still_learning

46.1K posts

still_learning

still_learning

@2still_learning

Done some stuff, still learning more, bits drop off the end Same @ name on Gettr

Katılım Eylül 2020
754 Takip Edilen812 Takipçiler
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still_learning
still_learning@2still_learning·
Circuit Breaker Benefits Overstated Following the leak of the SPI-M model to the media, a number of people have focussed on the claim that is could save "up to" 107,000 lives This is a flawed conclusion. The most obvious and major flaw is that the model stops at 31/12/2020....
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still_learning@2still_learning·
@SBarrettBar Oh, it'll take 6 months to get it into production That isn't going to affect the price of oil next week Said the politician, who is even worse than Nick Clegg who said we shouldn't do nuclear because it will take 10 years. Sixteen years ago
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Reclaim The Net
Reclaim The Net@ReclaimTheNetHQ·
Italy built a censorship system where private media companies can order websites blocked in 30 minutes, with no judicial oversight and no way to challenge it before your site goes dark. Cloudflare refused to join. AGCOM fined them €14 million, nearly 100 times the legal limit. Cloudflare is now suing to tear the whole thing down...
Reclaim The Net@ReclaimTheNetHQ

Cloudflare Appeals €14 Million AGCOM Fine, Challenges Italy’s Piracy Shield as Illegal Censorship System reclaimthenet.org/cloudflare-vs-…

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Liam Halligan
Liam Halligan@LiamHalligan·
I don't have "fellow travellers" Aaron I just say it as I see it - and always have The Tories left Labour with a truly ghastly fiscal inheritance - as I've written and said repeatedly. Debt at 90pc-plus of GDP, sky-high taxation and a bunch of nutty net-zero policies. But Labour has reverted to its pre-Blairite economically-illiterate type - and made a bad situation much MUCH worse. This is NOT the time for petty, party-political point-scoring - I'm not interested in that, so don't even try to label me, and I'd suggest that the vast majority of the public isn't either. This is a time for honest, grown-up discussions among serious people about how we fend off what could be a deeply destructive economic crisis .... Are you serious, Aaron? Do you accept that borrowing £14.3bn in a single month, £13bn of which goes to paying interest on existing debt, is insane - and incredibly dangerous ?? Or do you just want to point fingers and curry favour with your friends by calling me names?
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still_learning@2still_learning·
@Artemisfornow Until we decide to changes course we will all soon be living in one big open prison Some will work from home Others will be tagged & not work from home UBI delivering equality
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Bernie
Bernie@Artemisfornow·
Brilliant! Britain’s answer to Rape and domestic abuse … is to electronically tag the VICTIMS! That way we won’t need prison at all 🤡 I swear I’m in an alternate universe.
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Dr P Buddy
Dr P Buddy@DiscePuer·
@ToTheOctocopter @aDissentient And how are they able to be so much better? Explain it to me as if I've two degrees in engineering and in the past some years of working in refrigeration R&D. A glib "technology improves" is a meaningless reply to my original question.
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Andrew Montford
Andrew Montford@aDissentient·
1. This is implying that a gas boiler is 85% efficient. This is much less than modern boilers achieve. 2. The ratio of electricity to gas prices is currently 4.6, implying that Octopus heat pumps don't in fact deliver operating gains. 3. The capital cost of heat pumps is high, so Octopus heat pumps are not economically rational.
Greg Jackson@g__j

Not a study, not a survey - but the actual live data from every @OctopusEnergy Cosy heat pump installed in real homes is now online. And it shows that over 80% of Cosy heat pumps were cheaper to run than a gas boiler over the last year and delivered a COP of 3.7 over the whole year (about 4.3x more efficient than a gas boiler) There’s so much disinformation from fossil fuel lobbyists on heat pumps - and anecdote based on bad installs or out of date tech - but we hear time and time again how much Octopus customer la love their heat pumps. Cosy heat pumps can run as hot as a boiler (70C+), can often be installed with no radiator changes and no new insulation, work with microbore piping, can often retain your old hot water tank if you have one. But so much more - comfort sensors in up to ten rooms, optional remote support and servicing, software updates to literally make your heating better without a visit. Effortlessly working with smart tariffs to save money. British designed, British manufactured and thousands of great British jobs. Helping insulate Brits from the last gas crisis, this gas crisis and more to come. See the data for yourself: octopus.energy/cosy-heat-pump…

