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StarNamer@work wrote: the radiation frequencies are chosen
Chosen?
https://www.skycoolsystems.com/technology/[^]
"The film reflects sunlight to prevent the panels from heating up during the day"
No choosing on that one. And the atmosphere does absorb sunlight.
"and also emits infrared heat to the cold sky"
Now that one is unclear to me and perhaps what you are referring to.
However infrared is in fact absorbed to some degree by the atmosphere.
And where exactly is the infrared coming from? Best I can suppose is it just moving it from the building (inside) to the outside. But that depends on how it moves and there will be a loss factor (not stated.)
Then that page also states the following
"When fully replacing an air conditioning system, we expect an 80% to 90% energy reduction for cooling."
If true then I don't understand why acceptance would not be instantaneous? That would cut total US energy needs by 8%.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) - U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA)[^]
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jschell wrote: Chosen?
From https://spectrum.ieee.org/energy-from-cold
Within the mid-infrared range, which is where heat radiation from typical earthbound objects is concentrated, the most applicable atmospheric transmission band is in the 8- to 13-micrometer-wavelength range.
Glass is a great material for an emitter. Its atomic vibrations couple strongly to radiation around the 10-ΞΌm wavelength, forcing the material to emit much of its heat radiation within the transmission window
So the material is chosen such that it's radiation frequency is in the transmission window, effectively choosing the frequency.
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There is no such thing as a "cold radiator". Heat always flows from the high temperature to the lower.
It might be possible to use the night sky as a heat sink for cooling (the radiator is hotter than the night sky), but that also seems like "handwavium" (love that word).
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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jschell wrote: Far as I can see the system is using heat radiation (versus conduction and convection) to disperse the heat. Is there something in that to insure that it actually 'reaches' space? Versus of course just being absorbed into the atmosphere?
One way to think of it is like an infrared pigment that has a "color" that matches up with the most transparent color range of the atmosphere, so that the substance deviates a little bit from a blackbody spectrum.
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I'm looking for an article I saw but did not keep. Every developer should read it. If you happen to know a link to it, I'd appreciate it.
I logged into Github after not being there for a while and for some reason it took me to an article in a repository by someone with a name starting with a 'Z'. I was thinking "what is this" and had some trouble getting to my home page, so I read it. I didn't really register it at the time, but it was amazing. It largely said that almost everything we've been told about programming best practices leads to excessive "cognitive load", meaning our minds are getting kicked by the intellectual demands. I've known this for a while, especially with the demands of cloud, security and DevOps.
I also liked it because it described practices I have done for decades, but never much admit to because they are not popular... I write really complicated stuff and need all the help I can get.
Consider, if I'm right, it popped up because the Github folks, very smart people, though that developers should see it. I agree.
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I read the article and, to me, seems like a long winded way to say "Everything should be made as simple as possible but not simpler" (an aphorism often attributed to Einstein). Each individual example can be ascribed to the "yes, but..." category: "Prefer composition over inheritance: yes, but...", "Too many small functions: yes, but...".
Conclusion: I'm still not sold to any particular design philosophy. There are many tools out there, pick the one best fitted for your job.
Mircea
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That's the one. Thanks a lot.
The more I thought about it, the more I liked it.
I did search on cognitive load and it didn't lead me to it.
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That github article makes a lot of sense about Cognitive Load.
Here's the flaw in it related to developers:
If you admit to having cognitive load while viewing some architectural phenomenon that most of the other team understands (because they use it every day) those developers will treat you as if you are dumb.
"Well, I understand it. It all makes sense to me," says lead dev while looking around the group and other followers nod their little heads.
So, unfortunately, no one says this stuff out loud.
Long ago (2002), we had a dev contractor working on a component for a web site.
He got a bit mixed up on understanding web session and how to handle it.
Some others got involved and everyone was confused.
They finally worked it out but it took them an extra week on a project running late already.
At the Post-Mortem, Dev Manager said, "Well, we know there are things we don't know."
"what don't we know," asked Dev contractor.
"Well, like the issues with session. We need to know more about that."
The dev contractor replied, "What don't we know about session? Ask me anything and I'll tell you the answer."

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raddevus wrote: So, unfortunately, no one says this stuff out loud.
I do. Annoys the h*** out of people when I tell them it doesn't make any sense.
