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But it's not happening in areas that keep coal on their grid - Wyoming, Texas, Utah, China, etc.

It's primarily the places that try do both solar an fossil fuel retirement that are experiencing high energy prices - California, UK, Europe, Australia, etc.


To be clear: Australia has always had fairly high electricity prices, and Australia is also not specifically doing 'fossil fuel retirement', although there are coal plants closing they're closing because they're reaching the expected end of their natural life.


Texas has the most wind power of any us state.

High energy prices happen when you don't do the basics to be ready for a change before making it. Or when you skip basic maintenance until everything falls apart. I'm sure there are many other complex factors I don't know about.


Texas also has the most coal power of any state. As with China, success with renewables appears to depend on a policy of compatibility with fossil fuels rather than opposition.


Coastal commission's head would explode if we tried to lift a neighborhood.


>On the other hand, it's public knowledge which viruses the WIV has been working with

They took down their database in September 2019.


First of all, I'm talking about the many publications, talks, and NIH-database submissions they made before the pandemic. The viruses that the WIV has worked with are publicly known, because like most scientists, the researchers at the WIV go to great lengths to publicize their work.

What you're talking about is a private, password-protected database that was used to share data with off-site collaborators. It was actually available until early 2020, when the WIV says they took it offline because of persistent attacks.


Fusion is free now for personal use.


Interesting. I wonder if this is because it has really sucked in the last 6 months and this is some sort of hail mary? I have 2 machines with the latest VMware Fusion on it. An iMac (Intel) and a Mac Pro (2013). Both ran all versions of macOS flawlessly until a few months ago. Big Sur and Monterey have massive issues. I couldn't install from scratch anything Monterey. I had random hangs, installing new macOS guests. Just so many issues. It forced me to try Parallels Pro and I found it works fine. I'm in the process of switching over.


I wonder if Fusion was ever even profitable. I have never met anyone who has independently gone and purchased it. But I've bought licenses for it through work and maybe enough others have too.

Maybe it's a loss leader product now, get individuals into it so that they will ask for it at work.


I (grudgingly) paid for personal copies of both Fusion and Workstation Pro, since I did use both heavily for years.

However... my personal opinion of Workstation has taken a nosedive. I've experienced quite a number of really ridiculous bugs, and it appears that the firing of all of the competent maintainers and replacing them with Chinese developers has not done the product quality any favours. Looks like it's been in "cash cow maintenance mode" for almost a decade at this point.

Example from last week at work: When I fire up my Linux VMs on Windows 10 Enterprise, I get a black screen. The workaround: enable a nonexistent floppy drive. When the system boots the "floppy drive not present" dialogue box somehow stops the screen blanking out and it works until the virtualised OS power saving turns off the screen. At which point it's dead until you power it down and repeat the floppy trick. There's some really basic bug here, and it's been around for several years. Reported and unaddressed.

Same with quite a few other issues I've reported. EFI bugs preventing FreeBSD booting. Segfaults when using the PC beeper on Linux. Really stupid stuff that any basic emulation should be handling.

The QA on these products seems to have just gone, and I really resent paying a significant amount of money for bug-ridden poorly-tested software.

With Fusion I've seen the same issues that Workstation has for the most part, since other than the UI the codebase is mostly shared. If they want to be able to compete with the OS-provided and free alternatives, they need to up their game and make their product worth paying money for. Right now, it seems like you pay through the nose for something that has a handful of features nothing else offers, but overall is a worse experience.


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