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The median legendary pokemon in any given generation is typically quite mediocre in terms of viability/power, so I'm not sure it's quite correct to say that most tiers are free of legendaries. Even in ZU, the lowest possible tier, you have Pokemon like Mesprit, Regirock and Articuno kicking around in spite of their relatively high stats.

It is completely true to say that the so-called 'box legendaries' specifically - with base stat totals in the 670-700 range - tend to be excellent Pokemon and with rare exceptions are banned from 'standard' formats for being overcentralizing.


I did say "free or restricted" because of that. Like VGC itself limiting to one or two box art legendary.


That is a seriously impressive amount of power. In case anyone else is curious, it apparently provided fuel for about one hundred nuclear reactors, from that power. https://www.world-nuclear-news.org/Articles/Orano-to-start-d...


Apparently the old method of gas diffusion for uranium enrichment used a ton of power.

They'd convert uranium to uranium fluoride gas, then repeatedly force it through membranes. The lighter isotopes would be more likely to permeate.

I guess all that pumping pressure consumed a lot of power. Centrifuge technology uses far less.


> Centrifuge technology uses far less

Fun fact: uranium enrichment centrifuges don't play nice with earthquakes. They spin so fast that they have huge inertia. When there's an earthquake, the support of the machine moves with the Earth, and the spinning part stays in place, so the machine is ripped apart. It happened with an early Iranian covert nuclear project.


That's the plot of a Tom Clancy book. I can't find a reference to it happening in the real world.


Ever heard of STUXNET?


I wonder if it is technically infeasible to isolate the machine against earthquakes?


need some refs on that "secret program" part


I was wrong. It was Pakistan, not Iran. The enrichment program was certainly covert though.

  In September 1981, a powerful earthquake measuring 6.1 on the Richter scale shook Islamabad and the surrounding area. Pakistani scientists at Kahuta were on a lunch break when the earth shook, forcing them to run to work stations only to hear the sounds of explosions. Some four thousand centrifuges operating in the Khan Research Laboratory had crashed. The earthquake had unbalanced the rotors, operating in a vacuum at some 64,000 revolutions per minute (RPMs); they hit their casings and turned to powder, making sounds like hand grenades exploding. 

[1] https://www.google.com/books/edition/Eating_Grass/yGgrNAsKZj...


Yes, especially given what we now know about STUXNET...


You can visit a gaseous diffusion site outside of Oak Ridge, TN at a new, albeit small, museum: https://amse.org/k-25-history-center/ Much of the infrastructure has been leveled, but there are a few remnants. Site selection factors included obscurity, lots of water from nearby rivers and electricity availability-- they needed MW in a time where KW was a lot of power. There is also the AMSE itself and tours of supercomputers at ORNL.

Due to the availability of hydro generation in the early 20th century, Alcoa, TN (Aluminum Company of America) also established operations in the same area due to the energy required for smelting. Their other large operation hub? Niagara Falls.


not membranes. mass spectrometer. literally shots particles up and sort them by distance. mind boggling stupid simple.


Also the sheer volume of material that has to be processed and reprocessed again when its in gas form rather than a solid or liquid.


This seems to amount to:

1. They purportedly did a really shitty job of handling a report of CSAM 14 years ago.

2. They have the same problem with occasional abhorrent content every platform for user-submitted content has, except that they've taken stronger steps to reduce it by attempting to verify that everyone in uploaded content has consented to being in it.

Would we really call that 'pretty disgusting', if not for the consistent effort of conservative activists and thinkpiece journalists to frame the site in the most unfavourable terms possible?


Not the person you responded to, but this[1] is a very thorough and well-sourced criticism of the person behind the campaign to get Kiwifarms removed from Cloudflare. Sections two and three specifically go into the lies, misrepresentation and bad journalism surrounding Kiwifarms itself if you'd prefer not to read the whole thing.

[1]https://destinygg.substack.com/p/keffals-a-case-study-on-int...


This reads to me like it's written to evangelize the concept of worker co-ops more than to earnestly investigate the question posed in the title - which is fine, but this doesn't seem like a very good example to choose to make that point.

They say they have ten employees, and the buy-in for ownership is a thousand dollars. But there's no way the start up capital for a quality restaurant in Seattle was only $10k, so either the original founders absorbed those costs or some later employees paid in extra to cover them - either way with no expectation of increased control or return. That's more charity than alternative economic organization.

They also mention that the business has been around for ten years, but isn't profitable - and it's implied probably never has been on any consistent basis, or they would certainly have called that out. Somebody is covering that shortfall, and they're not getting anything in exchange for doing so - very noble, but again that's a reliance on charity for the business to continue existing.

