| > I don't know where you live, but where I'm living Exactly. There's a lot you don't know. > I'm just telling how it is. You're not telling it "how it is". You're telling a fantasy and calling it "realistic policies". You didn't even know about things like TV Pickup, did you? And you can't even imagine how your "realistic policies" would affect the grid. You didn't even know that smart meters are not everywhere. You didn't think how selling "good power" only to the rich would affect everyone. (Oh, right, anyone who won't be able to afford it are just cheapskates). Yup. "Just how it is". > so I'd guess their uplink is down, and they can't do FTP. Ah yes. Great smart meters that should be installed in the millions and people should rely on them to properly turn off and turn on gigawatts of power in the blink of an eye. |
Of course I know about effects like TV-Pickup, though I don't have TV since 1996.
Maybe I should have marked it as sarcasm?
Furthermore I also know that smart meters aren't everywhere, but I've been aware of them for a long time, and also of regions where they've been installed before they got installed here.
What can I say? I'm living the fucking cyberpunk dystopy where corporations make the rules, politicians are fools, but most people are too, so it actually IS some form of democracy, because it represents the majority, otherwise they wouldn't have elected the fools.
So. How it is... I know about blinking E-21 because I had to walk into the cellar to read the meter and email the counter value to my utility a few days ago.
Anything else? Do you want to have fries with that?
Or maybe https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackout_(Elsberg_novel) ?
Yes I'm very wary about cyberphysical systems implemented by the lowest bidder, and operated by outsourced nobodies.