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No, it didn’t. Do a linear semilog plot.
No, it didn’t. Do a linear semilog plot.
No, we had precisely zero measurable impact on the Keeling curve.
Work phone is for work, banking is browser and TAN generator. More secure anyway.
I have a work phone and a personal phone. Latter LineageOS now GrapheneOS. Still some proprietary apps but not many.
Nope. No deal. I need my downtime to recover.
It’s not a hard realtime cutoff spec, more a relais native actuation time. And from the behaviour I’ve seen they are ramping up slowly over minutes when the mains power is back, which seems a sensible thing to do.
These days we have lots of people with home office. There are appliances like refrigerators and home electronics which contribute to the domestic baseload. With battery buffering and higher production capacity you can flatten the generation peak and increase self-consumption, for the price of longer ROI.
On loss of power these inverters cut off within 20 ms or so. These are grid-tied, not insular (though with hacked firmware some of the models can be madeninsular-capable).
Which network setup do you use? Use a VPN tunnel with 1:1 NAT, route a subnet? Something else?
It’s in the article.