A #MerryChristmas and #HappyHolidays to all of @Mastodon world! Have a great day! ❄️☃️
Today's RadarSat 2 SAR satellite image close to the North Pole (showing sea ice): polarview.aq/arctic
Here is something I’ll bet you’ve never seen before — an actual partridge in an actual pear tree!
🎶 “On the first day of Christmas, my true love brought to me…” 🎄
The War on Christmas isn’t fully a figment of Fox News’s imagination. But the villains are today’s capitalist Scrooges, relentlessly exploiting their workers with long hours and low wages through the holidays.jacobin.com
I bought a brunch of eneloop pro, but using them in connected thermostats was always displaying "low battery" even after just fully charged. This is when I discovered that they are actually 1.2V
It really came as a surprise, is there a catch? Are they only good for low power stuff like remote controls?
Edit: it seems they do exist in lithium. Question remains why are the NiMH only 1.2v and why are they the most widespread?
I’m curious to know if this is a thing other ADHD and/or autistic folks experience, or if it’s just from the TBI (traumatic brain injury).
So just like when muscles start hurting from over exertion, when my brain gets overstimulated it physically hurts. Much like muscles hurt. If I push my brain too hard it hurts a lot. It’s also similar to when our sensory nervous system gets overloaded causing shutdowns/meltdowns and causes an achy feeling all over the body. It’s very much a physical body organ thing instead of a personality trait.
Anyone know what I’m talking about? Do you experience similar?
A crazy calendar convergence means a Plain Reading episode for Christmas! Check out our conversation with Jacqueline Hidalgo on myths of innocence, mercenary #reading, and rediscovering the enjoyment of #Books.
plainreading.libsyn.com/innoce…
@PodcastsLive @podcasts @bookstodon #podcast
Professor of theology and religious studies tells us about extractive reading, myths of innocence, and recovering the enjoyment of books. Intro and outro music: "" courtesy Music_Unlimited on Pixabay.plainreading.libsyn.com
This year's Ghost Story for Christmas by Mark Gatiss is an adaptation of the Edith Nesbit classic, Man-size in Marble. As usual, he takes it a bit further than the original, introducing Nesbit as a character and adding a satisfying coda. Properly atmospheric.
bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m002…
Edith Nesbit recounts the chilling tale of newlywed Victorians Jack and Laura and the legend of two marble tomb effigies, who are said to rise each year and walk.BBC iPlayer
@Notizie dall'Italia e dal mondo
La crisi del turismo causata dalla guerra infinita di Netanyahu ha gettato nella crisi migliaia di famiglie nella città della Natività. Celebrazioni natalizie solo religiose
L'articolo NATALE. Per il secondo anno, Betlemme cancella la festa in
His story is a stark reminder of the hardships Palestinians endure under the ongoing genocide in Gaza, where war destroys not only lives but also aspirations.
#Gaza #SaveGaza #StopIsrael #SaveTheChildren
#palestine #Israel #Politics #Genocide #PeaceNow #StopTheWar #CeasefireNow
$3.1 billion budget surplus for 2024/25.
#auspol
#WA
'Heartless': Mia and Evee told of eviction days before Christmas with nowhere to go
sbs.com.au/news/article/couple…
Three jurisdictions in Australia permit landlords to evict tenants without a reason during month-to-month agreements.Christopher Tan (SBS News)
Muse
Albanese thought bubble "gotta get rid of that WA nature bill. My mining mates won't be happy otherwise. Gotta get a job on a mining board after retirement."
Tongues | Языки
straycatsobserver.ru/cats/2024…
#twocats #двакота #fedicats #cats #ねこ #猫 #коты #tabbycats #catsofpixelfed #pixelfedcats #catbuddies
I've bought a few of these before (no affiliation) amazon.com/dp/B0CCL7TJ48
Edit: this is a link to 1.5V rechargeable batteries, which I commented before OP's edit acknowledging them.
Yeah but they're a cheat. They're lithium cells regulated down to 1.5v. Good ones are rare, when you find good ones they're generally expensive and because they're regulated down you generally get 100% battery showing until just before they fail.
I used them for some voltage sensitive stuff, but finding a brand that held a good charge for more than even 50-100 charges was hard.
Nimh is much better for anything that won't be upset about the voltage too much.