Can a worker-owned restaurant work? Sure, I think there are plenty of examples that prove it. Does this one work? Not as a business, by any reasonable standard.


Location: London (UK)

Remote: Preferred, open to hybrid

Willing to relocate: Maybe, within UK

Technologies: Go/Golang, Ruby, Ruby on Rails, Postgres, AWS, gRPC, Docker, Javascript

Résumé/CV: https://www.dropbox.com/s/fzh975ulwx3rgg1/CameronWatsonCV.pd...

Email: hello@cameronwatson.dev

Github: https://github.com/666lumberjack

Hi, I’m Cameron. I’ve been programming for my own projects for ~13 years, and professionally for four. I’m comfortable and experienced in teaching myself whatever I need to solve the problem in front of me, and a polyglot who’s tinkered with Python, Lua and a little Haskell and Racket in addition to the languages I’ve used professionally.

I previously worked as a backend developer for two and a half years on Bedful, a SaaS booking management system for campsites, and then for about six months as a full-stack developer at Hipcamp (Airbnb for camping) after that company was acquired.

I'm looking for an IC position working broadly on the backend, somewhere with interesting problems to solve and a culture that values potential and growth. Prefer working remotely and have experience collaborating across timezones from California to Canberra, but am open to hybrid with an office in London as well for the right opportunity.

Also open to freelance and contract work.


Location: London (UK)

Remote: Preferred, open to hybrid

Willing to relocate: Maybe, within UK

Technologies: Go/Golang, Ruby, Ruby on Rails, Postgres, AWS, gRPC, Docker, Javascript

Résumé/CV: https://www.dropbox.com/s/fzh975ulwx3rgg1/CameronWatsonCV.pd...

Email: hello@cameronwatson.dev

Github: https://github.com/666lumberjack

Hi, I’m Cameron. I’ve been programming for my own projects for 12 years, and professionally for four. I’m comfortable and experienced in teaching myself whatever I need to solve the problem in front of me, and a polyglot who’s tinkered with Python, Lua and a little Haskell and Racket in addition to the languages I’ve used professionally.

I previously worked as a backend developer for two and a half years on Bedful, a SaaS booking management system for campsites, and then for about six months as a full-stack developer at Hipcamp (Airbnb for camping) after that company was acquired.

I'm looking for an IC position working broadly on the backend, somewhere with interesting problems to solve and a culture that values potential and growth. Prefer working remotely and have experience collaborating across timezones from California to Canberra, but am open to hybrid with an office in London as well for the right opportunity.

Also open to freelance and contract work.


Location: London (UK)

Remote: Preferred, open to hybrid

Willing to relocate: Maybe, within UK

Technologies: Go/Golang, Ruby, Ruby on Rails, Postgres, AWS, gRPC, Docker, Javascript, Typescript

Résumé/CV: https://www.dropbox.com/s/fzh975ulwx3rgg1/CameronWatsonCV.pd...

Email: hello@cameronwatson.dev

Github: https://github.com/666lumberjack

Hi, I’m Cameron. I’ve been programming for my own projects for 12 years, and professionally for four. I’m comfortable and experienced in teaching myself whatever I need to solve the problem in front of me, and a polyglot who’s tinkered with Python, Lua and a little Haskell and Racket in addition to the languages I’ve worked with in the past.

Previously worked as a backend developer for two years on Bedful, a SaaS booking management system for campsites, and then for about one year as a full-stack developer at Hipcamp (Airbnb for camping) after that company was acquired.

I like having interesting problems to work on, whether that be some technical optimization or translating a thorny business context into software. Looking for an IC position where I get to do that, ideally surrounded by other competent and curious people and a culture that values learning and growth.

Also open to freelance and contract work.


I suggest you reread the HN Guidelines[1]. This kind of dogmatic dismissal-without-argument is not the kind of engagement that people expect here.

[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html


I suggest you not patronize me when I point out that this a bad-faith piece intended to invite ”argument” by way of FUD-laden industry talking points. It doesn’t meet the bar for consideration and the only reason it gets posted and survives is because HN has turned into a clearing house for rightwing tripe. The material has found its intended audience.


Welp, this is very relevant to me. Diagnosed with ADHD inattentive type ~4 months ago at 26, unfortunately too late to save myself from an inescapable spiral at work and a firing.

Definitely would recommend anyone who has serious suspicions about themselves to get checked out, especially if you found academics intuitively trivial through the 'typical' diagnosis years of ~8-14.


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