"The EU made Apple adopt new Wi-Fi standards, and now Android can support AirDrop"
"The EU made Apple adopt new Wi-Fi standards, and now Android can support AirDrop"
Did you know? If you have data that you want to share as a citable source, you need a DOI (Digital Object Identifier). One provider of DOIs is https://zenodo.org/ a project funded by CERN, OpenAIRE and the European Union. Register, add your data and get a DOI! It has Github integration, so you can just point it to a Github repo and whenever you add a release on Github, you get a DOI 😊 I will try to get the same functionality in codeberg/Forgejo.
Example: https://zenodo.org/records/16903106
Did you know? If you have data that you want to share as a citable source, you need a DOI (Digital Object Identifier). One provider of DOIs is https://zenodo.org/ a project funded by CERN, OpenAIRE and the European Union. Register, add your data and get a DOI! It has Github integration, so you can just point it to a Github repo and whenever you add a release on Github, you get a DOI 😊 I will try to get the same functionality in codeberg/Forgejo.
Example: https://zenodo.org/records/16903106
Did you know? If you have data that you want to share as a citable source, you need a DOI (Digital Object Identifier). One provider of DOIs is https://zenodo.org/ a project funded by CERN, OpenAIRE and the European Union. Register, add your data and get a DOI! It has Github integration, so you can just point it to a Github repo and whenever you add a release on Github, you get a DOI 😊 I will try to get the same functionality in codeberg/Forgejo.
Example: https://zenodo.org/records/16903106
Would be interesting to know how many households and companies survived due to solar and batteries. This outage once again shows, IMHO (In My Humble Opinion), how decentralising The Grid (which is happening) can create a buffer effect to soften the impact of such big outages.
8/n
Also, also. Losing such a big chunk of the European grid in a matter of minutes did NOT lead to ripple effects east of France, it seems. Which shows how resilient the grid actually is. This failed in 2006 (see the link in comment #4 of this thread), so it seems lessons have been learned. Which is A Damn Good Thing. At least here in Germany we saw no outages at all, AFAICS. #ThanksEU!
9/n