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- 2249. NBN election promise, BYD up, Tesla down and decentralised social media so hot right now
2249. NBN election promise, BYD up, Tesla down and decentralised social media so hot right now
Plus: why did Bitcoin make a man spend a decade trying to dig up a garbage dump?
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Issue 2249 - Tuesday 14th January, 2025
Hello! Here with some more housekeeping. Beehiiv, the platform which I’ve been using to send out the Sizzle, is doing some automatic link tracking. I just wrote a forum post about why this sucks and what I’m trying to do about it.
In Today’s Issue
It’s 2025 and we’re still doing NBN election promises
EV charging via power pole and BYD up, Tesla down
Never been a better time to be decentralised social media
Bitcoin garbage dive legal bid denied
Cheap Coles mobile recharge vouchers, Anker USB C charger, refurbished Lenovo ThinkCentre M900, Edifier MR3 studio monitor speakers, Lubluelu robot vacuum, and TP-Link Deco 3-pack wifi mesh router system
The News
It’s 2025 and we’re still doing NBN election promises
And that’s the starter gun going off for the 2025 election! Yesterday, Anthony Albanese pledged $3 billion in NBN funding to pay for 622,000 new fibre to the premise connections by 2030, and reiterated a promise to keep the network publicly owned. Friend of the Sizzle, The Guardian’s Josh Taylor, summed up the sorry state of NBN policy over the past fifteen years:
“Years of successive governments giving NBN Co funding injections, or loans, has meant that incrementally the NBN by 2030 will now more closely resemble the original plan but has ended up costing a lot more.”
As tempting as it is to look backwards at the obviously moronic takes, we should also question whether this is a good move now. The Australian, predictably, has the most negative takes with TPG saying we shouldn’t be spending money upgrading areas where there’s existing infrastructure ($) and a piece arguing that current bad internet speeds and the ascendance of Starlink and 5G is leading to a (tiny) drop-off in NBN connections already ($) so a NBN splurge is a bad bet. On the latter at least, I think there’s a bit of confusion between cause and effect. I suspect people are leaving crappy NBN fibre-to-the-node copper connections for satellite and cellular, neither of which are capable of handling anywhere close to the lion’s share of the a nation’s connectivity on fibre and copper.
I’m not surprised that it’s an election issue because we all know how important it is to politicians that kids in the bush are losing to gamers overseas because of their poor speeds. (A bonus for the real sickos: enjoy this bonkers NBN take in the Age in 2006).
EV charging via power pole and BYD up, Tesla down
Haven’t had a chance to hit EVs yet this year, so I was excited to see this from Australia’s energy grid lobby group calling to be allowed to install chargers on existing power poles. Energy Networks Australia says adding kerbside chargers would bring down costs by increasing supply and adding competition, but an article notes that there’s a lot of red tape to go through to get them installed and questions about whether it could affect grid reliability. I say have a crack. BYD continues to gain on Tesla, with the Chinese carmaker supposedly Australia’s preferred EV maker over the Musk-owned company which, for the first time, saw a (small) drop in global sales last year. Also OpenAI is now hiring staff reportedly to work on autonomous cars. If only we could directly power cars with Sam Altman’s endless hype…
Never been a better time to be decentralised social media
We spend so much time talking about the Bad social media companies, it’s nice to shine a light on the Good (or at least, better) ones. Decentralised social media service Mastodon will soon be owned by a non-profit organisation, with the founder saying this will ensure it will “be free of the control of a single wealthy individual.” Wonder who he’s talking about? Bluesky, on the other hand, will get a boost from a campaign — backed by Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales, the writer who coined “enshittification” Cory Doctorow and actor Mark Ruffalo — that is seeking to raise $4 million to create an organisation to build off Bluesky’s underlying AT Protocol. The more time I spend online, the more I realise the only option for a good internet is one that’s built on open protocols that give us more choice which is where we should put our energy to support. As a former Twitter addict, I’ve found that Bluesky has pretty much scratched the itch so I highly recommend that you follow The Sizzle.
Oh, Also
Bitcoin garbage dive legal bid denied
I get it. If my ex-girlfriend had dropped off $1.1 billion (and counting) at the tip, I’d probably dedicate a decade to coming up with extravagant schemes about how I could get it back, too. We can all see a little of ourselves in Brit James Howells who just had a judge deny his long-shot bid to force his local Newport Council to let him excavate a council landfill to find a hard drive supposedly holding 8,000 bitcoin, or cough up about a billion dollars in compensation. Howells reckons the hard-drive would still work even if it was crushed. IDK, it seems like the judge did him a favour by putting an end to this, but I’m not sure he agrees.
“It's not about greed, I'm happy to share the proceeds but nobody in a position of power will have a decent conversation with me … This ruling has taken everything from me and left me with nothing. It's the great British injustice system striking again.”
Bargains
20% off Coles Mobile Recharge Vouchers - $25 value for $20, for example, at Coles in-store
Bluetooth LED Pixel Display - $10 at Kmart
amaysim 28-Day Prepaid SIM Starter Pack 44GB - $11 at Coles in-Store
Anker USB C Charger (Nano II 65W) $39.99 at Amazon
UGREEN 10000mAh Magsafe Wireless Power Bank 20W - $42.74 at Amazon
Belkin BoostCharge Pro 4 Port GaN Charger 108W - $68.98 at Amazon
Refurbished Lenovo ThinkCentre M900 Tiny PC i7 6700T Wi-Fi - $139 for 8GB/256GB, $149 for 16/256GB at UN Tech
Patriot Viper Venom 32GB (2x16GB) 6000MHz CL30 DDR5 XMP / EXPO RAM (Hynix B-die) - $142 at Umart
Edifier MR3 Powered Studio Monitor Speakers - $150.92 at Amazon
Refurbished Apple iPhone SE 2nd Gen (2020) 64GB - $169 at Kmart
Lubluelu Robot Vacuum SL60D - $199.99 at Amazon
TCL NXTPAPER 14 256GB Tablet - $548 at Harvey Norman
TP-Link Deco BE65 BE11000 Wi-Fi 7 Tri-Band Mesh Router System (3-Pack) - $799.49 at Amazon
HP 840 G11 U7/16GB/512 SSD - $1,849 at Triforce
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Always Was, Always Will Be Aboriginal Land
The Sizzle is created on Gadigal land and acknowledges the traditional owners of country throughout Australia, recognising their continuing connection to land, water and community. I pay my respect to them and their cultures and to elders both past and present.
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