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Leo Kearse - see me on tour! Links in bio
Having worked in the public sector, I can confirm it operates as a mafia. A giant holding pen for mediocre people with mediocre degrees to wear suits and create work for each other so they can steal an ever larger chunk of taxpayers' hard-earned money. Of course they spent £180 million deciding not to build a road tunnel. When I worked in public sector management consultancy, we were tasked with finding efficiencies in the IT department of a large government agency. One man we spoke to had two laptops on his desk. He said one was for forex trading and the other one was to monitor his chicken farm in Ghana. There was no shame as he told us this, no realisation that he was actually being employed to do a job that didn't involve forex trading or managing a chicken farm in Ghana. We were struck by the number of people sitting around doing nothing, even for a public sector organisation. Then we discovered that the man running the IT department also owned an IT recruitment consultancy. Every man he hired into this IT department from his recruitment consultancy put money in his own pocket. So there was a huge incentive for him to just hire as many men as possible to get as rich as possible. Never mind being prosecuted over this - I don't think he actually lost his job. And there's an incentive in the rest of the public sector to hire as many people as possible because the more people you manage, the more important you are, the bigger budget you get, and the greater your salary. (On the plus side, as a management consultant, finding efficiencies in the public sector is a piece of piss.) When you hear about public sector investment, this is money taken from the real economy and given to people to produce very little. This isn't "investment" any more than a bank "invests" in bank robbers. It's not done to make a profit. It holds the real economy back, not just in terms of the tax burden, but also in the huge numbers of workers tied up in this false, public sector Potemkin economy. Those workers should be in the real economy producing something of value. Britain could be a paradise. We could all be rich. There's no need for mass immigration. The workers we need are already here doing nothing, on benefits or in the public sector. We just need to fire everyone in the public sector and scrap all benefits.
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Liam Halligan
Liam Halligan@LiamHalligan·
Check out the ten-year gilt yield this morning - after the UK's likely next Prime Minister tried to lecture international investors about the intricacies of fiscal policy and the UK's national accounts. A subject about which she clearly knows absolutely nothing. Nice one @AngelaRayner !!! Markets now demanding 4.9% per annum to lend money to the British government. In Morocco, it's 3.4%. And get this. In February 2026, the UK government a massive £14.3 billion - according to figures released this morning. No less than £13 billion of that money borrowed last month went on interest payments on existing debt. Think about that for one second - it's utterly insane. The UK's national accounts are now akin to a Ponzi scheme. And yet still, lunatic MPs and potential Prime Ministers call for ever more borrowing and spending - "because it's the right thing to do" Labour's chronic economic illiteracy and internal party-political posturing is driving the UK economy off a cliff ... ⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️
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Liam Halligan@LiamHalligan

This story below reveals the true extent of Angela Rayner's cluelessness when it comes to economics, the public finances and financial markets. I say that not with glee - but deep alarm and regret. If this is really how the probable next Prime Minister of the UK thinks - betting markets put a more than 50% chance on leadership coup by June - then the ousting of Starmer/Reeves by Rayner (or Miliband) is likely to spark an instant spike in gilt yields, from their already elevated levels. Just the fact that Rayner has said what she has below will put yet more upward pressure on the market-driven borrowing costs – whatever the Bank of England says is these days mere mood – that drive the interest rates faced by firms and households. I have nothing against more social housing – on the contrary, the arguments in favour of building more are at the heart of my book "Home Truths", along with policy mechanisms that could get that done. But if you think that, in the current environment, hard-nosed international creditors do - or even should - give a monkey's about the "social benefits" of subsidised housing then you are utterly and dangerously deluded. Again, I say this in sorrow, not glee. I knew plenty of smart people at the top of successive Blair governments. The architects of New Labour – at least the Blairites – always made sure there were financially literate and market-savvy people in the room when big decisions were made. That was important back then - when the national debt Britain had to service was 35pc of GDP. Now – with the same metric pushing 100pc of GDP and Britain paying more than Morocco to borrow money – it is absolutely vital. It seems that there is no-one – NO-ONE AT ALL – near the top of today's Labour government who has the first clue about the realities of public accounts and global finance. These are – once again – NOT tribal or party-political points, but statements of cold fact ....