KLVR Charger Pro • Rack mounted AA battery charger • KLVR
KLVRIt boils down to chemistry. The nickle-metal-hydride chemistry used in rechargeable batteries just don't produce 1.5V (explaining why is a lot more complicated), while the alkaline chemistry in non-rechargable batteries produces slightly more volts.In the same vein, lithium-ion batteries produce around 3.6V, while lead-acid produce about 12.4V.
To answer your other question, they should be able to power most things that aren't an analog clock (which might run slightly slow).
Car batteries are 6 cells in series.
classic rechargeable batteries are always 1.2V. That's due to the chemistry.
The "low power" warning is the reason why a lot of devices will tell you not to use rechargeable batteries, as they will trigger the low battery warning earlier, and the cutoff voltage might be reached earlier.
I think there are modern rechargable lithium batteries with usb ports that will emulate 1.5V batteries and their voltage curve. But they have their own quirks as well
Different chemistries produce different voltages per cell. Alkaline produces 1.5v, NiMH produces 1.2v, Li-Ion produces 3.6v. These are averages, the actual voltage varies over the current charge level of the cell. This variation in voltage is how the low battery alarm actually works, although Alkaline cells produce 1.5v initially, once they are nearly empty they are producing 1.1-1.2v. Your thermostats will likely work fine on NiMH batteries, if you can live with them continually complaining about the batteries being low.
There are, or at least were, rechargeable alkaline batteries, but they don't last many cycles.
The 1.5v Li-Ions have a tiny circuit board on them that regulates the voltage down to 1.5v, which takes up space so the capacity is reduced. You could do that with NiMH, but it would have less capacity than the Li-Ion version, so there's little point.
For me it's the opposite.
I pretty much only use batteries for my wireless mouse and my Xbox controller. When the batteries die I just recharge them and put them back a few hours later.
I finally bought some rechargeables again this year after shunning them years ago but that's just because I 3D printed a bunch of Christmas lights that have battery powered RGB pucks inside them.
Funnily enough, I started with all alkaline until the rechargables came in the mail at which time I replaced half of them with rechargeables which have already died and needed recharging before the other half with the original alkaline have needed to be replaced.
Previously, the only really good use I had for them was with my old Xbox 360 controllers since I could have a pair on the charger while using the other pair.
Huh, I use exclusively rechargeable batteries in everything. Works great.
Except the smoke alarm, that one complains if I don't use lithium
Same. Temp sensors, flashlights, game controllers, thermostat, whatever. Haven't had any issues.
The only time they suck is when a device wants an odd number of batteries. And my charger only works with tandem batteries. Not really sure of the implications, but charging two batteries with significantly different charge makes me nervous.
Idk, I use one that charges 8. Both double and triple A's
Always have spares in the charger ready to go
There are battery chargers that allow charging an odd number of batteries, even single batteries. I have a charger that is powered through USB, similar to the following:
The one I have has two power inputs: an USB-C and Micro USB, so it can be powered by any of these.
Google seems to have set their nest protect units to need six lithium AA non-rechargeable cells. Which is 1.8v, not 1.5v. You put in completely fresh batteries verified with a multimeter at above 1.5v (1.58v iirc) and they’ll complain about it.
I bought lithium rechargeable and they’re 1.5v. Which seems reasonable. I wish all of ‘em would be one standard.
Feels instead like we have AA-, AA, and AA+.
Eneloops are about the best rechargable AA and AAAs you can buy, they last close to forever. I've got some that are a decade old and still in use after thousands of uses and still about 80% of original. You chose well.
And it's fine. I used to use them a lot for GPSrs. A pair of eneloops lasts about 8 hours in an Oregon. A pair of decent branded Alkaline AAs lasts about 7-8.
The voltage is not an indicator of charge life when you're comparing different chemistries. The reason you're seeing low charge is that your device is not calibrated for rechargables. In things that are, they have settings for both so you can select which you use. If your thermostats don't, then they'll always removed about anything other than Alkalines.
Not your fault, but doesn't mean it's incorrect. I used to work in procurement, so I keep up with this stuff.
The consumer organisation is which.co.uk, well worth the subscription price
Ansmann are so popular, you can't buy them from Amazon or they'll be fakes. Stick to places like cpc.co.uk