Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | wreckdropibex's commentslogin

> the average residential rate for Finland, an EU country known for its recent nuclear developments (great!), is ~$0.25 per kWh, about 25% higher

Huh? More like 11-17c/kWh.

- Average spot price for 2024 was less than 6c/kwh https://www.nodesk.fi/sahkon-keskihinta-2024/

- Transmission costs are around 2-6c/kwh https://sahkokuningas.fi/sahkon-siirtohinta/

- Taxes bit less than 3c/kWh

Even if you add all those up, you only get max 15c/kWh.

As of today, you can get 2 year fixed price for less than 8c/kWh, even with that it only adds up to 17c/kWh, with most expensive transmission costs, taxes rounded up and energy price rounded up.

Nuclear energy has contributed to the cheap price, but so has wind power https://www.talouselama.fi/uutiset/te/bfe4f5f4-0329-4cfe-989...


https://countryeconomy.com/energy-and-environment/electricit... is where I'm pulling most of my data from, which itself seems to be using Eurostat as a source.


Maybe this is a "including everything" proce, i.e. transmission, connection fees, etc.

I currently pay a flat ~8c/kWh. I could save by using spot price electricity but as I don't use much, this keeps the monthly cost predictable.


Same-day? It is not a problem at all. For example Finland calculates enough paper ballots in hours to give a definitive result, I am sure there are other countries that manage it as well. Your imagination is stuck in the world of voting practices of your side of the pond.


My experience with 5G is that it's strictly better than LTE. At this point, if I see the 5G symbol, I'm conditioned to expect there to be 10-100x more bandwidth available than with LTE and latencies to be at levels at par with wired connections.


Identifying people online has already been solved https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39638744


Recycling glass is ~30% more energy efficient than creating new glass https://www.palpa.fi/juomapakkausten-kierratys/eri-juomapakk...

I have no idea about glass industry economics, but 30% energy savings would seem significant for any industry.


Ok yea that makes sense. I had a vague memory it was less efficient than paper but still net better energy.

Still almost everything pales in comparison to 2000% on aluminum


You would think sand is plentiful, but eg https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20191108-why-the-world-is....


I have been wondering about this in context of glass... With concrete and such applications you cannot have too smoot sand, but is it same for glass? As you are going to melt it anyway, it shouldn't matter if it is not usable in concrete...


> chronic sinus headaches

As I am writing this, I am going through something like this. Over a longer period of time I have made myself believe that it is related to what/when I eat etc. If you can, could you share what were the triggers for you?


Your thoughts are limited by the environment you live in and your imagination.

In other countries eg brussel sprouts, mushrooms, tomatoes, etc are weighed by the consumer at the vegetable section.

- Next to the specialty tomatoes there is a label that says the name, price and _number_ for the specialty tomatoes

- Pick an individual tomato or put multiple in a small plastic/paper bag from next to the tomatos

- Put the tomatoes on a scale right next to them

- Enter the _number_ from the label, no need to search for or type anything complex

- Get a sticker with the price + barcode

- Put the sticker where ever is reasonable (on the tomato or on the bag or where ever, no one cares where you put it)

- In self checkout scan the sticker

Or even better, use a system where you are carrying a scanner when pickig stuff from shelves and at self checkout you only have to pay, since you have already scanned everything.


Sounds like your gram gram was overly careful.

Foraging for mushrooms does not require huge amounts expertise. It requires a little bit of common sense.

If you regularly went foraging, it would have been possible for you to learn a few easily identifiable and unmistakable mushrooms. At least in the Nordics (and I assume it would be the same near by), it is quite easy to teach another person a few mushrooms to forage for when you can show the mushrooms growing in the wild and explain the few identifying traits.


If you take a 6 year old mushroom foraging you tell them not to eat any mushrooms without showing you first, because it requires an expert ;)


You live in your world, but others live in their worlds. It _feels_ like you have a strong opinion about something that you don't have much experience from.

Foraging can be a fun and addictive hobby. Many people learn foraging from their parents and can very safely forage for mushrooms/berries/plants that they identify. It is not (just) about optimizing for nutrients, supplements, costs, apocalypses, whatever. People do stuff for other reasons as well; the joy of finding stuff can be addictive, walking in nature is likely good for you, walking overall is definitely good for you, eating food provided by yourself can give a warm and cozy feeling, and so on.

"Time wasted foraging can easily earn hundreds of dollars", dunno what consultant bubble you live in, but that is not the case for most of the world. People can not automatically just go convert time to money, not that many would even want to. Foraging can be a lot more rewarding than grinding away in some meaningless uber-for-whatever-gig-work.

Also, it seems for example going to earn extra money from Uber etc kills more people than mushrooms in the US (... where I am assuming you are from).

> In the United States, mushroom poisoning kills an average of about 3 people a year. > https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mushroom_poisoning

> at least 50 gig drivers for companies like Uber, Lyft and DoorDash had been killed while on the job in the United States [between 2017-2022] > https://www.nytimes.com/2022/04/06/business/uber-lyft-driver...


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: