Infographic: Unplugged in California

2 million residents were without power for days at a time in the state’s outages

6,402 wildfires in Calif. as of Nov. 3. Wind-induced fire season runs Oct. to April. Summer fire season runs June through Sept.

In October California utilities cut power to two million customers costing the region billions of dollars in productivity, spoiled food and more. Power was shut off to avoid line-sparked wildfires that might spread by high winds.

In the 1990s, California’s failed attempt to deregulate its utility market began with a poorly designed system that gave unfettered reign to power traders like Enron. The companies were allowed to limit supply and drive up prices. Far from creating market competition, the result was rolling blackouts and corrupt investor-owned utilities.

Pacific Gas & Electric (PG&E) equipment may have caused over nine wildfires at the beginning of October according to federal documents. Currently in bankruptcy from wildfires in 2017 and 2018, inspecting and properly trimming around the state’s 250,000 miles of overhead power lines is a multi-year challenge. PG&E handles 100,000 miles of lines including the state’s most remote regions.

Generators, ice, gas shortage

California residents and businesses experiencing days-long blackouts found local providers in low or no supply of needed generators and the gas to run them.

No hot water, no hot anything

Those fortunate to have generators created a run on fuel. The state with the most stringent air regulations found itself at odds as gas-powered generators fired up around the state to keep refrigerators, freezers, internet routers, EVs and cell phones charged.

Painted into a corner

New electric vehicle (EV) sales in Calif. rose 63.7 percent in the first half of 2019. The state accounts for half of all EVs sold nationwide. Of 950,000 new cars sold statewide in Q1/Q2, 13 percent were electrified (pure EV, hybrid or plug-in hybrid).

EV owners were cautioned

EV owners were issued warnings to keep their vehicles fully charged during the outages and fires. Many EV owners resorted to gas powered generators to charge their EVs.

Only half the solution

California mandates solar panels on all new construction. Solar panels require battery storage in order to operate in a blackout.

Electricity: A shrinking market

Solar panels and other micro energy generation decentralizes the state’s power grid—and profitability. In fact, utility revenue is expected to fall as much as 15 percent, or $48 billion over the next decade according to Accenture.

Generators are common in areas prone to snowstorms and severe weather, but California’s strict emissions standards make the operation of many generators illegal. Typically not an issue with the mild climate, but the blackouts created a new and uncharted market.

Rolling blackouts began in September. California’s air quality regulatory agency is temporarily waiving its restriction on the sale of generators that don’t meet California standards through December. This is to accommodate demand brought on by blackouts.

The surge in generator use—and their ensuing pollution—is not sitting well with California environmentalists. The Calif. Air Resource Board is collecting data on the size and number of gas and propane generators now in the state. But correlating the source and level of pollution of generators will be near impossible as the state also battles wildfires and poor air quality of major cities such as Los Angeles.

Most are prepared for hours-long power outages. Days-long outages are different. Battery backups run out, even emergency lighting only lasts about 12 hours. Food spoils. There’s no hot water for showers. Community entry gates and electronically-controlled front doors stop working. Even emergency lighting in halls and stairwells fail.

Apartment communities and other businesses are not hardened for long-term blackouts.  Michael Wara at Stanford University calculated the shutdown could cost residents and businesses as much as $2.5 billion in losses.

The majority of generators in California are gasoline-powered. The price of gas in California—already the highest in the nation—continues to rise. The average cost per gallon is $4.18, and as much as $5 a gallon in many areas. The huge difference in California and the rest of the nation is its stringent regulations, rising housing costs and fuel taxes. Every gallon sold in California includes a 12-cent tax on gas, and a 20-cents tax on diesel. A repeal of the gas tax failed at the ballot in 2018.

“State and federal laws like the recently approved gas tax [in California], the Low Carbon Fuel Standard and other fuel-related taxes and fees add a little over 92 cents to each gallon of gas and have a profound impact on California’s businesses and communities,” Kara Siepmann, a spokeswoman for the Western States Petroleum Association said.

Download the PDF

Infographic: Quantum supremacy

The man in the machine

Programmed by humans, algorithms begin with a logic tree specifying every facet of the code’s behavior from content prioritization to blacklisting. With Google’s near monopoly, what hangs in the balance is the global economy, billions of dollars in ad revenue for Google, rental housing operators cost of operations—and the shaping of the country’s very thought and culture.

90+ percent of all online searches worldwide are through Google

How Google works (kind of)

Google indexes content while also programming for misspellings, wording idiosyncrasies and more. Google then places the most relevant information at the top of its search results page/section in accordance with undisclosed criteria.

Google’s search results favor large companies, and both its high-revenue advertisers and internal mono chromatic culture as reported in the Wall Street Journal.

What makes a match?

Google says hundreds of factors go into search results including the location of searched words on a webpage, page links, location of searched words, creation date of a page—while removing pages Google deems as scams, deceitful or including hate speech.

