a post Black Friday open thread

by liberal japonicus This is the year that Japanese started to take to the idea of Black Friday, though, as is usual with the Japanese, they don't quite understand it. This article from 2016 suggested that it was being considered: We are now approaching the end of the nenmatsu shosen (year-end sales war), arguably Japan’s … Read more

This is Sparta!!

by liberal japonicus Yes, I know that the Battle of Marathon was the Athenians versus the Persians, but it is hard not to hear that phrase in my mind when I read this article from A. Wess Mitchell, "a principal at The Marathon Initiative and a former assistant secretary of state for Europe and Eurasia … Read more

Policing identity

by liberal japonicus The question of identity is always one on my mind, so the CBC report of Buffy Saint-Marie's identity caught my attention. To summarise, Saint-Marie said that she was adopted by a white couple and was part of what is known as the Sixties Scoop, where First Nation children were taken from their … Read more

And third on the list

by liberal japonicus Right after a Russia-Ukraine ceasefire and a solution for Israel-Hamas, I suppose is How to fix the internet, which seems like a topic y'all might have a lot to say about. A few grafs When the internet began to be built out commercially in the 1990s, its culture was, perversely, anticommercial. Many … Read more

Science at the end of the world

by liberal japonicus

A science thread. Below the fold is a youtube video. A little background, Toyota, despite having an early lead in electric vehicles because of its development of the Prius, it refused to go all electric and has been beaten out by other companies, notably Honda. Toyota argued that going all electric was not a solution, though a lot of this came out after Toyota got beat up in the market place, leading shareholders to express their disappointment.

For those of you who aren't link readers, a few grafs from the Slate article

How did Toyota end up gagging on the electric-car revolution’s dust? Not by making a careless business oversight, but through methodical decisions that came from the top. And worse: The company has paired this lack of innovation with aggressive attempts to protect its position as the world’s most valuable car company by stopping electric vehicles from taking hold more broadly.

[…]

A generation ago, Toyota was ahead of most automakers in researching and deploying clean-energy tech, and it gradually electrified some of its biggest models while expanding its fleet of hybrids, both plug-in and not. Yet, as the ever-warming atmosphere and the ever-boiling chargers-versus-gas-pumps battles demonstrate, there’s a key difference between electrifying and going fully electric. Toyota’s focus on the former at the expense of the latter may have made sense previously thanks to its domination of the hybrid market, but as those sales plummet, it increasingly looks like a mistake.

[…]

Toyota head Akio Toyoda, heir to the family dynasty that launched his company nearly 100 years ago and current chair of the powerful Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association, has consistently pooh-poohed EVs while doubling down on his beloved hybrids. That’s not to say he dismisses all energy innovations—his company loves it some hydrogen, though its fuel-cell fleets haven’t quite taken off. But to hear it from him, an all-EV transition would be as apocalyptic as a future in which we don’t attempt to clear up transportation emissions. When the Japanese government considered a California-style future ban on gas cars in late 2020, Toyoda went off at a JAMA press conference, denouncing EVs as a bunch of hype while warning that expanded use would lead to lost jobs and reduced power capacity. Toyoda’s successful pushback was in step with EV-related remarks he’s made over the years as the voice of both JAMA and Toyota. In 2021: “Carbon is our enemy, not the internal combustion engine.” In 2022: “Playing to win also means doing things differently. Doing things that others may question, but that we believe will put us in the winner’s circle the longest,” referring to his company’s bearishness on EVs. Last month: “People involved in the auto industry are largely a silent majority. That silent majority is wondering whether EVs are really OK to have as a single option. But they think it’s the trend so they can’t speak out loudly.” (all links are from the article)

While I'm just an interested observer, whenever I hear people in power talking about a silent majority, I retch for a few moments. This is compounded by the people who pop up and talk about how going all electric is a woke thing and good on Toyota for standing up to the EV mafia. FFS.

Anyway, the video seems to be another shoe dropping (I would say the other, but that implies that there is only one shoe, but the world has shown us that there is an infinite supply of shoes to be dropped) which is Toyota's new ammonia based engine.

Now, maybe I'm just stuck in my position, but given what is known about ammonia, I'm still thinking that this is just another group of people trying to keep power by employing whatever they can to stop change. But that's just my first reaction, maybe I'm just not seeing it, hence the post, which could be about anything science-y. Knock yerselves out.

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We need a hat

by liberal japonicus More bad news, the proposal to recognise Aboriginal people in Australia’s constitution has been rejected. In the damned if you do, damned if you don't file The referendum question, to amend Australia’s constitution to recognise the first peoples of Australia by establishing Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander voice to parliament, was deliberately … Read more

An open thread on standards

by liberal japonicus Another ever so slightly focussed open thread, this time on standards, prompted by this article from Nature.The opening paragraph In a strip published in 2011, cartoonist Randall Munroe pokes fun at people’s inability to develop a universal standard for, say, electrical outlets, printer-paper dimensions or TV remote-control signals. From 14 competing standards … Read more

See ya! wouldn’t wanna be ya!

by liberal japonicus From the Guardian The ousting of McCarthy represented the first time in US history that a speaker of the House has been removed from office, marking an ignominious end to a short and fraught tenure for the California Republican. It comes as Americans’ approval ratings of Congress and the federal government remain … Read more

Feinstein

by liberal japonicus I tend to think that the transactional nature of politics, particularly in the US House and Senate, makes it a certainty that the people who end up there never seem like the person they were when they started. Reading the Guardian's obit of Feinstein underlines that. Whether it reveals their true nature … Read more

A slow motion train wreck

by liberal japonicus With Janie faithfully putting up open threads (greatly appreciated), I'll try to alternate with some more focussed posts and for this one, I'll let all of you give your predictions about the Supreme Court, using this vox article to prime the pump. Predictions and links appreciated!

