Noit

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 week ago

They haven’t been as nice since they took the horse out.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 weeks ago

I don’t believe we’ve had confirmation yet. They have said the Pro sticks will be smoother and less squeaky but didn’t name check Hall Effect.

 

archive.is

The UK is seriously considering nationalizing Jingye Group’s British Steel, as ministers rush to rescue the country’s last steelmaker from the prospect of permanent closure. Amid concerns the manufacturer’s main plant in Scunthorpe faces imminent closure, Britain’s Labour government is holding active discussions about taking it into public ownership, according to people familiar with the matter who spoke on condition of anonymity about plans that haven’t been finalized and may not materialize. Ministers will do whatever it takes to save British Steel from collapse, they said.

British Steel’s fate is a headache for Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who is trying to preserve a key industry just as Britain is stepping up defense spending and seeking to reduce the country’s reliance on other countries for critical resources. The matter is further complicated by British Steel having a Chinese owner which has already rejected a £500 million ($64o million) UK rescue package. The government remains in talks with Jingye to seek a way forward. The UK government declined to comment. A spokesperson for British Steel did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Calls to Jingye’s headquarters in China were not answered outside of office hours, and the company didn’t immediately respond to an emailed request for comment. “All options are on the table in relation to Scunthorpe,” Starmer said on Monday.

Jingye, which bought British Steel out of liquidation in 2020, has been in negotiations with the government since 2023 after it prepared to abandon plans to build two new electric arc furnaces while closing its existing two blast furnaces, the last remaining in the UK. Worries about the sector are being compounded by US President Donald Trump’s imposition of 25% tariffs on imports of foreign steel.

Trade unions have warned that Jingye has canceled orders for iron ore, coking coal and other raw materials needed to make steel, raising concerns the Scunthorpe plant could effectively close within days without the fuel to run it. If the raw materials aren’t ordered this week, the blast furnaces risk being permanently shuttered, according to one person working in the industry.

Ministers are now examining putting in the order for the raw materials themselves to buy Scunthorpe time, the people said, adding that the order could be made as soon as Wednesday. Nationalization looks like the only viable option if Britain wants to prevent itself from becoming the only Group of Seven economy without a virgin steel industry, the industry figure said.

The closure of British Steel’s UK operations would put thousands of jobs at risk in Scunthorpe and Teesside, both in northern England. The company employs around 3,500 people in total.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 3 weeks ago

Did air cadets when I was a teen, I milked it for every flight I could, and met some people I’m still great mates with decades later. Couldn’t recommend it highly enough.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Always interesting to see when the speech is over and the fine detail starts filtering through what is actually included, and you know what, this sounds actually very good. More of this please.

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submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
[–] [email protected] 13 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Jesus Christ, every action shot they showed made me feel physically sick and I was watching on mobile while doing other stuff. If I’d watched that on my telly I think I’d have chundered.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 months ago

They’re all currently active, mostly have comedy backgrounds, and mostly don’t do touring so scheduling them is probably fairly easy? Plus a lot of the contestants are talked into it through their celeb mates, so once you have one person from a show it’s easier to get their fellow cast members in.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 3 months ago

I know 3/5, Mantzoukas, Martin and Baynton should all be great. If you can stomach X still, seek out Martin's short skits there, those are great.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 3 months ago

Is Nintendo the only console producer whose consoles get used for mega LAN events? I was at a regional Pokemon event the other day where there were 500+ people playing Switch within a few tens of metres of each other. Aside from the fact that wireless gear could enable cheating, the wireless interference would be a real issue.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 months ago

I’m glad OK Go are still going, there’s nobody who does anything like what they do.

I am not into this song at all though, and this video is a terrifying nightmare.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Can anyone name the game boy tune they're using for the ad music? Sounds familiar.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 4 months ago

Cool Worlds and Dr Becky are both pretty good for astronomy and general space stuff.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 4 months ago

That’s claymation for you. I’m wondering how much they can actually produce in two years.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/49536096

 

My in-laws are at me again for what I want for Christmas. They're very big on gifts. I mostly want some new joy cons for my Switch because mine have surrendered to stick drift. I can't believe they don't sell plain black ones any more.

Anyway, if you're blessed with relatives like mine it's time to start writing your list to Father Christmas even though you're in your thirties and own your own home.

What are you after?

 

Nigel Farage, the Reform UK leader, is in the US where he is due to attend an election day party at Donald Trump’s Florida home in Mar-a-Lago. In an interview with the Telegraph, he has said that Trump, who is a friend, should accept defeat if he loses the presidential election. (See 10am.)

But Farage said he expected Trump to win. And he said he was particularly excited by the prospect of a Trump victory because Trump has said he will put Elon Musk, the Tesla founder and X owner, in charge of a government efficiency commission. Farage said that Musk would slash government spending, and that this would provide a blueprint for what Reform UK would propose for Britain. He told the Telegraph:

"This is the sexy bit: Elon comes in and takes a knife to the deep state. Just like when he bought Twitter he sacked 80 per cent of the staff.

There are going to be mass lay-offs, whole departments closing and I’m hoping and praying that’s the blueprint for what we then do on our side of the pond.

Because that’s what Reform UK believes in - that we’re over-bureaucratised and none of it works. This assault on the bureaucratic state is the thing that’s really exciting.

They’ll all be gone. They’ll all be fired. Why do we need Whitehall with all these useless, ghastly Marxists? Universities have all become madrassas of Marxism. The whole thing is appalling.

Trump’s first term taking on the deep state was impossible because they had no idea how it worked; he finished up with a lot of people around him who weren’t supporters and who were imposed upon him.

They didn’t know an American president has the power to appoint 3,000 people. This time they have been working really hard on that for 18 months."

Rightwingers regularly complain that the state is too large (Kemi Badenoch believes this too), but it’s unusual to argue that Musk’s management of Twitter has been a success. Since he took over, it has lost three quarters of its value, equivalent to a sum worth around $30bn. That is partly because, after Musk sacked most of the moderators, people were less willing to use and advertise on the site.

 

It's been about eighteen months since I first spoke to a doctor about getting referred for an adult ADHD diagnosis. The doc said basically "I'll refer you but don't expect anything because you're holding down a job and a family so you must be doing alright". I had my screening interview back in June, and that was followed up by two web-based questionnaires, one for me, and one for an adult who was about when I was young. My mum filled this role. And it's off the back of this questionnaire that the NHS has discharged me, stating "ADHD is a life-long condition and we would expect differences to have been evident from an early age" and "[my] difficulties are not best explained by a diagnosis such as ADHD".

Unqualified as I am, I do still feel like based on my own research, ADHD is probably the best explanation for a bunch of stuff in my life. A guy I've spoken to a lot who has some experience says my lived experience sounds fairly textbook ADHD/autism as taking effect from my mid to late teens (when my mum wasn't about so much), but the NHS seem to have focused in on my early childhood in discharging me.

Has anyone here been discharged by the NHS before a diagnosis, and what did you do afterwards? Did you carry on and get diagnosed elsewhere? If that happens, do you have to cover the entire cost of prescriptions forever? Did you get diagnosed with something else? ngl this feels like a real blow and I don't really know what to do next.

 

I bought a Thule Crossover eight years ago and the zip on it has finally gone. Short of getting a local seamstress to fit a new zip, I think it's time for a new one, and am a bit tempted by the Thule Crossover 2 30l. Are Thule still good? Is there anything else of the same sort of size that I should be considering?

 

I’m looking for a lightweight waterproof jacket with a hood, ideally available in the UK. I don’t buy jackets very often so I don’t know what I should be looking for asides from that broad category. Suggestions welcome!

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