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Comment Re:Slow burner (Score 1, Informative) 12

Threads is essentially filled with engagement farmers and cam girls. There are a lot of Twitter expats, but Threads purposefully suppresses news where it can which to me is beyond belief. I have journalist friends that are absolutely frustrated because "X" is now elevating Nazis and MAGA, Threads suppresses news and they're not getting anywhere near the engagement, and BlueSky and even moreso Mastadon are ghost towns. So now they go back to "X" where they get more engagement.

If Threads could just clone old Twitter it would be massively popular.

Submission + - Boeing Capsule Sets Off (bbc.com)

dbialac writes:

Boeing's Starliner spacecraft has begun its journey back to Earth — but the astronauts it was supposed to be carrying are staying behind on the International Space Station. The empty craft, which has been switched to autonomous mode, has undocked from the orbiting lab.

While we've nearly all had to deal with flight delays, this one takes the cake.

Submission + - Electrocuted Birds Are Bursting Into Flames and Starting Wildfires (gizmodo.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Electrocuted, flaming bird carcasses are falling off of power lines and causing wildfires across the U.S. This surprisingly common phenomenon has been responsible for at least three Colorado wildfires so far this summer. These events are not isolated. A 2022 study found that electrocuted birds caused 44 wildfires in the contiguous United States between 2014 and 2018. That study was led by Taylor Barnes, a biologist who now works for electric utility company EDM International. In the paper, Barnes wrote that “avian-caused ignitions” happen when a bird sits on an overhead power line. For reasons that can vary from case to case, sometimes the bird receives a powerful electrical shock, setting its feathers on fire. The dead or dying bird then falls, and, on occasion, lands in some brush or other flammable material.

“Sometimes they burst into flames,” Barnes told 9News, an NBC affiliate in Colorado. “Sometimes they just fall dead. Not every bird that is electrocuted will fall to the ground and start a fire.” Odds are, you’ve seen birds perched on electrical wires countless times without witnessing spontaneous sparrow combustion. Barnes said birds just going for a sit pose no threat. Because the birds are not touching the ground, the electricity in the power line has no way to the ground and is not dangerous to them. It’s only when the birds get into a part of the power infrastructure where a circuit can be completed that they end up crispy. [...]

It’s not clear what happened to the birds involved in Colorado’s other two recent fires, which occurred on July 31 and August 27. No people were injured or killed in the incidents. According to Barnes’ 2022 study, the area of California coast known as the state’s Mediterranean ecoregion has the highest density of wildfires set off by avian ignitions. In the paper, he advised authorities in the area and other fire-prone regions to look into modifying power poles to prevent these electrocutions. Given the devastating effects fires can have and how common they’ve become, it’s surely worth the investment to keep our feathered friends in flight and not on fire.

Comment Re:Future? (Score 2) 27

VMware is now available on AWS, and they've been buying up quite a few containerization companies and incorporating that into vsphere 7 (ex: Tanzu).

And even with public cloud providers out there, there will always be a need for on-prem hybrid cloud where VMware will have a role. I mean, you gotta have some things on premesis.

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