• 3 Posts
  • 22 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 11th, 2023

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  • First of all, best user icon. Saw it before, commenting on it now

    Second, the intent of supercaps shouldn’t be range but batter loading. The limit of regenerative braking is not in the torque of the motor but what you need to do to transform the generated current into chemical energy in a battery. It’s not as simple as passing the current through a capacitor, but with supercaps it is. So with the supercaps you can dump extreme currents and either use the energy for taking off or redirect it to the battery.

    I demonstrated this in my senior design project at uni and it worked well. Didn’t have a load I couldn’t absorb with a bunch of the caps. The issue was they’re very low voltage, so similar to the li-ion cells you need a lot of them in series to match the system voltage.



  • I’ll give my thoughts for anyone dropping in from a search or wherever. I have a pair of MB42s (non-x) powered by a cheapish Amazon 20w DAC+amp and love the sound. Great for movies, music and gaming all around if paired with a small (8 or 10") sub. They’re quick and detailed, but not too analytical. Great separation. You can close your eyes and really get yourself in the setting or pick out the instruments and reason about their construction or the method they’re being played. Yet unlike a pair of monitors, these speakers are actually fun. They’re not completely flat and lifeless, nor ever siblant to my ears. As I alluded to, though, they fall off around 120-140hz so you need a sub if you’re watching movies (explosion kicks are completely missed by the MB42s) or listening to anything needing prominent bass like electronic or metal.

    My only gripe is their field of listening is quite small. On my desk I need a couple of speakers stands to point them at my ears to get the most out of them. They’re certainly good outside the sweet spot but if you’re really trying to enjoy the media you need to position yourself right. If I even relax too much I find I’ll miss the super high-end details. For this reason they’re not at all suitable for the R/L channel of a home theater system.


  • Windy is it. Great initial view of favorites for the quick check and beautiful visualizations, but man does it get deep if you want to double click.

    For instance, a few weeks back I wanted to see why the sun looked orange and the sky was pale at ~3pm, so I pulled up the particulates map. I could see a 6hr moving map of particulates making their way from Alberta CA over to the skies to my west.

    Also, they show a breakdown of all the major weather service providers’ forecasts and detail which are better in which situations, helping you understand if that forecast you’re planning on is really going to happen or it’s just wishful thinking.

    Oh, and you can set up alerts to notify you days ahead of time if conditions are right for activities, like if it’s cool enough and good enough air quality to go for a run or if the wave swells will be high for surfing or what have you.









  • I find most commentary reads as though people were expecting GTA from CDPR, which is completely unfair. I don’t see a lot of “this doesn’t play like Skyrim” from TW3 commentary, and there’s a lot in common with those comparisons: CDPR titles are more story-driven, less freedom in their protagonist’s character and role, and far less “life” outside the main path (ie, townsfolk and little finds along the way).

    E: I think it played less buggy on launch than Skyrim, too. PC