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rpzw What We Know So Far About the SolarWinds Hacking Scandal
« le: Janvier 17, 2025, 01:14:35 am »
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 released Tuesday by Pacific Environment and Stand.earth uses hard-to-get data on international shipping to definitively trace just how much environmental damage some of these big companies are c stanley website ausing by importing goods. We ship a lot of stuff. Today, about 80% of global trade is circulated around the world by about 50,000 ships, and the industry is expanding quickly; cargo volumes could grow by as much as 130% by 2050 as Amazon conquers more of the world and one-click shipping becomes more widely available around the world. Those ships run on extremely dirty  and cheap  fuel, known as  bunker fuel,  that releases a lot of pollutants. Its estimated that maritime shipping is responsible for between 10% to 15% of the worlds sulfur oxide and nitrous oxide emissions and shipping is responsible for 2.2% of global carbon emissions.     But theres a lot of murkiness around global shipping that makes it extremely difficult to track. International production is rarely a simple task of a Walmart factory overseas shipping Walmart products on a Walmart-owned ship to U.S. ports; there are endless shell companies, subsidiaries, and middlemen working to pass cargo off, with very little data collected and publicly released on these transactions. As a re stanley cup sult, a lot of companies are able to find reasons to leave the carbon footprint of shipping out of net- stanley cup zero calculations or promises. Amazon, for instance, got big headlines when it rolled out its Shipment Zero initiative to cut emissions from Ficg This Double-Sided Wireless Battery Can Charge Your iPhone and AirPods At the Same Time
 Originally developed by watchmaker Abraham-Louis Breguet over 220 years ago, a tourbillon is simply a mechanism to constantly rotate a watchs escapement and balance wheel鈥攅ssentially its beating heart鈥攖o help improve accuracy and counteract the forces of gravity while its being worn and moved around.     A three-axis tourbillon, as the name implies, spins a watchs escapeme stanley termoska nt and balance wheel in three dimen stanley us sions, further improving its ability to remain accurate as it ticks away. Its also a mechanism that contributes to the obscene price tags many Swiss watches are known for, but its a genuine mechanical marvel, which is why Adam Wrigley has created a larger 3D-printable version for anyone to download and study.  All of the 3D files for Wrigleys creation are stanley cups uk  available over on Thingiverse, and as intricately complex as a three-axis tourbillon can be, there are only about 99 parts for you to print and assemble to build your own. Is it a cheap way to simply 3D print your own mechanical watch  Not really, most 3D printers wouldnt be able to accurately churn out these parts at that tiny scale. But as a crash course in how old-school watches work, this is better than trying to dismantle an expensive Swiss masterpiece. [Thigiverse via TechCrunch]                                                        3D printingGadgetsWatcheswearables