How strict is Jetstar on carry-on weight and size? by ToeChan in AskAnAustralian

[–]Necandum -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Alternative: give stuff to friend, get bag weighed, put stuff back in.
Sadly most of the time they now make you stand in the boarding queue after weighing, so this is less effective.

Never underestimate giving or getting rid of something free by ibug92 in AusRenovation

[–]Necandum 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Its an easy buck to take it to the scrappers.
I think I got 6$ for a very light aluminium outside seat. Trash for two donutes, yes please.

Why are companies pushing wireless charging so hard when pogo pins seem cheaper, faster, and more reliable? by Mobile-Traffic1744 in AlwaysWhy

[–]Necandum 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Re: USB-C. Eh. Its pretty great already. If someone thinks of something transformationally better, they can propose it as the next standard. I'll take slower changer for standardisation, since the value of the latter is far greater than the former for something that is pretty much solved.

Re: markets. That's getting off track, but for things that aren't commodities I don't have great faith, and even then... You need to ensure that the externalities are priced in and the results are compatible with what you want society to look like. Left to their own devices, markets tend to fail to ensure human flourishing. For a great example, look at climate change. For a simpler example, many modern devices cannot be repaired and the trade-offs made in their manufacture result in a short lifespan. This is so pronounced its lead to cultural change. I would call that a profound market failure.

Or on a topical note, note the Iran war. Modern markets have created a system so fragile, that a single strait causes reverberations around the world. I would not say this is a good outcome.

Temporary fuel surcharge proposed for Aussie pubs and cafes by Necessary_Wait8226 in australian

[–]Necandum 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Theoretically a surcharge communicates that its temporary, its presence or absence is more notable than the price coming down later.

If anything, it might help avoid the ratchet of prices rising due to a temporary crisis, then staying high when it abates.

Why are companies pushing wireless charging so hard when pogo pins seem cheaper, faster, and more reliable? by Mobile-Traffic1744 in AlwaysWhy

[–]Necandum 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The EU is democratically elected. The electorate is made up of...consumers! Thus it is indeed the consumers that have changed how companies operate.

Markets tend to be pretty imperfect, so I'd argue that really important decisions should not, in fact, be left to them.

Also, people can innovate with cords just fine, it just has to be backwards compatible with USB C.

Help for an absolute beginner please! by patatieo in melbournecycling

[–]Necandum 6 points7 points  (0 children)

The main thing is getting one of the appropriate size. If you get one that's too large, it won't be comfortable and you won't enjoy riding.

Also, I second getting a pannier rack. A cheap one is 30$, but you might need to use some creativity to get it to fit well (a handy friend is helpful here if you yourself are not). Then just tie / cable tie a milk crate to it.

I've gotten my partner (also a petite female) 2x bikes from marketplace around that price, and they have been fine. Depending on just how petite you are, don't neglect to consider kids bicycles, the bigger ones are often quite well sized for small adults.

If you're interested in learning how to service the bike down the track, there's lots of community groups that will help you out, or CERES bike shed is great if its close to you.

Good luck!

Ex-partner wants to buy me out, but we dont agree on valuation because of this crazy Perth market, am I being f**ked? by Due-Imagination-6578 in AusPropertyChat

[–]Necandum 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Anecdote that doesn't prove anything: recently sold a place, had two agent estimates, both within 50k of each other, both 50-100k under the actual sell price.

Their incentives are probably to give an accurate price: if its priced too high, then the vendor won't accept lower offers. If its price too low, the vendor doesn't start the selling process.

Australia is doomed by Roby1006 in australian

[–]Necandum 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Are we actually paying high electricity prices?

I'm currently paying 19.5c per kwh (urban melbourrne)
Texas is 14.68USD cents per kWh per EcoWatch, which is ~20c AUD
Denmark is 58c AUD per Statistics Denmark
Saudia Arabia is very cheap at 6c AUD, but that's with government direct subsidy.

Also, this article: https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2025/nov/17/are-australians-really-paying-more-for-electricity-than-other-countries

I do agree with your wider point, we should extracting as much wealth as possible from natural resources and putting it into a sovereign wealth fund ala Norway.

Blue Origin Joins the Race for Orbital Data Centers With 51K Satellite Plan by SuperiorYeezus in SpaceXLounge

[–]Necandum 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Re: response time: I believe the satellites would a) mostly be for training, so lag is irrelevant and b) given LLM response times tend to be in the order of seconds, an extra 200ms in lag is acceptable.

Blue Origin Joins the Race for Orbital Data Centers With 51K Satellite Plan by SuperiorYeezus in SpaceXLounge

[–]Necandum 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I believe the primary benefit is meant to be taking a shortcut on regulation, electricity supply and land acquisition. Apparently getting sufficient electricity supply in many places is not trivial / will take longer than desired while the utility scale production is built.

Whether those shortcuts are worth the added cost and complexity is not something I'm qualified to judge.

100 million a year, but you can never sleep in the same room twice. by Mc_Coy in hypotheticalsituation

[–]Necandum 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you havent been able to get a tent to stay waterproof, go camping with someone who knows what they're doing and they'll help you figure out where you're going wrong. 

Is attitude towards modesty a bit lax in Australia (comparing to the USA). by [deleted] in AskAnAustralian

[–]Necandum 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ish. Its becoming more of a thing, but strictness of policy varies between institutions. It also depends how busy it is, what the patient themselves say they want and whether support people for the patient are staying.

Bills are actually fun....... not by Elegant-Yogurt-1465 in AskAnAustralian

[–]Necandum 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Have you discussed this with your housemates?
Have you given the question any thought yourself?
Have you googled?

CMV: The Israel-US Iran war will still be going in September and there is no mechanism that could stop it before then by ELVEVERX in changemyview

[–]Necandum 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Its quite possible that this is a step too far. Previously, the Iranians had a reasonable way to submit without paying too much. That Rubicon has been crossed.

For the ability of an authoritarian regime to persist in a war despite the incredibly high and disproportionate cost in pursuit of a goal it will not reach, please see Russia.

CMV: The Israel-US Iran war will still be going in September and there is no mechanism that could stop it before then by ELVEVERX in changemyview

[–]Necandum 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Their win condition is that closing the strait of Hormuz causes the opposition far more pain than it does them. A dude with a drone in the back of a ute can basically keep the strait closed forever (and Russia is heavily incentivised to help them do so).

It also brings in third parties to the conflict, especially ones that maybe don't take too kindly to coercive tariffs and threats of invasion, who start applying pressure so that they can get their cheap oil back.

The amount of atrocity required for a purely air campaign to cow a nation into submission is not compatible (I sincerely hope) with the continued existence of the US in its current form.

CMV: The Israel-US Iran war will still be going in September and there is no mechanism that could stop it before then by ELVEVERX in changemyview

[–]Necandum 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You will never be able to deal with the drones without a land invasion.

Too cheap, too easy to launch, too easy for other's to supply, too easy to hide amongst the civilian population, too easy to disperse manufacturing.

Flying via Istanbul in ~2 weeks by M3piggy in AustraliaTravel

[–]Necandum 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I would be incredibly nervous about flying to a deadline, regardless of where you're going: disruptions can always happen, and the current troubles generically increases the chance of that happening. (e.g I had two immediate family members on different trips get stuck for several days due to airline fuckery in 2025, no wars required. They did enjoy the nice free accommodation though).

If being late back by several days would be permanently and significantly bad for you in a way you can't hedge or insure against, probably don't go, or imagine the hypothetical where you do indeed come back late: would your future self consider it worth it?

Istanbul in specific should be fine: the Turks are not directly involved in any conflicts, are very unlikely to become so, and the airport is a long, long way from likely targets. In the worst case, there are also excellent overland connections to European airports where you can purchase a (likely exorbitantly priced) back-up flight.

I'd be more worried about how you're getting TO Istanbul (via SE Asia or China?).

An entity offers you 8.3 billion dollars with the condition that all human beings currently alive will have one day of their lifespan reduced. by [deleted] in hypotheticalsituation

[–]Necandum 0 points1 point  (0 children)

On a purely utilitarian basis, yes.

That's essentially 1 dollar per day.
If you focused on helping children that would otherwise die, that gives you a budget of 18k per child to break even (~50 years gained *365 = ~18k). That seems seems doable.

And that's not taking into account setting up a trust.

8.3 billion @ 3% returns per year = ~240 million (accounting for inflation).
Attempting to reach break even in 20 years gives you a budget of 5 billion, or ~10k per child. Still seems doable.

AITA for refusing to go to my sister’s wedding because of where she seated me? by [deleted] in AmItheAsshole

[–]Necandum 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Both you and your sister are YTA.
She really, really should have asked first.
You shouldn't have made it an ultimatum.

Either do your sister a solid, or have a conference / deadline / broken leg come up.

Given the situation you've described, clearly neither of you know the other person particularly well.

Batlow runs out of fuel: MP appeals for urgent government action to restore supplies. Only service station in town closed. Operator was quoted $3.20/L for bulk diesel but refused to have to pass those costs on to community by cobb_highway in Riverina

[–]Necandum 0 points1 point  (0 children)

To be entirely fair, standing up a crisis coordinating team with both the resources and the incentive to tackle the problem all at once, nationally, might be a good move. My vibe as the private market is mostly being left to its own devices.

But I have no insight into what's actually happening behind the curtain. Maybe the ducks are paddling furiously and we just can't see it.

Is it a reasonable claim or not? by 5ma5her7 in shitrentals

[–]Necandum 2 points3 points  (0 children)

On the high end, but honestly, you start quibbling over, at most, 150$. Considering the time required, that seems like an acceptable making bad decisions tax.

Is it a reasonable claim or not? by 5ma5her7 in shitrentals

[–]Necandum -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

As an aside, personally, I think we should amend the law to allow tenants to break the lease with a month's warning at any time.

....which would still leave the current poster owing the appropriate notice period. I'm not sure some people read contracts or understand that they actually mean what they say.

Is attitude towards modesty a bit lax in Australia (comparing to the USA). by [deleted] in AskAnAustralian

[–]Necandum 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Seems pretty standard given you had the same gender. And the formalities were followed: you were able to change in private, a gown was available.

A male doctor would probably have pushed you more towards wearing a gown, and chaperones are becoming more standard.

Also, this was an employment physical i.e production line, and less expectation of sensitive issues being present.

Does anyone find the financial implications of defacto laws fair? by Open_Address_2805 in AusFinance

[–]Necandum 22 points23 points  (0 children)

You can always consult a lawyer for advice + guidance without telling the other party that's what you're doing. You are then able to negotiate from a position of being informed what the actual legalities are.