The new law requires the installation of solar panels in all *public* parking lots operated by the government. I checked this through local news sources.
In South Korea, there are already incentives to install solar panels on buildings, including parking lots. If you operate a solar power system with a capacity of over 20 kW, you can sell the generated electricity at prices higher than the market rate thanks to government support programs.
Despite these benefits, many parking lots in South Korea still do not install solar panels. This is mainly because, given the country’s high population density, most parking lots are located on land that is considered potential development sites. Once solar panels are installed, it becomes more difficult to change the land use later for development purposes, and the owners would also have to bear additional costs for removing the panels.
Congratulations on having been born into an environment where you’ve had the privilege of becoming so fluent in English that you feel comfortable complaining about other people’s stylistic choices in writing.
Note: This comment was translated using an LLM.
> you feel comfortable complaining about other people’s stylistic choices in writing
Yeah, why be such a privileged prick that you belittle someone's diction? Everyone should be free to write how they want to. In fact: if you complain about grammar you're just as fucking classist, you reactionary scum. Hell, there's no real difference between unintelligible grunting and pointing and properly written sentences in a tone appropriate for the context.
The point being made is that fluency in English is usually due to birth and lack of fluency isn’t an indicator of stupidity
To be simplistic, fluency in English is not an indicator of greater intelligence than someone born to non English speaking parents
If Python community and CPython developers were more open to PyPy, many things could be changed. A group of people talks about how good having a third-party interpreter in Python community while the whole Python eco-system is heavily relying on the old (maybe good-enough) Python C API.
Whenever I meet a C API issue on RustPython project (yes, I contribute to RustPython), I think about PyPy, and check what's going on C API, and realize 15 years was not enough to change things. Now the momentum of PyPy is not that strong as before. I believe Python community lost a huge chance.
Hope HPy or something can save PyPy. Maybe RustPython also will get a chance around there.
Core contributors still contributing regularly.
Problem of PyPy was making decisions that's really bad for exposure - like having non GitHub repo because they love mercurial. I love mercurial too but to contribute to opensource have to use GitHub. Which they finally moved now.
I hope PyPy will become popular again.
to be clear i don't know if the project supports the feature out of the box; it just seems to me like something it would enable, and that i would have expected to see called out as a use case in the README.
The new law requires the installation of solar panels in all *public* parking lots operated by the government. I checked this through local news sources.
In South Korea, there are already incentives to install solar panels on buildings, including parking lots. If you operate a solar power system with a capacity of over 20 kW, you can sell the generated electricity at prices higher than the market rate thanks to government support programs.
Despite these benefits, many parking lots in South Korea still do not install solar panels. This is mainly because, given the country’s high population density, most parking lots are located on land that is considered potential development sites. Once solar panels are installed, it becomes more difficult to change the land use later for development purposes, and the owners would also have to bear additional costs for removing the panels.