Tile never gained enough market traction for it to be an issue. No use using a system to track your stolen goods that can't provide you with a location because there's no phone running the Tile app within hailing distance.
Reading The Fine Manual here : (https://blockprotocol.org/spec) - blocks are expected to include code to render the block information in a displayable format. So, a block isn't just the data model, it's also the view layer. Some options suggested in the spec include React, vanilla HTML, and Web Components. This part feels a little mushy at the moment, since there's no proposal yet for how a Block identifies which rendering context it expects.
> Some options suggested in the spec include React, vanilla HTML, and Web Components.
Ah, ok. So the code is only expected to run in a browser, not an arbitrary application. Although since the spec is open, I have no doubt there will be efforts to write code for handling blocks in non-browser applications.
At the moment, yes - we want to figure out the principles of application/block interaction in a web context first, and then move on to other environments. The principles should be transferable, although some of the 'how are they implemented' won't be (https://blockprotocol.org/docs/faq#what-about-non-web-contex...)
The comment above you is right that 'handling blocks implemented in different ways' (in a web context) is one of the mushier parts of the spec, and it's something we need to do more prototyping and refinement of.
I can see how, if you get to critical mass, the network effect will drive adoption. For example, building a Blocks-based project management system becomes much, much easier if it can tie into one of many (hypothetical) Blocks-based HR information systems, so that you can pre-populate a list of employees at the company. As much as big companies love lock-in, there's tremendous potential value in enabling small companies to build open value-add tools that focus on solving a narrow problem extremely well.
Check out https://helium.com - it's a blockchain-based LoRA network, where the blockchain is used to reward uptime and certainty of location of the base stations. Transmissions can be received from 10 miles or more away, if the receiver is located high enough.
The thing that people are missing here is that these aren’t natural gas wells, they are oil wells. Natural gas is a byproduct of oil production (crude oil can have a lot of natural gas dissolved in it, which bubbles out when it’s pumped out of the ground). It’s usually not economical to capture this gas and make use of it, so it’s usually just flared, or worse - vented. To the degree that this makes use of this waste gas, it’s better than nothing. However, if it encourages continuing to tap gas off of shut-in oil wells, then it’s potentially less good.
Specifically, it needs to absorb/emit in a frequency range called the “sky window”, where the atmosphere is transparent. In this range, the object is basically seeing the cold of space at a few Kelvin, so that almost no energy is absorbed and a lot is emitted.
The trick is to design a system where the total power absorbed across the solar irradiance spectrum is less than the power that is emitted in the sky window, so that the system is a net power sink (in this case to the tune of 100W per sq. meter or so).
>Here are those states: Alabama, Arkansas, Connecticut, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, and Texas.
>Then there are nine states that limit the number of dealerships Tesla can open: Colorado (limit: one), North Carolina (one), Virginia (two), Georgia (five), Maryland (four), New Jersey (four), New York (five), Ohio (three), Pennsylvania (five).
If my count is correct, that's a full half of states in total. And the states in the second group are all large enough that it's a meaningful limit to be only allowed a handful. For comparison, there are 7 Toyota dealerships just between the Denver and Boulder Colorado areas (using their "find a dealer" tool makes it hard to be more thorough than that).
Car manufacturers contracted with car dealers back when the car business was uncertain - they needed a local dealer network to sell and service their cars. Once dealers were established, they lobbied to get laws in place to prevent them from being disintermediated by the manufacturers, who could have easily just put them out of business and replaced them with manufacturer-owned stores.
Not entirely true. Certain classes of jobs, like working in health care, have always mandated vaccination. Additionally, when most vaccines are given in childhood, making sure everyone is vaccinated in grade school has the effect of ensuring that most adults are vaccinated. No need to keep re-checking throughout life.
This. What’s your long-term business plan? If you plan to keep this business as a privately held enterprise in the long term, equity is basically useless and worthless. Are you planning to hand out equity to investors or employees? If not, this person would be one of a handful of shareholders. Unless you have a plan to sell the company or go public, then I would advise that you explain the situation to the salesperson and explain to them why they wouldn’t want equity.