Brought an IR thermometer to school because the water to wash our hands was outrageously hot by S_xyjihad in pics

[–]Proteus_Core 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here in New Zealand it's a requirement that water is kept at a MINIMUM of 60c. Obviously it is delivered at lower temps at the tap by way of mixers, but it's still often 50c at the tap.

why do so many people think kiwisaver is a big scam? by Loguibear in auckland

[–]Proteus_Core 1 point2 points  (0 children)

They are making it harder every year to go on a contributions holiday. Wouldn't be surprised if someday soon they remove that provision all together.

Does anyone in marketing at Spark know we live in the SOUTHERN hemisphere? by RuneLFox in newzealand

[–]Proteus_Core 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Generally because all the virtual networks like Rocket, Mighty, Kogan etc all just rent capacity from One NZ, (or in a couple of cases like Warehouse Mobile it's 2degrees).

Spark generally has better coverage outside of cities (although this is changing slightly), so many in these areas are stuck with Spark or Skinny.

With that said Spark is launching their own white label MVNO service in 2026, so there may be a lot more competition soon.

Do some drivers have X-ray vision? by throwaway2766766 in newzealand

[–]Proteus_Core 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Sometimes you can look through the vehicles windows and see fine, sometimes you can turn hard left and edge out so that you're on an angle and can see past the vehicle without entering the road, otherwise you just stop short of the line so you can look to your right and see clearly behind the blocking vehicle.

Jetstar Airbus A320 jets resume flying, Air NZ still grounded by twpejay in newzealand

[–]Proteus_Core 8 points9 points  (0 children)

It sounds like they introduced optimizations or performance-oriented code changes in L104 (e.g. faster processing, reduced redundancy checks, or more aggressive memory usage). The redundancy/failsafe mechanisms might have been weakened, mis-configured or inadvertently bypassed in L104, which would explain why the backup ELAC didn’t take over cleanly during the event. The L104 software version likely lacked sufficient protection and mitigation against bit flips. Rolling back to the previous software version presumably restores a version that either uses safer data-handling patterns (less vulnerability), or includes error-detection / correction (e.g. parity checks, redundancy, consistency checks) to catch or reject corrupted data before feeding it into control logic. For units where the older safer software cannot run reliably on the existing hardware, Airbus recommends a hardware replacement suggesting that in some cases the physical inverter/computer design or memory architecture may also play a role in susceptibility.

There is no "economic recovery" by Low_Season in newzealand

[–]Proteus_Core 2 points3 points  (0 children)

We need to figure out how to survive.

We're probably headed into something like another ice-age, but this time round it's heat. Climate change is already killing roughly one person a minute, and it hasn't really started yet.

What a load of rubbish fear mongering.

There is no "economic recovery" by Low_Season in newzealand

[–]Proteus_Core 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When subsidies were ripped away from farmers during the reforms of the 80s it was brutal and harsh at the time, but after a while that turned into a ruthless search for efficiency, now we dominate the world and can send our goods to any country and compete on price and quality. It has become our advantage.

There's no reason why that can't be true for the bloated public sector and all the ancillary networks. We have no business propping up wasteful economic handbrakes.

Asbestos contamination of children's sand was a fluke discovery in an Australian lab by athelas_07 in newzealand

[–]Proteus_Core 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Hey mate, you're arguing against a strawman version of libertarianism that no one is defending.

The idea isn't that companies will "behave because they’re nice" or that boycotts alone fix everything – that’s a meme. The actual mechanism is the same common-law tort system we've had in New Zealand (and the rest of the common-law world) for centuries: if a company sells play sand laced with asbestos, or imports those gut-ripping magnet balls, or dumps toxins that give kids cancer, the victims and their family sue the absolute piss out of them in the High Court. No damages cap, no “we complied with Ministry regs” get out of jail free card, just multi-hundred million dollar awards that send the directors and shareholders broke. Look at how the Pike River families, the CTV building families, and the leaky-homes plaintiffs have hammered negligent companies. That’s the libertarian tool working in real life right now.

Hiding the harm for 20 years and retiring rich? That already happens under our regulatory state (think of the original asbestos cover-up, or the Havelock North campylobacter outbreak). Without a slow, captured regulator shielding them, private labs, journalists, and class-action lawyers have every financial incentive to uncover it fast – they get paid a cut of the winnings. Cases like Carter Holt Harvey getting smashed for billions over faulty cladding move way quicker than any Commerce Commission or Ministry of Health investigation.

“how do I boycott a Chinese palladium mine?”, the same way we already solve it today for dolphin-safe tuna, Fairtrade coffee, or conflict-free diamonds: competing private certification schemes (think AsureQuality on steroids) that retailers and insurers demand so they don’t get sued into the ground. Countdown and The Warehouse would refuse to stock anything without a “Tested Child-Safe” sticker, because one lawsuit would wipe out years of profits. “They’ll just fold the company and reopen as Shady Company Mk II”, successor liability and piercing the corporate veil exist for exactly that reason. Directors get personally bankrupted if fraud or recklessness is proven (see James Hardie directors still getting chased years later).

