- 1 Post
- 5 Comments
unglueclass23@programming.devto
World News@lemmy.world•Tesla starts selling Chinese-made Model 3s in Canada at the EV's lowest price everEnglish
01·6 days agoOut from one fire into another…
unglueclass23@programming.devto
Technology@lemmy.world•The Men Who Spend Hours Talking to Porn Bots— “It’s just nice to feel heard.”English
2·8 days agoIt’s mostly novelty. But wears off eventually when you start noticing very obvious patterns emerge in the way it answers and quality degrades significantly as context size grows. It also will always talk to you in the way YOU tell it to which also becomes boring as time goes on.
It’s always funny to me how people on the news talk about AI partners and so on when you know if they have 2 brain-cells, next month they will drop this whole stupid idea. When you’re talking to it about your problems you’re just talking with yourself.
unglueclass23@programming.devto
World News@lemmy.world•Cheap Batteries Are Taking Over the World’s Power Grids | Falling costs, rising electricity demand and the Iran War are nurturing a boom in energy storage.English
2·19 days agoYeah it’s a bit confusing. When I hear “battery capacity” I think about GWh not GW but I suppose it isn’t “wrong” as it can mean output “capacity” and they did mention “in GW”
Not sure where you’re getting the numbers from but I think @DarthFrodo@lemmy.world is right here as in the differences in numbers are probably explained by the fact that the first number is only for batteries used to balance the grid and the other one is more general.
But yeah you do make a good point that we have no clue about actual storage capacity. Still, really strange that EU numbers are so low. I expected way more.
unglueclass23@programming.devto
World News@lemmy.world•Cheap Batteries Are Taking Over the World’s Power Grids | Falling costs, rising electricity demand and the Iran War are nurturing a boom in energy storage.English
3·19 days agoI don’t really get it, in the chart “Installed grid-scale battery capacity in gigawatts, 2025”
Europe barely has like 17GW in total but later on below they say:
In Europe, it sees batteries that are already online or nearing completion as likely to benefit most, with capacity seen rising from about 50 gigawatts in 2025 to 75 gigawatts by year-end.
What is this big discrepancy? Is the second part talking about batteries not connected to the grid or something (not grid-scale?)

In 10 years you will say the same thing about today :)