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Pavle

b6960f…82311d

pavle@primal.net

1.4kFollowers542Following59Notes13.7kSent15.0kReceived

I’m only joking

59 total
Pavle5h ago
I hope someone builds this as a video game, seems like it could have interesting gameplay. Once you build it for a game you can sell it to countries as real software, so it’s a great business plan too. Especially for indie devs looking to transition to the military industry. 📝 1b729c37…
1000 sats
Pavle26d ago
Punch the abandoned monkey keeps getting bullied, I fear the zoo is intentionally creating these situations for clout.
1010 sats
Pavle28d ago
Happy Chinese New Year to all who celebrate https://youtu.be/R40IDdAkRZM?si=U1bR4ShQ1de2WC-t
1303 sats
Pavle122d ago
Cool video for normies https://youtu.be/exoNex2Yn5w?si=56aMxxMjMFvfAEwg
4200 sats
Pavle140d ago
A comment from a Chinese redditor on the topic of a proposed US-Australian joint gallium project, copied without permission: Stop dreaming. The US has a greater chance of returning to the moon than establishing a rare earth refining industry. Let's assume that the United States has instantly solved all the technical difficulties in refining rare earths and they only need to consider how to build factories: Produce 100 tons of gallium—this would make you a major supplier accounting for 10-20% of the global gallium production chain. What exactly does it take to reach this level? Gallium metal is a by-product of aluminum production. According to annual reports, Aluminum Corporation of China (Chinalco) extracted 146 tons of gallium from 20 million tons of alumina. For the United States, it would first need to invest approximately 2 billion US dollars to build a factory with an annual alumina smelting capacity of 15 million tons. The alumina produced cannot be discarded directly; based on the ratio of roughly 2 tons of alumina corresponding to 1 ton of electrolytic aluminum capacity, a super factory with an electrolytic aluminum capacity of 7.5 million tons must also be built simultaneously. This super factory is roughly equivalent to one Chinalco or slightly larger than China's Weiqiao Group in terms of electrolytic aluminum scale. The most crucial factor is electricity. Producing 1 ton of alumina requires 2 tons of bauxite, 0.25 tons of lime, and 0.5 tons of standard coal. Producing 1 ton of electrolytic aluminum further requires 13,000 kWh of electricity—meaning 7.5 million tons of electrolytic aluminum would require approximately 100 billion kWh of electricity annually, roughly equivalent to the annual power generation of the Three Gorges Dam. Taking the United States' leading nuclear power technology as an example, each pressurized water reactor nuclear power plant generates approximately 10 billion kWh of electricity per year. This would mean needing 10 such plants. Since the Three Mile Island incident, the U.S. has not built a new nuclear power plant in nearly 40 years, and only 3 new reactors have been put into operation since 1996. After the alumina factory, electrolytic aluminum factory, and power plants are all built, supporting infrastructure such as ports and highways is still needed to transport soda ash, lime, and other materials to the factory areas. Oh, and then there are the industrial workers. Weiqiao Aluminum has approximately 100,000 employees. Even if we assume the U.S. has high automation and production efficiency, with all management and logistics departments fully automated (in fact, China is purchasing more industrial automation robots), and calculating based on 20 electrolytic cells per worker, a project with an annual output of 500,000 tons would require 600 skilled workers. Thus, 7.5 million tons of electrolytic aluminum would roughly require 10,000 skilled workers. Adding in the aforementioned alumina factory, supporting power plants, etc., a total of approximately 30,000 to 50,000 new skilled industrial workers would be needed. However, U.S. manufacturing jobs have dropped from 20 million in 1979 to 12 million today—a loss of about 8 million jobs, or roughly 100,000 jobs lost each year over 45 years. Where will these workers come from? Now you understand: to produce 100 tons of gallium metal, you need power plants, highways, power grids, coal mines, soda ash plants, bauxite mines, alumina factories, electrolytic aluminum factories, a complete downstream electrolytic aluminum production and sales network, and tens of thousands of skilled industrial