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Having recently done a timer replacement on a Dualit, I think that might literally be a Dualit timer module. Looks identical in the packing box photo. It wouldn’t surprise me if the heating elements were the same as well (haven’t checked) though those are probably more commonly available as generic items.


They look the same to me: https://www.dualit.com/collections/toaster-spares

It seems slightly disingenuous to use the repair parts from a toaster on the market without crediting them.


He would definitely would - though I’d imagine that most his travel would be done on a diplomatic basis - so it’s possible the Vienna conventions might apply and preclude detention. (not really sure, I’m not a lawyer).


I'm not expert on it, but I suspect that two of them might somehow be related to the Transmit and Receive stations for Australia's JORN (over the horizon radar) that are located in Western Australia near Laverton.

Though if that were the case, I'd probably guess there should be more areas at the other site locations around northern Australia - so that might invalidate my guess.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jindalee_Operational_Radar_Net...

https://www.google.com/maps/place/28%C2%B019'02.6%22S+122%C2...

https://www.google.com/maps/place/28%C2%B019'36.3%22S+122%C2...


SQL Server has included a message queue capability for a while now. It’s called SQL Server Service Broker:

https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/sql/database-engine/config...

I haven’t had the opportunity to use it in production yet - but it’s worth keeping in mind.

I’ve helped fix poor attempts of “table as queue” before - once you get the locking hints right, polling performs well enough for small volumes - from your list above, the only thing I can’t recall there being in sql server is a LISTEN - but I’m not really an expert on it.


Also Azure is adding SQL Server trigger support

https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/azure-functions/func...


This stuff has a latency measured in minutes though, limiting the usecases a lot.


Came here to mention Service Broker. I've used it in production in multi-server configurations for a number of years. It works really well but it's terribly obscure. Nobody seems to know it's even there.

The learning curve is steep and there are some easy anti-patterns you can fall into. Once you grok it, though, it really is very good.

The LISTEN functionality is absolutely there. Your activation procedure is invoked by the server upon receipt of records into the queue. It's very slick. No polling at all.


I could see that potentially being an Anti-Trust issue for them.

Given the controversy over the Activision acquisition, acquiring one of the major engine platforms, having a major game studio, and already owning the XBox platform might make for great end to end strategic alignment / platform control - but I think it would also be a big regulatory/political fight to get done.


A blog post on the excellent IP/DE blog outlines that a Delaware judge has referred a series of related entities to the Department of Justice, and their legal counsel Texas Supreme Court's Unauthorized Practice of Law Committee in a series of Intellectual Property cases by Non Practicing Entities - revealing concealment of beneficial ownership and links to a French Sovereign State Fund.

This follows up to this discussion and report last year:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=33504777


I suspect rz2k means that when the plant was operating, they couldn’t even see the towers because of the smoke/smog.

Now that it is closed, and there is no smoke - they can see not just the towers, they now see a long way behind them as well.


In Australia, after you change your licence address, they mail you a small sticker with the updated addres, that is then stuck onto the back of your licence.

There's a small section marked on the back that is specifically for it.

I guess if you move multiple times within the expiry period, you can pull the old sticker off and replace it.


I've seen this in my area around metro Detroit as well.


I'm not sure if the video covers it, but I do recall reading that in Madagascar, they mark the beans with pinprick initials so that it's easier to identify if they've been stolen.

https://www.vanillabeankings.com/blogs/recipes/vanilla-bean-...

I might even have read about it originally from here.

Of course that only helps if they're recovered / identified quickly - once any significant amount of co-mingling happens then it's probably too much effort to track down the origin.


Instead of a the tree structure, think about it as Data Center -> WAN -> Site Server -> LAN -> Client

By having a proxy/repeater/site server, you are reducing the amount of WAN traffic you need to send.


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