aged 50 and older through the National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center.

    Key Findings:
    The researchers discovered that unmarried individuals were less likely to develop dementia, including Alzheimer’s disease and Lewy body dementia. This was true for both men and women.

    Marital status and risk of dementia over 18 years: Surprising findings from the National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center
    Selin Karakose et al. Alzheimers Dement. 2025 Mar.

    https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40110684/

    00

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