At one company a contractor that one of the owners liked was brought in to solve problems. No idea what problems because I never saw anything he suggested (and company paid for) used.
But in one meeting he presented a solution that would handle several million users logged into the system at once. I sat through most of that, then question why he decided we would need that problem solved - specifically where he came up with millions of users. He answered by claiming that that was outside of my need to know space. Fortunately one of the other owners was also in that meeting and he immediately piped up to state that he wanted to know that also. The Consultant kind of nervously looked around and side stepped by suggesting he would send it later.
I never saw it.
At some point I sized the application using existing business data. From that if the application owned the entire market it would never have more than about 3,000 users. And most of them would never be using it constantly.
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I've never seen the article, but I have seen tools that purport to measure the "cognitive load" of functions.
I don't put a lot of stock in them because that metric simply doesn't work for me.
I have a neurological condition that leads to my short term memory being very unreliable.
As such, I tend to use a very large screen (55" at 4k), make my functions longer, and see as much code on the screen at once as I can. Lots of little functions means I have to remember how to call them and it slows me down and introduces bugs.
For me that's a much worse problem then being faced by a complicated function with a relatively simple calling footprint. So I tend to load my functions up with functionality. Why make 4 functions to do something when 1 will suffice?
I usually split off functions mostly to avoid duplicating code.
It's a Bad Practice(TM) that leads to functions with "high cognitive load" but it works around my particular disability, so those metrics be damned - they don't take my particular brain wiring into account.
Check out my IoT graphics library here:
https://honeythecodewitch.com/gfx
And my IoT UI/User Experience library here:
https://honeythecodewitch.com/uix
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Github _IS_A_ Cognitive Load, in my opinion. 
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I've managed to survive on work that I liked ... The longest I've been "forced" to learn something I didn't need was 1 week (Java, Swing, Struts, Eclipse, Net Beans, Apache, JBoss, etc.) ... then they came to their senses (.Net).
"Before entering on an understanding, I have meditated for a long time, and have foreseen what might happen. It is not genius which reveals to me suddenly, secretly, what I have to say or to do in a circumstance unexpected by other people; it is reflection, it is meditation." - Napoleon I
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The IT landscape is changing, and one specializes not in IT, but a specific field in programming. I do office-programming, but do not ask me to write a game - I've never touched XNA and the likes.
You overload if you try to learn everything. 40 years ago, you'd be a hero if you did C instead of GWBasic. Now, there's a lot more landscape.
The demands are non-existing outside of what your boss demands; and that might not be very realistic.
Bastard Programmer from Hell
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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I worked on an ancient web app written in visual basic back in the day. It had one "page" that took two numeric parameters The first one represented the dll and the second the method on the object. Those mappings were done in a database lookup.
All the methods took a single undocumented xml object as a parameter and stored all data in that one nested dictionary before doing other id lookups to load other components to build more of the tree. At one point I had 3 or 4 copies of visual basic running in debug mode to figure out how some nested component got the data needed.
All of that eventually was passed to an xslt file to generate html.
The architect that put that together was on another team, and shared his design with me before his team built it. I kept pointing out that it did nothing except make things more complicated, and totally lost my cool as he kept trying to explain the beauty of it to me.
They built that system and a year later nobody was left on the team because it was so hard to work with. I eventually ended up tearing it down and migrating it to a much more basic design. When the only constraints to building software live in people's heads, they end up building based on whatever crazy assed ideas seem good to them at the time.
That system was built out of cognitive load, and was the most ridiculous thing I ever worked on. I think it replaced a system with a few 6000 line functions of nothing but nested switch statements, but that was child's play in comparison.
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That's a bit overboard. I've seen some crazy stuff, but at least it had some rationality.
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Wordle 891 5/6
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Letters position in the First two word really helped figure the third letter!
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βThat which can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.β
β Christopher Hitchens
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Wordle 891 3/6
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Wordle 891 3/6*
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Happiness will never come to those who fail to appreciate what they already have. -Anon
And those who were seen dancing were thought to be insane by those who could not hear the music. -Frederick Nietzsche
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In a closed society where everybody's guilty, the only crime is getting caught. In a world of thieves, the only final sin is stupidity. - Hunter S Thompson - RIP
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Wordle 891 3/6*
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Had to look up the meaning of that word.
Was thinking mostly of the Godfather (or any other Italian American maffia movie).
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