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Oh, I see now how I did that name thing wrong...

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@tshirtman @Havoc_online @EarthOrgUK @ChrisMayLA6 Yes, so NIMBY folks don't actually have a problem with transmissions lines.
@tshirtman @Havoc_online @EarthOrgUK @ChrisMayLA6 Don't nuclear power plants need transmission lines?

The madness of the UK's energy system is summed up in the £55m paid to wind farm operators in the last couple of months to cease generation (temporarily) because the energy interconnection (distribution) system was unable to handle the electricity transfer from generation to use; at the same time £217m was paid (mainly to gas-based generators) to make up the shortfall in renewable energy the congested network caused.

The network build-out needs to be accelerated!

#energy
h/t Observer

Lo and behold
I'm as fascinated by the Artemis II mission as many other people, but as scientist I'm frustrated that experts interviewed about it in the media are rarely asked to justify the truly astronomical cost. So far the program is reported to have cost $93Bn, with the direct costs of this mission alone amounting to more than $4Bn. I'm perhaps particularly sensitive to this because I'm frequently asked to justify funding three orders of magnitude smaller that we have used to improve knowledge of how the Antarctic ice sheet will respond to climate change and contribute to future sea-level rise.
Today's eldritch coffee is The Great Race of Yith (from Lovecraft's "The Shadow out of Time"):
judging online information quality based on site where it appeared: a comprehensive guide

- "How To (...)" in the title, cookie banners, lots of side-information written in a way that wastes your time: SEO slop, don't bother. You might as well make a wild guess, same likelyhood it'll be correct

- official docs for $x, autogenerated by a rube-goldberg machine and automagically pushed into whatever-pages by a fully-skidoodled, post-quantum CI pipeline: describes everything, except the exact fact you're looking for.

- no HTTPS, tilde in the name, DNS with 4+ dots, likely hosted on some dusty uni server, white background with absolutely no CSS: one of the best resources on the subject. you question how it's even still online

- site titled "Garry's blog", default wordpress favicon, last update either previous month or 12 years ago: golden. crystal-clear exposition, good examples and screenshots framed so well you don't even need arrows pointing places. likely used as a cheat-sheet daily by everyone in the community

Kids are not encouraged to be learners so much as "trained exam-passers," as Julian Barnes put it. Here, for example, is a good account of formulaic templates, cutesy acronyms, and other gimmicks that teach kids to write badly....but score well on tests: https://rethinkingschools.org/articles/the-politics-of-the-paragraph/.

And every example of good scores for mediocrity - or poor scores for impressive thinking - reminds us never to judge kids (or schools) on the basis of standardized tests.

The Politics of the Paragraph

The tale of a high school English teacher's journey into—and out of—formulaic writing programs as her school struggles with high-stakes exams.

Rethinking Schools
Fuck sake Australia.
sometimes all it takes is a little subtle messaging to improve your pet’s behavior