Big Tech is term for big tech companies. Meta, Alphabet, MS, Apple and few more, the companies that have monopolized large sections of the Internet/Mobile and tech in general and are using that power + money to expand further into related/unrelated areas.
Too big to fail, but also not big enough to be broken up. If the government's priority was safeguarding the financial system, as soon as the crisis passed the big banks would be broken up to reduce risk if any one of them failed.
That breaking them up wasn't even discussed in government or media shows how powerful their influence is.
Society can not allow people to be uninsured while also forcing medical care providers to treat emergencies as we currently do. It's a horrible moral hazard and increases health care costs for everyone else. There is no political will to end the "hospitals must admit people even if they don't have insurance" rule, so we had to do something about getting everyone insured.
To have a hope of supplying grid power, they need to scale up the energy gain by four orders of magnitude and reactor run time by 12 orders of magnitude.
Those are just two of the engineering problems. It'll be a while, and I doubt it will ever compete with solar, wind, and storage.
Remember that the human genome project was started in in 1990, completed in 2003. In 2003 it took a year to sequence 80% of the human genome, now it takes a day to do 98%. In 1990 they had the understanding on how to sequence DNA, but scaling that across whole human genome seemed like monumental task.
I'm guessing in a decade we'll have a viable early stage industrial process, and in 2 decades we have commissioned fusion reactors.
If we don't kill the planet with nuclear war or the climate crisis.
> Maybe not on earth, but there are applications in deep space.
Depends on how long the interstellar craft is supposed to travel. If it's under 100 years, fission should be able to do the trick of keeping the craft warm and the lights on for the sealed ecosystem to function during the decades of coasting between stars.
Fusion rockets would be more convenient than fission ones because you can store the hydrogen you need in the form of water and water also acts as a great radiation shield while in deep space. Then, to brake, you use your radiation shield as reaction mass for fission or fusion rockets.
If we are talking about much more than that, fusion is probably a better answer as fission fuel will half-life itself into paperweights over a grand transgalactic tour.
You'll need a constant power supply for the entirety of the trip. After doing the math, it turns out, fission seems quite viable - all usual fuels, in storage, have half-lives of more than 10,000 years.
So, if you have enough fissiles for keeping the closed ecosystem happy for the duration of the flight, you can go quite far.
The ship/colony will need to enter orbit around a star and drop by a rocky planet at some point, to gather more fissiles and reaction mass (and other materials needed for fixes and upgrades), so it wouldn't be able to stay indefinitely in deep space. If it's fusion-driven, a gas giant may be a good option for both fuel and reaction mass, and icy moons may work well for replacing water.
I'm not talking about travel. I am talking about permanently living between the stars, and essentially living off hydrogen harvested from the interstellar medium.
You are operating under the rather naive assumption that the people and resources used in fusion research are fungible with the people and resources used in other things.
When you have a bunch of people who know how to build nuclear bombs sitting around with nothing to do, you damn well keep them busy before another country finds them a job.
Having worked in the field for 6 years, the estimated cost per shot at NIF is roughly $1MM. The estimated cost for a day of shots at OMEGA is $250k-$300k.
The cost per target varies a lot due to the precise manufacturing tolerances and the methods to get them. For example, the sphere with the fuel in it is made by dropping liquid glass from a drop tower. And then metrology is done on hundreds and hundreds of glass spheres.
So though the electricity might cost that, we are talking about a building in which just the lasers and their optical paths take up 3 foot ball fields of advanced warehouse space. And the target chamber is at ultra high vacuum, which is 10 meters in diameter. There are also countless diagnostics, computers, and other electronics, the lights for all the facility, and the number of people required to run it so this delicate experiment goes off without a hitch.
Honestly, it's almost not worth talking about as a power source anytime soon. Even if Q > 2 on NIF there are countless engineering problems that would have to be overcome (and haven't really been thought too hard on in the ICF field) to get a power reactor out of this tech.
My two cents, look towards MIT and CFS for news on their SPARC tokamak and plans for ARC tokamak. Based on some data I have seen, SPARC should hit Q>1 pretty easily. With some estimates of reaching Q> 3 to 9. And before you scoff at it, this reactor design is using magnetic tech that has proven it can withstand and produce a 20T magnetic field! In MCF, field strength and heating are the two key metrics. To put this into perspective, the massive tokamak being built in Europe has a MAX possible field strength of 13T, assuming it's run to the edge of it's theoretical design limitations. The SPARC one hasn't even been run to it's design limitations, most likely due to the mechanical stresses a 20T field produces in a 3-4 meter D coil.
I'm not sure what your experience is, but mine is over multiple decades over multiple companies over multiple continents, and in general, corporate management, project management, and business analysts are not concerned about security.
Instead, they are interested in delivering buttons, fields, and streamlined workflows. Technical debt and library upgrades? Os upgrades? Forget about it. They need to deliver value back to the business in terms of faster business processes.
Only when the business is hacked or they fail compliance does the business leadership start to care.
Blaming the people with the hands on the tools is not fair when the business will not give the resources to do their work properly.
Which is restricted to EU public institutions, who are verified by the EU Voice team. There is no way there will be 45 million accounts there to trigger EDSA.
The Windows Registry is a pretty good key-value store for centrally storing config.
Because some, perhaps many, have abused the originally good idea, does not invalidate its positive aspects.
Also, I do not agree it is a file system. It is a key-value storage system that is leagues better than the win.ini, system.ini, and the prolific ini file collection hell it replaced.
Some form of version control would make the registry better.
It’s impressive because they actually achieved that level of centralization. Most systems aim to have a centralized configuration “place” but it doesn’t stick. With windows the registry really did stick
Everything is tech now. And other things are the value add.
For example, if you are a law firm, or a real estate company, and if your tech is not operating then your company is not operating.
If your Internet is offline, or your local network, then your business is not running.
If your company has a security breach, then you will have massive reputation problems.
If you're a small business, you need to have an online presence with Insta, Facebook, and Google maps.
It's all 75% tech now. Get with the programme.