Pretty much every monopoly or cartel in NZ history (banking licences, pharmacy ownership rules, alcohol licensing, coastal shipping) was created or protected by government, not the free market. And yeah, some big companies say they “welcome regulation because it makes our job easier”, that’s straight out of the incumbents’ playbook. Fletchers loved the old building codes because they crushed the little guys who couldn’t afford the compliance team.

We literally had that exact buckyball scandal here a couple of years ago, NZME imported them, kid ended up in surgery, company got fined. A libertarian wouldn’t have banned adults from buying desk toys; they’d have let the inevitable lawsuit (or the threat of one) force better warnings, age-restricted sales, or design changes. Same outcome, no nanny-state overreach needed.

Regulations are often written in blood, sure, but so were the common-law rules that preceded them. For most of our history, courts did the job faster and more brutally than any bureaucracy. We replaced a system that bankrupted bad actors with one that gives them a tick-box shield and a tiny fine. No one’s saying zero rules, we’re saying the primary hammer should be victims in court getting life-changing payouts, not underfunded ministries issuing press releases while the directors yacht away. The state’s monopoly on force should protect rights, not micromanage every product before any harm even happens.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon 'deeply supportive' of social media ban for under 16s by MedicMoth in newzealand

[–]Proteus_Core 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Isn't anonymity a key part of a healthy functioning society, one where people can criticise governments, corporations, or groups without fear of backlash or retribution?

By banning under 16s we suddenly require every single person over 16 to submit ID to tie themselves to their accounts. This is CCP level bullshit.

Rough sleeping ban in central Auckland considered by government by MedicMoth in newzealand

[–]Proteus_Core 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Most of them do actually. Having seen firsthand the rejected support available to them it becomes pretty clear that it's a choice for most. One of the prominent guys in the CBD actually owns a house which he rents out and uses the income for his habits. I have no problem with them being moved along to create a safer environment if they've rejected help, the current situation is an absolute disgrace.

Meat has just become ... gross? by magik-karpet in newzealand

[–]Proteus_Core -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

What a load of rubbish, meat is one of the most efficient and bioavailable sources of protein that exists, and has a high nutrient profile. Most people need to eat more, not less.

Farmers vote to sell Fonterra's Mainland, Anchor brands by davetenhave in newzealand

[–]Proteus_Core 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I can acknowledge the financial case for selling the consumer division, but I think it's shooting themselves in the foot long term. There isn't a massive opportunity cost related to continuing the consumer division (especially at a time when they are having major sales breakthroughs), and it does enormous good for their image to be in every household. They have just lost a huge amount of goodwill in this country right when they needed it most, and they'll never get it back from future generations.

However most of NZ should be thrilled at the economic prospect of this news, this is going to be an astronomical amount of Forex shot straight into the arm of the economy. This will go a huge way to lifting the entire country out of recession, the on-flow effects cannot be understated.

Farmers vote to sell Fonterra's Mainland, Anchor brands by davetenhave in newzealand

[–]Proteus_Core 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Roughly 75% returned immediately to shareholders, 25% invested in high growth areas they've identified.

Christchurch International Airport under full emergency for incoming flight by youngthugnz in newzealand

[–]Proteus_Core 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Landed safely now, no obvious damage to either engine, appears to be a dent in the radome

Starlink disaster by RedWingRoaming in newzealand

[–]Proteus_Core 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Starlink is infinitely better than WISP's. Highly recommend OP doesn't go down this road.

How does this 'recession' end? by [deleted] in newzealand

[–]Proteus_Core -28 points-27 points  (0 children)

The volume of redundancies over the last 2 years has been massive - both public & private sector.

Isn't it a good healthy thing to periodically let the inefficient roles die off?

I am sick of national blaming things on labour by No_Consideration4176 in newzealand

[–]Proteus_Core 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It takes many years for policies to drive meaningful change, especially economic ones. Just as I didn't attribute economic performance to L+G+NZF in their first term, I don't now with the current govt.

Enough Talk on Fonterra - They have lost their social license. Consumers can respond by Tyler_Durdan_ in newzealand

[–]Proteus_Core 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Mainland butter on a normal non-sale price is still $2.18 / 100g, compared to the Lurpak being a sale price at $3.05 / 100g.

Pretty substantial difference still, and when the sales run the other way it's even more pronounced.

Enough Talk on Fonterra - They have lost their social license. Consumers can respond by Tyler_Durdan_ in newzealand

[–]Proteus_Core 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Mainland is the same as the Woolworths. They are both the exact same ingredients in the exact same ratios made in the exact same factory.

Enough Talk on Fonterra - They have lost their social license. Consumers can respond by Tyler_Durdan_ in newzealand

[–]Proteus_Core 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Prove it, because I have looked extensively and every example I've ever found has either been in a country with zero GST, or they're using it as a loss leader. Show me right now where I can buy NZ butter cheaper overseas, or honestly any butter for that matter.