SeventyTwoTrillion

joined 2 years ago
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[–] [email protected] 78 points 9 months ago

me misplacing my keys this morning delaying me for five minutes was Putin's message to my household and I will respond accordingly and with equal scale. my agents are hiding his wallet in a particularly obscure location in his house as we speak

[–] [email protected] 25 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (2 children)

So the USA is now admitting that troops are dying during these attacks.

yeah, this is the actual news here more than the attack - that they finally either want to start saying deaths are happening, or they can't hide them anymore for some reason. US soldiers have been dying for months

[–] [email protected] 10 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (1 children)

I really liked Horizon Zero Dawn but the story hook of the game is way too far in IMO, and the story is probably the only reason I finished it. Like, I was trying to find reasons to like the game and failing and about to give up before you encounter the big metal door, and then I was like "Huh, maybe this is actually an interesting game after all." It just starts off really slow unless you're really into quasi father-daughter dynamics, which I can't say I particularly am. It is fundamentally a Ubisoft towers skinner box game with a Gamer Vision scanning thing and "Hm, guess I should go into that cave!" murmurs, and some of the enemies being metal versions of real-life creatures is really interesting for... a few hours, and then it just kinda isn't, and some of them are too tanky for no particular reason.

Horizon Forbidden West kinda just felt like the same game as the first but in a different setting and with different metal creatures. It similarly takes a little while to get to the actual story hook - finding HADES - and once again I really liked the story, but once again it's a Ubisoft towers skinner box with Gamer Vision. It's actually really embarrassing for the game that the main gameplay hook (at least, as I saw it), being able to ride flying monsters and fly around the map, was introduced virtually at the end of the game and has very few uses in the game. I mean, I guess you have a... glider... that is really just a parachute. And underwater sections, sometimes.

The end of Forbidden West actually pissed me off. Like, I was planning on finishing up the rest of the game's map and doing the rest of the quests and collectibles and stuff, just to get my money's worth I suppose, but I finished the main quest and decided that I couldn't really be assed. I really hate when game endings aren't self-contained. It was just "Oh, we're DEFINITELY getting a sequel to this, so we're leaving you on a cliffhanger and not actually giving you any closure at all." This kinda happened in the first game but like, the series could have ended there and you would have felt 95% satisfied. For this game, it was like 10% satisfied.

I'll... probably play the third game simply because I'm invested in the game's story at this point, but the gameplay loop simply isn't going to get better and I'm not looking forward to once again climbing up those towers and once again entering Gamer Vision and once again firing dozens of arrows into machines while in Slow Motion Aiming Gamer Mode.

[–] [email protected] 26 points 9 months ago (1 children)

The thing I'm a little bewildered by is: can't the runways just be hit? Or the planes struck when they have to land and refuel/rearm?

In Ukraine this seemed to be what Russia did, but the sheer size of the country meant that Ukraine could inevitably find a different place to land their planes, and much of the country was out of range of a lot of Russian missiles (though Russia could hit anywhere with their longer-range missiles as they've proven with strikes on Lvov etc). Israel does not have the advantage of size or considerable depth.

[–] [email protected] 51 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

Finally, an intelligent take in this god-forsaken megathread. If the Yemeni proletariat merely joined hands with the Palestinian and Israeli proletariat and overthrew their respective bourgeoisie, we could have peace throughout the Middle East. But instead, these people insist on continuing cycles of violence

(/s just to be sure)

[–] [email protected] 47 points 9 months ago (7 children)

every day I bounce between "there's no way Israel is so profoundly stupid that they'd try and attack Hezbollah again" and "nope, the Israeli leadership is actually that stupid"

[–] [email protected] 47 points 9 months ago (1 children)

next step is for a journalist to say "pig poop balls"

[–] [email protected] 34 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

the krav maga dude literally trains you to stand your ground and face the general direction of incoming, draw your firearm, aim in the general direction of the incoming fire, begin returning fire blindly in the general direction of incoming fire, and then advance on the enemy.

Critical support to this dipshit for getting Western soldiers and cops killed

[–] [email protected] 37 points 9 months ago (3 children)

Wrong about the beginning of events, but correct about their trajectory once they have begun

But often only because we go "No, that won't happen, that would be stupid and counterproductive for the West" but then they just do the thing anyway and so we just go "...okay, well, they're gonna lose then"

[–] [email protected] 43 points 9 months ago (4 children)

I literally cannot stress enough that if you don't want your oil tankers to be set on fire, you simply have to not go through the Red Sea

[–] [email protected] 36 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

From the Rio Grande to the sea, Texas shall be free

And by free I mean "returned to Mexico and indigneous groups"

 

Part 1: How Is It Meant To All Work?