The subterranean streams of se acabó

by liberal japonicus I think that since most of us here are not fanatical followers of sports in general or football/soccer in particular, an interesting discussion might be had about everything related to the unsolicited kiss from Rubiales, head of the Spanish Soccer Federation. If you aren't aware of any of this, basically, the Spanish … Read more

selling the hangman the rope

by liberal japonicus ProPublica has had a number of great deep dive exposes lately. They seem to do particularly well with problems in the Navy and their most recent piece about the Navy's failed Littoral Combat Ship program is the latest. One point that caught my eye (and accounts for the title) was this General … Read more

Stuff happening

An open thread. Georgia is a brand of canned coffee sold in Asia, originally a Coca-Cola and Nescafe collaboration, but then, Coca-Cola took over the brand. Anyway, it seemed apropos. Another thing, we had a bizarre spike in visits two weeks ago. Here is the jump and two days on either side. 2023-08-09 314 2023-08-10 … Read more

Climate change and geoengineering

by liberal japonicus I'm not sure about this, but I seem to recall a couple of years ago a spate of articles about dealing with climate change through geoengineering, but with the current weather problems around the world, I'm not seeing them. I can adduce several possible reasons, listed in order of likelihood: I'm not … Read more

Whatcha watching?

by liberal japonicus What's a old fart to do? Facebook slides into irrelevance, Instagram is a bridge too far, and Tik-tok might as well be from another Galaxy (not to mention X/Twitter), I end up going to Youtube. I use it to show things to students and it is possible to curate lists of videos, … Read more

Looking for the union label

by liberal japonicus Being on the left of the political spectrum, I wish the members of SAG-AFTRA the best of luck. If you read the reportage, they do seem up against the cartoon villains of the Judge Doom sort in Roger Rabbit. Here is the Guardian's take. However, just following some of the discussions, I … Read more

Across the pond

by liberal japonicus While our UKian contingent is not as large as one might hope, I always appreciate their insight to things British. So what to make of this? Rupert Murdoch was throwing a midsummer party at Spencer House, the palatial residence in St James’s, London, owned by Earl Spencer. Seated on a sofa in … Read more

Err, seriously?

by liberal japonicus Janie mentioned that she wanted to maybe talk about the wedding website decision so I'm putting this up. Here is the SCOTUSblog summary. What baffles me is that apparently, the request was faked This week, I decided to call Stewart and ask him about his inquiry. […] It took just a few … Read more

Affirmative inaction

by liberal japonicus A continuation of discussion in the previous post. Nous suggested that And between this and Roe, I think the GOP is going to be in serious trouble with educated suburban women. While I believe nous is talking about larger problems of college affordability and college debt, in case anyone thinks that the … Read more

What goes around…

by liberal japonicus Open thread-y post. Been reading a lot about the revolt in Russia and a common hook is to plug it into some historical event. The obvious one is 1991 KGB takeover and Yeltsin and Czar Nicolas II is another fave. But there is also Yemelyan Pugachev (Catherine the Great), one of the … Read more

Picking up and going

by liberal japonicus In the enshitification thread, the notion popped up (and it's popped up several times at the blog) about the idea of moving to some red state en masse to change the politics. I've kind of lost track of who said what, but this guardian article points to the issues with that. Under … Read more

Enshitification open thread

by liberal japonicus I found this interesting Federov said: “A lot of officials in different countries forget that human behaviour nowadays is about clicking a few clicks. It is not about circles of hell, wasting people’s time. “We acted more like a start-up, not like a public sector company,” Federov told MEPs, encouraging an “an … Read more

AI as McKinsey

by liberal japonicus This New Yorker piece by Ted Chiang is really worth your time. As it is currently deployed, A.I. often amounts to an effort to analyze a task that human beings perform and figure out a way to replace the human being. Coincidentally, this is exactly the type of problem that management wants … Read more

Open thread

by liberal japonicus Seems time to open another thread. Would love to have some informed speculation about Dominion v. Fox settlement. Shootings out the wazoo. Trying to figure out the sweeper pitch. Great chess. ANything else?

Degrees of separation

by liberal japonicus While I am 2 degrees of separation from the World's Worst Georgian, James Earl Carter (Walter Mondale spoke to my students when they were doing an exchange in Minnesota and in the party afterwards, I managed to spill ice cream on my tie while I was thanking him for his help for … Read more

Some math fan service

by liberal japonicus The discussion of programming brought a lot of math love out, so I thought I'd toss this up as a quasi-open thread. This Guardian article just popped up about two high school students presenting about a trigonometric proof of the Pythagorean theorem. I'm still wondering what the shape of the proof would … Read more