Retiring Worn-Out Wind Turbines Could Cost Billions That Nobody Has

schwit1 shared this article from Energy Central News:
Estimates put the tear-down cost of a single modern wind turbine, which can rise from 250 to 500 feet above the ground, at $200,000… Which means landowners and counties in Texas could be on the hook for tens or even hundreds of millions of dollars if officials determine non-functional wind turbines need to be removed. Or if that proves to be too costly, as seems likely, some areas of the state could become post-apocalyptic wastelands steepled with teetering and fallen wind turbines, locked in a rigor mortis of obsolescence.
Companies will of course have the option of upgrading those aging wind turbines with new models, a resurrection of sorts. Yet the financial wherewithal to do so may depend on the continuation of federal wind subsidies, which is by no means assured. Wind farm owners say the recycling value of turbines is significant and recovering valuable material like copper and steel will cover most of the cost of decommissioning… Yet extracting valuable materials from the turbines is not as easy as it sounds… “The blades are composite, those are not recyclable, those can’t be sold,” said Lisa Linowes, executive director of WindAction Group, a nonprofit which studies landowner rights and the impact of the wind energy industry. “The landfills are going to be filled with blades in a matter of no time….”
Unlike Duke Energy, some of the smaller wind farm companies operating in Texas, with fewer financial resources, may be tempted to just walk away when aging turbines no longer spin a profit. Linowes believes such moves may begin occurring even before wind turbines outlive their useful life as manufacturing warranties on the big turbines expire. “At what point does the cost of maintenance tip over to the point it’s not worth maintaining a turbine?” she said. “We’re in something of an unknown or uncertain territory… It could be a very ugly situation in the next five years when we see turbines need work, and are no longer under warranty and not generating enough electricity to keep running them.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Retiring Worn-Out Wind Turbines Could Cost Billions That Nobody Has

Google Fiber Rollouts Poised To Explode With New FCC Utility Pole Policy

Google Fiber Rollouts Poised To Explode With New FCC Utility Pole Policy
Alphabet says that going into the ambitious rollout of its Google Fiber internet that it knew things would be costly, hard to pull off, and slow-going. What the search giant didn’t expect going into Google Fiber rollout was how hard it would be to gain timely access to space on a utility pole to install its equipment. Google says that one

Source: Hot Hardware – Google Fiber Rollouts Poised To Explode With New FCC Utility Pole Policy

PC Shipments Grew for the First Time in Six Years

According to Gartner, worldwide PC shipments grew for the first time in six years during the second quarter of 2018. This was driven purely by the business market and the Windows 10 upgrade cycle, not consumers, many of whom have switched to smartphones for daily tasks. Analysts warn that the market will weaken again in two years.



This is the first quarter of year-over-year global PC shipment growth since the first quarter of 2012. All regions experienced some growth compared with a year ago. While the results are a positive result for the PC industry, Gartner analysts said this sign of market stability is not enough to declare a PC industry recovery just yet.

Discussion

Source: [H]ardOCP – PC Shipments Grew for the First Time in Six Years

Altiplano review: A brain-tickling board game about… alpacas

Read 15 remaining paragraphs | Comments



Source: Ars Technica – Altiplano review: A brain-tickling board game about… alpacas

Yo Ho, Yo Ho, The LEGO Deal For Me

LEGO’s Pirates of the Caribbean Silent Mary kit includes nearly 2300 pieces, your favorite characters from the movie, and great touches like tattered sails and a collapsible mast. It’s basically always sold for $200 since it came out, but Walmart has it for just $140 right now, so get this deal before it gets dragged…

Read more…



Source: Gizmodo – Yo Ho, Yo Ho, The LEGO Deal For Me

Intel Z390 Support For 8-Core Coffee Lake Refresh CPUs May Be A BIOS Update Away

Intel Z390 Support For 8-Core Coffee Lake Refresh CPUs May Be A BIOS Update Away
It looks as though motherboards based on Intel’s current generation Z370 chipset will support the chipmaker’s upcoming 9th generation Core processor family by way of a BIOS update. We say this because at least two motherboard makers have already added BIOS updates for existing Z370 motherboards, with release notes suggesting they’re intended

Source: Hot Hardware – Intel Z390 Support For 8-Core Coffee Lake Refresh CPUs May Be A BIOS Update Away

What Did You Get in Trouble for at Your School's Computer Lab?

Left hand on A S D F? Good. Right hand on J K L and, for some reason, “;”? Congrats, you’re in home position! A thing basically every learned in their school’s computer lab and never used for the rest of their lives. Did you learn other things? Brag a little louder about going to private school why don’t you?

Read more…



Source: Gizmodo – What Did You Get in Trouble for at Your School’s Computer Lab?