“Geopolitical competition and government regulations are poised to remake the digital economy,” according to recent research by consulting firm A.T. Kearney. “The global technological landscape is currently being reconstructed, subjecting the once-free and unfettered transfer of data across borders to new and greater digital walls.” This stems from the view that Big Tech is facilitating false information, monopolizing markets, honing in self-serving technology, as well as the growing concerns surrounding personal data.

Of human hands

No matter how large or small the task to be programmed, developers determine each parameter of the executable program in devising a specific outcome.

Changes to Google’s search algorithms are not fully disclosed though businesses have lived and died by them. The number of annual changes made to Google’s algorithm has grown from around 500 (2010) to roughly 3,200 algorithm changes in (2018).

Quantum supremacy: in the beginning

Google AI’s quantum computer, Sycamore, is said to have reached “quantum supremacy” on Oct. 23 by completing in minutes a math problem that would take today’s supercomputer 10,000 years (Nature magazine). IBM, owner of the world’s fastest two supercomputers said that it would take its supercomputer, Summit, two-and-a-half days. Still, it will be many years before quantum computing has worked through its high rate of errors and is useful or profitable.

The tip of the search

The Federal Trade Commission is running antitrust investigations into Facebook, Alphabet/Google, and Amazon. The FTC will assess whether these firms harmed market competition by way of their mergers and acquisitions as part of “a campaign of exclusionary conduct that includes exclusionary behavior,” said FTC chairman Joseph Simons.

  • 3.8 million online searches made on Google every minute
  • $9 billion EU fines against Google (last three years) for anticompetitive practices
  • $12 billion Google paid in 2019 to remain Safari’s default browser
  • 1 of every 7 Google searches are first-time content searches
  • Google operates in healthcare, phones, laptops, drones, AI, quantum computing, advertising and search.
  • In auto-complete, Google’s feature that predicts search terms as the user types a query, google filters out controversial subjects

Download the PDF

Infographic: Renter nation

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12.3 percent of millennial renters plan to always rent—up from 10.7 percent nationally year-over-year. 9.8 percent of the U.S. population moved in the past year—the smallest number since 1948. 17 percent wanted a new /better home or apartment of those who moved in 2019. Over 12 percent moved for a new job or transfer. 2.9 percent […]

The post Infographic: Renter nation appeared first on MH PRO.

Infographic: Unplugged in California

2 million residents were without power for days at a time in the state’s outages

6,402 wildfires in Calif. as of Nov. 3. Wind-induced fire season runs Oct. to April. Summer fire season runs June through Sept.

In October California utilities cut power to two million customers costing the region billions of dollars in productivity, spoiled food and more. Power was shut off to avoid line-sparked wildfires that might spread by high winds.

In the 1990s, California’s failed attempt to deregulate its utility market began with a poorly designed system that gave unfettered reign to power traders like Enron. The companies were allowed to limit supply and drive up prices. Far from creating market competition, the result was rolling blackouts and corrupt investor-owned utilities.

Pacific Gas & Electric (PG&E) equipment may have caused over nine wildfires at the beginning of October according to federal documents. Currently in bankruptcy from wildfires in 2017 and 2018, inspecting and properly trimming around the state’s 250,000 miles of overhead power lines is a multi-year challenge. PG&E handles 100,000 miles of lines including the state’s most remote regions.

Generators, ice, gas shortage

California residents and businesses experiencing days-long blackouts found local providers in low or no supply of needed generators and the gas to run them.

No hot water, no hot anything

Those fortunate to have generators created a run on fuel. The state with the most stringent air regulations found itself at odds as gas-powered generators fired up around the state to keep refrigerators, freezers, internet routers, EVs and cell phones charged.

Painted into a corner

New electric vehicle (EV) sales in Calif. rose 63.7 percent in the first half of 2019. The state accounts for half of all EVs sold nationwide. Of 950,000 new cars sold statewide in Q1/Q2, 13 percent were electrified (pure EV, hybrid or plug-in hybrid).

EV owners were cautioned

EV owners were issued warnings to keep their vehicles fully charged during the outages and fires. Many EV owners resorted to gas powered generators to charge their EVs.

Only half the solution

California mandates solar panels on all new construction. Solar panels require battery storage in order to operate in a blackout.

Electricity: A shrinking market

Solar panels and other micro energy generation decentralizes the state’s power grid—and profitability. In fact, utility revenue is expected to fall as much as 15 percent, or $48 billion over the next decade according to Accenture.

Generators are common in areas prone to snowstorms and severe weather, but California’s strict emissions standards make the operation of many generators illegal. Typically not an issue with the mild climate, but the blackouts created a new and uncharted market.

Rolling blackouts began in September. California’s air quality regulatory agency is temporarily waiving its restriction on the sale of generators that don’t meet California standards through December. This is to accommodate demand brought on by blackouts.

The surge in generator use—and their ensuing pollution—is not sitting well with California environmentalists. The Calif. Air Resource Board is collecting data on the size and number of gas and propane generators now in the state. But correlating the source and level of pollution of generators will be near impossible as the state also battles wildfires and poor air quality of major cities such as Los Angeles.

