Donβt laugh at me
Donβt laugh at me
Streeting accuses trusts and ICBs of seeking to cut deficits too sharply
Reading in the HSJ this morning that βStreeting accuses trusts and ICBs of seeking to cut deficits too sharplyβ is probably the closest Iβve come an apoplectic stroke in my life.
I suspect he doesn't actually care about the end result of the oil much. Putting his foot on the necks of people, trying to show the planet what he can get away with is likely way more important to him.
(And I'd agree that makes a far more convincing point than a few 'barrels' of oil ever could).
He might have a concept of a vision in two weeks.
Mooi kiekje.
Ik mis het best wel om niet meer even door het park en landgoed te kunnen lopen.
Can the ICC or UN Save Us?
The Brutal Truth Nobody Wants to Hear
www.jackhopkinsnow.com
You're a smart cookie, another great post.
Also, you can very well have just batteries without solar panels, so only ever having them charge from the grid.
But whether any of this would help depends on your location, roof orientation, your electricity tariffs, and your consumption needs.
You'd need an installer to help with that.
4/4
To make good use of panels without battery storage you'd have to match your power consumption to the power that is generated.
Instead and ideally you'd store any generated power in batteries first and foremost. Plus using cheap nightly rates to top up the batteries from the grid when needed.
3/4
How much power depends a lot on latitude. Here at 56.3N with about 5.5kW max of panels: Aug 23.1kWh/day, Nov 2.6kWh/day, Dec 0.99kWh/day. Still adds up to ~5.2MW per year.
Right now the sun barely broaches the tree lined horizon while this roof is not ideally oriented for solar either.
2/4
As someone else already said, you don't charge panels.
You can charge batteries if you have those; directly use the power; or sell back what is not used to the grid (at peanuts rates).
But yes, solar panels do still generate power even when the sun isn't directly shining on them.
1/4
I was on the Dutch Photo Zone forums many years ago, and we met up a few times for a photowalk or a day in a photographers' studio or such, which has always been a good experience.
When discussing gear though, yeah us amateur photogs are absolutely a bunch of "intense nerds" anytime and anywhere. π
You might've missed that newer digital cameras like the mirrorless ones usually have inbuilt image stabilisation? That, plus in-lens image stabilisation on some gets you quite a bit of handheld shooting for free. (Not really tested it myself though).
Yeah, I don't go out enough with the camera here; struggling to find motivation myself nor things to shoot and there's nothing like a club to join nearby that I can find to help find such motivation.
Oh, and p.s.: mobile devices aren't old school tech ;)
Well, I think 28 is too narrow on crop sensors. About okay on full frame. I've not used Tamron, but I've had a Sigma 28-200, which if I recall correctly also suffered from lots of focus hunting, and I can stand that less than having to focus manually. (Manual only with a focus prism or live view).
Every democracy that failed waited for a safer moment. This article explains why that moment never comes.
www.jackhopkinsnow.com
I was listening to @thebulwark.com's Next Level podcast today and they were thinking through the chance that Trump actually tries to seize Greenland and there was a @jvl.bsky.social sort of 'I kinda hope he does it to drop the mask entirely' and I just cannot scream loudly enough: No, You Do Not. 1/
Yeah maybe. More likely a Canon 100-500 or 200-800 (just can't decide) from MPB, as I'm extremely spoiled for having fast AF. π Would want it for both e.g. birds and deep sky astrophotography.
Thanks :)
This was the 1st EF 75-300 lens, cheap, optically sharp but just far too slow (both aperture & the AF).
I have a 7D and R6m2. Lenses: 24-105 4L IS USM II, 70-200 2.8L IS USM; primes (nifty fifties, 85 1.8, 100 2.8L Macro, Samyang 14mm 2.8).
Missing a (reasonably fast) long zoom lens.
Outside of the usual monikers of Fascist or Nazi, which term do you think best describes Trump and the Trump Administration.
My personal favourite for Trump is the Tangerine Twat or Mango Mussolini, but I canβt see those making it into policy briefings.
Not exactly what he said: an initial invasion would with little doubt be successful by the US. But they and their equipment is unlikely to last due to the climate involved. Unlike the Nordic countries' armies, who are very well acclimatised to this and who help train other armies in such warfare.
It's probably bots doing those posts, you should keep that in mind.
Old scanned picture of a large sliding double glazed door to the garden.
In the Netherlands our new house (built mid/late 70's) like all houses in our street had a large double glazed sliding door to the garden. So maybe somewhat common?
Managed to find a picture. I managed to run into the closed door once, though fortunately I bounced, didn't go through. Hurt though!
A lightly snowed over footpath in a woodland area. Some of the trees are evergreens; many have lost their leaves for winter.
A a crossing at a snowed over footpath in a woodland area. Some of the trees are evergreens; many have lost their leaves for winter.
A path through the woodland, presumably for maintenance as to my knowledge this woodland was replanted (like many in Denmark) and is also used for logging.
"The snow stills the air, and amplifies one's feet." (me)
First (real) snow of the season here in Denmark, not seen snow as good as this in quite a few years. The doggo (not pictured) also enjoyed it with quite a bit of dashing through the snow.
#photography #mobilephotography #snow #walkies
A mute swan in a lake or pond, lit by a bright afternoon sun. Its head and neck isn't pure white but a little bit yellowed. Water droplets adorn its head and neck like little jewels if you zoom in close enough.
Robβs theme for todayβs #BirdOfTheDay is #GoodLight and bird capture. As always I need to use my archives (really need a longer lens) but at least some people get to see these old pictures. π Here's a swan from 2015 with the 40D and cheap 75-300 lens.
A group of six ducks is floating in a large pond all with their tails up in the air, their heads down in the water and thus not visible. Barely visible far away in the background are some more ducks.
Oh, almost missed out on today's #BirdOfTheDay theme which is #BirdButts.
Their parents probably wouldn't let you get too close in the first placeπ
A female duck and two of her growing ducklings (one yellow, one brown) are walking through grass
6 young cootlings and one of their parents are rummaging through grass.
#BirdOfTheDay is all #AboutTheKids any bird chicks or juveniles, and the Alternative is #Gulls.
Here's some ducklings and cootlings for you. (Some more oldies from 2005 with the 300D + EF 75-300).
#Photography