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Baa Ram Ewe 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🐑🐷🦃🚜
The media need to consider the possibility that Starmer didn’t fail to ask the questions himself because he was incompetent. I believe that he failed to ask the questions because his lawyer head knew he needed to be able to claim ‘it didn’t cross my desk’ I believe that’s Starmer’s method of action. Don’t write anything down. Don’t have a record. Plausible deniability. It is my belief that he is fundamentally shifty to the core and has spent his life’s career hiding behind others for bad decisions due to ‘no record’ of his own culpability.
Tony Diver@Tony_Diver

Exclusive: Britain's civil service ethics chief twice offered to officially question Lord Mandelson over his links to Jeffrey Epstein but was rebuffed by No10. Darren Tierney approached senior No10 staff in late 2024 and offered to conduct formal interviews before the decision.

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still_learning@2still_learning·
Just Stop Oil ? The children are going to have to attend Summer school
Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡@shanaka86

Your paracetamol is made from oil. The phenol comes from a cumene process that starts with naphtha. The naphtha comes from a refinery. The refinery’s feedstock transits the Strait of Hormuz. Ninety-nine percent of pharmaceutical feedstocks, solvents, reagents, and packaging are petrochemical-derived. The American Gas Association confirmed it. The medicine cabinet is the sixth layer of the Hormuz crisis and nobody is talking about it. The war started with uranium. It moved to oil. Then fertiliser. Then water. Then plastic. Now medicine. Paracetamol is 100 percent petrochemical. Phenol from cumene, converted to para-aminophenol, then acetylated. Ibuprofen is 100 percent petrochemical. Isobutylbenzene plus propionic acid derivatives. Metformin, the most prescribed diabetes drug on Earth, is 80 to 90 percent petrochemical. Dicyandiamide from natural gas derivatives. Antibiotics like amoxicillin and ciprofloxacin require methanol, acetone, and dichloromethane as solvents for extraction and crystallisation. Oncology drugs need cold-chain energy and plastic packaging. Every blister pack, every pill bottle, every syringe is PE, PP, or PET from Gulf naphtha. India makes 40 to 47 percent of American generic medicines by volume. It imports $4.35 billion in active pharmaceutical ingredients annually, 74 percent from China. But the critical precursors, the methanol and ethylene glycol that feed Indian API synthesis, are 87.7 percent and roughly 100 percent Hormuz-dependent respectively. The Indian government has prioritised household LPG over industrial petrochemical feedstock, starving the downstream pharmaceutical chain. API costs have surged 30 percent in the last two weeks. The typical buffer is two to three months of inventory. The war is nineteen days old. The clock started before the buffer was designed for this scenario. A diabetic in Ohio takes metformin every morning. The dicyandiamide that becomes the active ingredient traces back through a Chinese intermediate to a natural gas derivative that originated in the Gulf. The methanol used to crystallise the compound in a Hyderabad factory was shipped from a terminal that now sits behind the same strait controlled by provincial commanders with sealed orders. The blister pack was moulded from polyethylene derived from naphtha that loaded at a facility the IRGC published satellite targeting images of yesterday. One pill. Four petrochemical dependencies. One chokepoint. The farmer in Iowa cannot plant corn because nitrogen costs $610. The diabetic in Ohio may not be able to fill a prescription because methanol costs whatever the strait permits. Both crises trace to the same 21 miles of water. Both are governed by the same sealed packets. Both operate on biological clocks that do not negotiate with doctrine. Nitrogen decides whether the food grows. Methanol decides whether the medicine is synthesised. Polyethylene decides whether it reaches the shelf in a blister pack. Energy decides whether the cold chain holds for oncology and biologics. Every molecule in the pharmaceutical supply chain is now compromised by the same chokepoint that trapped the fertiliser, the gas, the plastic, and the water. Europe said Iran is not their war. Their existing drug shortages, 400 to 1,500 medicines depending on the country, will deepen regardless. Bangladesh, Egypt, and sub-Saharan Africa depend on Indian generics for infectious disease and maternal health. The API depletion clock runs for everyone. The strait does not distinguish between a urea molecule and a methanol molecule. Both are gated. Both are biological. And both determine whether human beings survive the next quarter. Full analysis - open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…