Most are prepared for hours-long power outages. Days-long outages are different. Battery backups run out, even emergency lighting only lasts about 12 hours. Food spoils. There’s no hot water for showers. Community entry gates and electronically-controlled front doors stop working. Even emergency lighting in halls and stairwells fail.

Apartment communities and other businesses are not hardened for long-term blackouts.  Michael Wara at Stanford University calculated the shutdown could cost residents and businesses as much as $2.5 billion in losses.

The majority of generators in California are gasoline-powered. The price of gas in California—already the highest in the nation—continues to rise. The average cost per gallon is $4.18, and as much as $5 a gallon in many areas. The huge difference in California and the rest of the nation is its stringent regulations, rising housing costs and fuel taxes. Every gallon sold in California includes a 12-cent tax on gas, and a 20-cents tax on diesel. A repeal of the gas tax failed at the ballot in 2018.

“State and federal laws like the recently approved gas tax [in California], the Low Carbon Fuel Standard and other fuel-related taxes and fees add a little over 92 cents to each gallon of gas and have a profound impact on California’s businesses and communities,” Kara Siepmann, a spokeswoman for the Western States Petroleum Association said.

Download the PDF

Infographic: Quantum supremacy

The man in the machine

Programmed by humans, algorithms begin with a logic tree specifying every facet of the code’s behavior from content prioritization to blacklisting. With Google’s near monopoly, what hangs in the balance is the global economy, billions of dollars in ad revenue for Google, rental housing operators cost of operations—and the shaping of the country’s very thought and culture.

90+ percent of all online searches worldwide are through Google

How Google works (kind of)

Google indexes content while also programming for misspellings, wording idiosyncrasies and more. Google then places the most relevant information at the top of its search results page/section in accordance with undisclosed criteria.

Google’s search results favor large companies, and both its high-revenue advertisers and internal mono chromatic culture as reported in the Wall Street Journal.

What makes a match?

Google says hundreds of factors go into search results including the location of searched words on a webpage, page links, location of searched words, creation date of a page—while removing pages Google deems as scams, deceitful or including hate speech.

“Geopolitical competition and government regulations are poised to remake the digital economy,” according to recent research by consulting firm A.T. Kearney. “The global technological landscape is currently being reconstructed, subjecting the once-free and unfettered transfer of data across borders to new and greater digital walls.” This stems from the view that Big Tech is facilitating false information, monopolizing markets, honing in self-serving technology, as well as the growing concerns surrounding personal data.

Of human hands

No matter how large or small the task to be programmed, developers determine each parameter of the executable program in devising a specific outcome.

Changes to Google’s search algorithms are not fully disclosed though businesses have lived and died by them. The number of annual changes made to Google’s algorithm has grown from around 500 (2010) to roughly 3,200 algorithm changes in (2018).

Quantum supremacy: in the beginning

Google AI’s quantum computer, Sycamore, is said to have reached “quantum supremacy” on Oct. 23 by completing in minutes a math problem that would take today’s supercomputer 10,000 years (Nature magazine). IBM, owner of the world’s fastest two supercomputers said that it would take its supercomputer, Summit, two-and-a-half days. Still, it will be many years before quantum computing has worked through its high rate of errors and is useful or profitable.

The tip of the search

The Federal Trade Commission is running antitrust investigations into Facebook, Alphabet/Google, and Amazon. The FTC will assess whether these firms harmed market competition by way of their mergers and acquisitions as part of “a campaign of exclusionary conduct that includes exclusionary behavior,” said FTC chairman Joseph Simons.

  • 3.8 million online searches made on Google every minute
  • $9 billion EU fines against Google (last three years) for anticompetitive practices
  • $12 billion Google paid in 2019 to remain Safari’s default browser
  • 1 of every 7 Google searches are first-time content searches
  • Google operates in healthcare, phones, laptops, drones, AI, quantum computing, advertising and search.
  • In auto-complete, Google’s feature that predicts search terms as the user types a query, google filters out controversial subjects

Download the PDF

Infographic: Renter nation

12.3% of millennial renters plan to always rent—up from 10.7 percent nationally year-over-year.

9.8% of the U.S. population moved in the past year—the smallest number since 1948.

17% wanted a new /better home or apartment

of those who moved in 2019. Over 12 percent moved for a new job or transfer.

2.9% rise in wages from Sept. 2017 to Sept. 2018—the largest wage increase in a decade (not counting for inflation)

Rent fuel: jobs
  • Labor-force participation is now 63.3 percent, a solid gain from 62.9 percent year-over-year.
  • Strong employment growth among millennials (25-34) is helping power a surge in household formations.
  • Average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent in Oct., even with the GM worker strike and baby boomers retiring at peak career earnings.
  • Robust job growth has also helped support consumer spending, which helped the U.S. economy power ahead.
  • Hiring has slowed to 176,000 in payroll gains for the last three months but still exceeds population growth.

Download the PDF