workers. Let’s assume the U.S. overcomes all these design, construction, and production challenges, and builds the entire 7.5 million-ton electrolytic aluminum industry just for 100 tons of gallium metal. It would then face an even bigger problem: electrolytic aluminum is an overcapacity industry. Even China struggles to find buyers for its 45 million tons of electrolytic aluminum output—how can the U.S. ensure it can definitely sell all its electrolytic aluminum? If it cannot sell the aluminum, or has to sell it at a loss, how will it cover the costs of the hundreds of billions of yuan invested for 100 tons of gallium, the supporting infrastructure, and the training and recruitment of tens of thousands of industrial workers? Another point: if the U.S. miraculously accomplishes all of the above, but China suddenly lowers prices and opens up rare earth sales—what will happen to all these investments? https://www.reddit.com/r/CriticalMetalRefining/comments/1…
411126 sats
Pavle176d ago
Traditional Serbian wedding apple shooting
1252182 sats
Pavle197d ago
Yesterday was the most magical day of my life.
9424413.2k sats
Pavle209d ago
A sheep spends its life fearing the Wolf only to be eaten by the Shepherd.
80352 sats
Pavle226d ago
Great take, more and more Africans are waking up. https://x.com/DavidHundeyin/status/1950642755870347288
2200 sats
Pavle227d ago
This tech can’t come soon enough. Set lasers to full-power, initiate Van Helsing protocol, no mercy for mosquitoes. 📝 6297e935…
3100 sats
Pavle238d ago
Thus saith the Lord https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GJleW4TCQM0
3410 sats
Pavle244d ago
On This Day in 1054, the Great Schism in Christianity Began… Encouraged by Emperor Constantine IX, who was willing to sacrifice his own patriarch for the sake of friendship with Rome, papal envoys entered the Hagia Sophia on July 16, 1054, and placed a bull of excommunication on the altar—condemning Patriarch Michael Cerularius of Constantinople and his closest supporters. However, relying on the backing of both the clergy and the people, the patriarch managed to sway the weak-willed emperor and impose his own will. With the emperor’s approval, Cerularius convened a synod which, in turn, excommunicated the Roman envoys. The far-reaching consequences of these events became evident only later. At the time, few paid much attention—disputes between the two churches were nothing new, and no one could have guessed that the conflict of 1054 would prove to be a decisive and irreversible break, unlike the many previous disagreements. In the image: Patriarch Michael Cerularius in the Patriarchate, miniature from the Chronicle of John Skylitzes, National Library of Madrid.
20010 sats
Pavle257d ago
https://x.com/fellforitagaina What a wonderful account for all schadenfreude enjoyers.
2000 sats
Pavle260d ago
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yfVCzQUXkmc
1000 sats
Pavle270d ago
We’ve added some of the most requested features to Primal iOS in this update, including support for other wallets through NWC and support for follow packs. Creating a custom feed from a follow pack now takes just one tap. Keep the feedback coming, and we will keep improving your Primal experience ✌️ 📝 9f160b10…
1745247 sats
Pavle271d ago
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RHXFKjfrlqI
1000 sats
Pavle275d ago
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nCP3LZoxABs
1008 sats
Pavle284d ago
https://youtu.be/89dGC8de0CA
1108 sats
Pavle287d ago
Watch this video before it gets taken down https://youtu.be/vOZToel_368
1000 sats
Pavle291d ago
572 years ago today, on May 29, 1453, Constantinople fell to the Ottomans. Known as the Queen of Cities, it had been the heart and cradle of Orthodox Christendom for over a thousand years. The last Roman Emperor was Constantine XI Dragases Palaiologos, the son of a Serbian noblewoman named Jelena Dragaš. The city had never truly recovered from the devastation of the Fourth Crusade and had long been a shadow of its former self. But when it became the capital of the mighty Ottoman Empire, new life was breathed into it, and it once again reclaimed its place as the most important city in the Mediterranean. Today, Istanbul stands as one of the most historic and culturally rich cities in the world and a must-visit for anyone with a passion for history. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zgf9Xiixv-o
0000 sats

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