Faster and farther: Bulls Cross E8 electric bike review

Enlarge (credit: Eric Bangeman)

As the managing editor of Ars Technica, one of my duties is to monitor the daily torrent of news tips and PR emails. The overwhelming majority of them is deleted after a glance, and the news tips and story ideas are passed along to the appropriate writer. Sometimes a product announcement will catch my eye, and I will follow up. Once in a blue moon, I’ll say, “please send me one so that I may review it.” And that’s how I ended up riding an electric bike around the Chicago suburbs for two weeks.

I’m one of the hardcore cyclists at Ars, along with Jay Timmer and his new-as-of-last-fall road bike as well as copyeditor Kerry Staurseth. I love cycling, and it was a major factor in my dropping 120lb over a 12-month period starting in the summer of 2009. My daily rider/errand-runner is a 1998 Gary Fisher Marlin mountain bike. For longer rides, I use my 2009 Trek XO2 cyclecross bike. I’ve made a few modifications to it, including removing the bumpy cyclecross tires and swapping out the front 46-tooth chainring for a 50-tooth one. I went with a cross bike over a road bike because I’m still a Clydesdale, and I like the slightly longer wheelbase of a cross bike. I’ve also briefly owned a 2011 Trek Madone 5.9, which I sold not long after I bought it due to severely screwing up my right knee.

But electric bicycles—e-bikes—are new territory for me. Broadly speaking, there are two basic options in e-bike land: power-on-demand and pedal-assist. With the former, the rider can control the speed with a throttle instead of just pedaling. Think moped but with an electric motor instead of internal combustion. Pedal-assist, by contrast, requires the rider to do some of the work. The electric motor won’t engage unless the rider is pedaling.

Read 14 remaining paragraphs | Comments



Source: Ars Technica – Faster and farther: Bulls Cross E8 electric bike review

Amazon's Pre-Prime Day Calvin Klein Sale Includes Plenty of Jeans and Tops

Oh wouldn’t you know it, another Calvin Klein pre-Prime Day deal. Today’s selection includes jeans, pants, and various tops for men and women, with prices starting under $20. Just remember that it’s for Prime members only.

Read more…



Source: LifeHacker – Amazon’s Pre-Prime Day Calvin Klein Sale Includes Plenty of Jeans and Tops

GCC 8/9 Land Fix For "-march=native" Tuning On Modern Intel CPUs

The other day we reported on a GCC 8 regression where Skylake and newer CPUs with “-march=native” haven’t been performance as optimally as they should be. Fortunately, that patch was quickly landed into the GCC SVN/Git code for GCC 9 as well as back-ported to GCC 8…

Source: Phoronix – GCC 8/9 Land Fix For “-march=native” Tuning On Modern Intel CPUs

Intel Sends In A Final Batch Of DRM Feature Updates Targeting Linux 4.19

After several big feature pull requests of new “i915” Intel DRM driver features landing in DRM-Next for Linux 4.19, the Intel open-source developers have sent in what they believe to be their last batch of feature changes for queuing this next kernel cycle…

Source: Phoronix – Intel Sends In A Final Batch Of DRM Feature Updates Targeting Linux 4.19

Amazon's Share of the US Ecommerce Market Is Now 49 Percent

New numbers from researchers at eMarketer reveal that Amazon is set to clear $258.22 billion in U.S. retail sales in 2018, “which will work out to 49.1 percent of all online retail spend in the country, and 5 percent of all retail sales,” reports TechCrunch. From the report: It started as an online bookstore, but today Amazon is a behemoth in all areas of e-commerce, fueled by a strong Marketplace network of third-party sellers, an ever-expanding range of goods from groceries to fashion, and a very popular loyalty program in the form of Prime. Now, it is fast approaching a tipping point where more people will be spending money with Amazon, than with all other retailers — combined. Amazon’s next-closest competitor, eBay, a very, very distant second at 6.6 percent, and Apple in third at 3.9 percent. Walmart, the world’s biggest retailer when counting physical stores, has yet to really hit the right note in e-commerce and comes in behind Apple with 3.7 percent of online sales in the U.S. The report goes on to mention that Amazon’s pace has not slowed down. “Its sales are up 29.2 percent versus a year ago, when it commanded 43 percent of all e-commerce retail sales,” reports TechCrunch. These new numbers may renew the prospect of antitrust action being brought against the online giant.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Amazon’s Share of the US Ecommerce Market Is Now 49 Percent

A One-Letter Typo is (in Part) the Reason Aliens: Colonial Marines Sucked

When Aliens: Colonial Marines dropped in 2013, it has built up a ton of hype that made it seem as though the game would transport players into the terror-filled and action-packed Alien universe. Instead, they got an absolute mess of a game that, as it turns out, may have been just one letter away from being good—or at…

Read more…



Source: Gizmodo – A One-Letter Typo is (in Part) the Reason Aliens: Colonial Marines Sucked