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Dr. Paul Wilhelm | Advanced Rediscovery
🔬 I said this would be the most important thing I've ever written. Here's why. WiFi, Bluetooth, 5G — all built on one type of electromagnetic wave. All stopped by the same thing: walls, water, metal. Tesla believed there's another type. Longitudinal. No magnetic field. Waves that don't stop at walls. They called him a crank. I went looking. Here's what I found.
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still_learning@2still_learning·
@MDC12345678 We have to stop playing on the CO2 pitch & get back to the basics of reliable, cheap energy supply. Solve the energy trilemma by making it a dilemma and we can start the economic revival If we don't, when times are good, the scientific illiterate will start bleating again
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Maurice Cousins
Maurice Cousins@MDC12345678·
Global LNG markets will be tight for years. That is bad news for the UK, which relies on LNG for around a quarter of its gas imports. Yet we have plenty of domestic alternatives in the North Sea, shale and coal. And this Cornell study suggests LNG may even have a higher carbon footprint than coal once full lifecycle emissions are counted. news.cornell.edu/stories/2024/1…
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Jack Prandelli
Jack Prandelli@jackprandelli·
🚨BREAKING: Qatar just declared force majeure on LNG contracts to Italy, Belgium, South Korea, and China. For up to 5 years. Here's what the CEO just told In an exclusive interview with Reuters, Qatar's Energy Minister and CEO of QatarEnergy just confirmed the damage from Iran's attack on Ras Laffan. It's worse than anyone thought. → 2 out of 14 LNG trains damaged → 1 of 2 gas-to-liquids (GTL) facilities damaged → 12.8 million tonnes per year of LNG offline for 3-5 years → 17% of Qatar's total LNG export capacity gone → $20 billion annual revenue loss → $26 billion in damaged facilities (the CEO said they "should not be attacked") QatarEnergy may declare force majeure on long term LNG supply contracts to: → Italy → Belgium → South Korea → China For up to 5 years. Additional exports declining: → Condensates: Down 24% → LPG: Down 13% → Naphtha: Down 6% → Sulphur: Down 6% → Helium: Down 14% The damaged trains: → Train S4 and S6: 30% owned by ExxonMobil, rest by QatarEnergy Production cannot restart until hostilities cease. What this means? 12.8 million tonnes per year = 17% of Qatar's LNG capacity. 17% of its capacity just disappeared for 3-5 years. Italy, Belgium, South Korea, China: These countries had long-term contracts with Qatar. Force majeure means those contracts are suspended. They now have to compete in spot markets for replacement cargoes. Against each other. And against every other buyer scrambling for LNG. $20 billion per year in lost revenue for Qatar. $26 billion in facilities damaged. The only country with capacity to absorb Qatari volumes at scale is the United States. I wrote a full breakdown on how this shift benefits US LNG producers and which stocks are positioned to win from Qatar's structural supply loss👇 open.substack.com/pub/themerchan… #Iran #Qatar #LNG
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David Algonquin
David Algonquin@surplustakes·
Prof Dieter Helm proposes UK gov signs long-term offtake contracts to support the resurrection of North Sea gas (this is likely necessary to reassure producers they won't be taxed/regulated out of existence by a future gov) Hard to see how you argue against this at this point
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still_learning@2still_learning·
@mattwridley I have often thought about the value of the land created by linking East Anglia back to The Netherlands Harwich & Rotterdam would become inland, but new ports would be built No new island, but the end of Britain as as island nation
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Matt Ridley
Matt Ridley@mattwridley·
The cost of creating an island on doggerland by building a sea wall and pumping out the water might be smaller than the benefit. The benefit would include fascinating archaeological finds.
Mike Sowden@Mikeachim

Generation after generation, Doggerland was nibbled away by the rising North Sea. Did Mesolithic people have stories about times when life was easier? Who knows. But there certainly wasn't any ignoring what happened next. (Image: bbc.co.uk/news/science-e…) 10/

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still_learning@2still_learning·
@BenGrahamUK Yes, but how much money was spent destroying the existing dual carriageway A14 to remove the capacity If there's an accident, the easy diversion has been lost How much for the really dumb "SMART" implementation, which imposes reduced speed limits which are often unnecessary
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Ben Graham
Ben Graham@BenGrahamUK·
£1.5 billion for 21 miles of road. That’s £70 million per mile for the A14 Cambridge–Huntingdon upgrade. No tunnels. No megacity constraints. Just standard infrastructure. This is why nothing gets built in Britain anymore.
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still_learning@2still_learning·
@7Kiwi Target: "Up to 50%" So a decline to 1% can be celebrated as a success because the target was met Cynical, moi ?
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Toby Young
Toby Young@toadmeister·
Research commissioned by the Government and published on its website last week has proposed to use smart meters to deter the "immoral" use of central heating. dailysceptic.org/2026/03/19/exp…
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