I wanted to write up a quick effortpost on carbon capture as someone more than a geological layperson but admittedly less than a specialist. Opinions about carbon capture range from a Muskian tech-bro belief in its emancipatory role in solving the climate crisis to a belief that it is an almost entirely failed technology that will only exacerbate emissions. It would be exceptionally boring of me to say, "Well, carbon capture is a land of contrasts…" and as such, I will show my hand immediately and say that I come down much closer to the latter belief than the former, but there is genuine nuance to understand about the technology. I hope to make the current state of things a little clearer.

I will have to simplify things for brevity and clarity; many long reports, papers, and books have been written on the subject, which adds all sorts of complications. You could (and many have) dedicated your academic and professional life to the field and its inner workings. But I hope this suffices, and I hope users arrive with more knowledge, or information to add or correct.

A Quick Explanation of the Theory

Your typical CCS project can be divided into three sections - the first is the capture of CO2; the second is the transportation; and the third is the storage - or, a not-so-secret fourth option, the utilization (such as in chemical processes or oil recovery). While the more accurate name for the process as a whole would thus be CCUS, and that acronym is what you'll see a lot of if you delve into the science, CCS works fine for our purposes.

Capture: Carbon dioxide is somehow captured or separated from other gasses, usually at a stationary source like a factory or a fossil fuel power plant. There are many technologies for this, like absorption, adsorption, and cryogenic separation, but this isn't the essay's focus. The efficiency of capturing this carbon is not (and never will be) 100%, and in some case studies I've seen figures as low as like 30%. 90% capture efficiency is an often-boasted number. In short: it depends, and as we'll see later, it's not the most burning question in the CCS debate anyway.

Transport: The carbon dioxide is liquified and then moved through pipelines. Humans have gotten pretty good at moving liquified gases through pipelines, so this is the least problematic part of the process in terms of the science. Of course, there is inevitably an environmental impact from pipeline construction and the possibility of leakages.

Storage/Utilization: This liquified carbon dioxide is injected into sinks, typically underground deposits or aquifers, or used in further processes (though this currently makes up a negligible portion of captured carbon usage - it turns out that other sources of carbon are not very hard to come by). The big argument here, and the one I was told when I was taught about it in my courses, is something along the lines of "Look - if this reservoir was able to hold this natural gas/oil for millions of years, then it can continue to hold carbon dioxide for millions of years more." While this isn't always true - seismic activity and the impact of previous oil extraction operations might produce ...interesting results down the line - the theory is relatively sound, especially with frequent monitoring.

So, this is how it's meant to work - you stick a filter of some kind on a power plant or cement factory or steelworks or something, you transport it via pipeline or perhaps other methods, and then you stick it underground where it will stay for thousands or millions of years in the same place that we got the fossil fuels from in the first place. It's an idea that is convincing in its simplicity, and - hypothetically - it requires no extra space that needs to be constructed by humans. Indeed, there are appropriate geological traps that we could put the CO2 into that didn't already have fossil fuel present due to being at the wrong depth or not having the right biological material there, so even if some reservoirs were too damaged by extraction, we could still put the carbon somewhere.

The International Energy Agency is certainly a believer in the potential of the technology, featuring it as part of its roadmap towards net zero by 2050, and has various other pieces more explicitly on the role of CCS as a technology that can both reduce emissions directly and remove CO2 already emitted from the atmosphere. The IPCC, the body dedicated to climate change at the UN, also regards carbon capture as a critical technology.

As such, CCS is increasingly finding its way into countries' and companies' climate policies. 24 out of 29 Long Term Low Emissions and Development Strategies submitted under Article 4 of the Paris Agreement have CCS as part of their strategies.

Natural Gas and Enhanced Oil Recovery

Before I discuss the problems with CCS, a brief note here on what "enhanced oil recovery" is and how CO2 and natural gas relate to it. Natural gas must be processed before it can be marketed and sold and said processing involves separating CO2 from the gas mixture. This CO2 is thus captured and sent to be used in enhanced oil recovery, which has helped boost the economic viability of natural gas extraction.

Enhanced oil recovery is the process by which you inject CO2 into existing oil and gas reservoirs to use the pressure to extract more fossil fuels, improving production rates, particularly in reservoirs in which extraction is declining. Not only are you using (typically non-renewable) energy to compress carbon dioxide into liquid form and then pump it into the rock, but the extra oil and gas you get out of the rock is being used as fuel, which worsens the climate crisis.

Part 2 here in the comments.

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