Sujet : Re: The Joys of African (and other 3rd world) construction projects
De : nospam (at) *nospam* example.net (D)
Groupes : comp.os.linux.miscDate : 12. Jan 2025, 19:47:51
Autres entêtes
Organisation : i2pn2 (i2pn.org)
Message-ID : <43c0da8e-4829-638c-9247-2911ab5b7632@example.net>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
On Sun, 12 Jan 2025, Lars Poulsen wrote:
On 2025-01-11, D <nospam@example.net> wrote:
This is the truth. I have never seen the maintenance cost for sea-based wind, or
mega solar farms in deserts. I have never seen the cost of security to protect
the mega solar farms in deserts. Fun fact... when Ericsson built out cell phone
networks in africa, they quickly discovered that every base station needed
guards. If not, as soon as they were built, and the crew left, some local tribes
dismantled it and sold it as junk.
>
This was why they needed wireless telephones to begin with: Telephone
wires were stolen within days, only to reappear in the market as scrap
copper wire. Wireless networks greatly reduced the attack surface.
>
Wife and I just watched a Danish documentary movie about a restaurant
group that moved a Michelin starred restaurant from Torshavn (Faroes) to
a village in on the edge of the Disko Ice Fjord in West Greenland. The
Why would they do that? Sounds like bad business to me. On the other hand, I'm not running a restaurant. =)
Does your wife speak danish or did you AI-translate the subtitles? Sometimes I can rip documentaries including swedish subtitles from svtplay.se and then automatically translate the subtitles so that it works for my wife as well.
My company does a fair amount of engineering support work for the CTBTO
(the Preparatory commission for the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty
Organization) which maintains dozens of infrasound monitoring stations
in remote parts of the world. My business partner/boss likes to come
along on a site visit once in a while. Easter Island, Robinson Crusoe
Island, Alice Springs, Warramunga. (Not so keen on going to Djibouti,
Tristan da Cunha.) These maintenance/field upgrade visits are planned
Wow! What ever they are paying you to go to those places, I am certain it is not enough. You would have to pay me several 100s of thousands of dollars before I would voluntarily travel there.
years ahead of time. We supply radios for communications within a
station between sensor arrays. Towers are designed, tower sections
ordered and staged, cables are spec-ed to exact lengths. We do
predictions of radio signal strengths using Google Earth to review
line-of-sight issues. And field installation crews have carefully
planned spare parts, cable splice kits, power banks etc. There is no
BestBuy or Home Depot in the villages of Nunavut!
My father visited Nunavut once I think. Don't remember the circumstances. He worked almost all his life for the same airline, so it was probably some very minor test of a potential new destination or a marketing stunt.
It is a fun part of our project portfolio. The CTBTO is a UN agency
headquartered in Vienna. The contractors are a diverse bunch, that get
rotated a bit. We have worked with groups from France, Ireland,
California and Alaska. We got in on this, because our radios are the
most reliable they could find. I don't know what they will do when we
retire in a couple of years, but I am sure they are working on it.
This is worrying. Does it not worry you that you have the world government as your customer? How do you deal with the ethical dilemmas that implies? =/