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Why the Work Still Matters

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freeAgent
22 hours ago
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Now is absolutely not the time to stop supporting journalism, particularly that which focuses on the intersection of technology and human rights.
Los Angeles, CA
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Police Freak Out at iPhones Mysteriously Rebooting Themselves, Locking Cops Out

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freeAgent
1 day ago
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I have to imagine this is some sort of bug.
Los Angeles, CA
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How China is poised to dominate the ‘electric donkey’ industry | Semafor

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In many ways, the humble two-wheeler is the most successful electric vehicle China has ever rolled out on a scale that is truly mind-blowing.

More than 45 million are sold every year in China, Joseph Constanty, senior director of global strategy and growth at NIU, a Nasdaq-listed Chinese electric two-wheeler brand, told me. Nationwide, some 400 million electric two-wheelers — mostly mopeds — were zipping on the road at the end of 2023, according to state-run newswire Xinhua, compared to 20.4 million electric cars. In my hometown, Shanghai, the number of electric mopeds reached 10 million last year, meaning one in every 2.5 people owned one. The vast majority of these look like Vespas and are designed to travel no faster than 25 kilometers, or about 15 miles, an hour. Technically, they are classified as electric bicycles in China and, when fully charged, can cover 40-60 kilometers.

From daily commutes to school runs and everything in between, these mopeds — endearingly dubbed “little electric donkeys” — carry their owners everywhere. You can’t miss them: outside wet markets, metro stations, and shopping malls, filling the pavement to the brim while carrying personalized stickers to help their owners spot them.

During a recent visit home, I saw rows of them hooked up to communal charging pods inside residential estates and outside shops. Facilities like these — designed for safer charging — are cheap to use and easy to find.

China’s two-wheeler sector shares some characteristics with its four-wheelers, which are better understood — and more feared — in the West. Electric mopeds have benefitted from subsidies for consumers as well as China’s massive manufacturing capacity, and the companies that make them have been shaped by rapid expansion and brutal price wars, fostering a handful of well-known brands: Yadea, based in the eastern city of Wuxi and listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, sold 16.5 million electric two-wheelers last year, with revenues just shy of $5 billion.

And, much as the domestic Chinese market has become saturated with electric cars, prompting automakers to look abroad, two-wheeler manufacturers are following suit.

Yadea’s VP Zhou told 21st Century Business Herald that he expected Southeast Asia to be the largest export market for Chinese two-wheelers, followed by South America and Africa. In May, his company started building a $150 million factory in Indonesia, which is set to produce 3 million two-wheelers every year. It has also expanded into Vietnam. Some companies have ventured farther: NIU has targeted the European and US markets in addition to Southeast Asia, with Constanty telling me he did “not see major competition from non-Chinese manufacturers” in the West. Deloitte projects annual demand for electric two-wheelers outside China will jump from 21.1 million in 2022 to 46.3 million in 2026.

The US was the largest overseas market for Chinese two-wheeler makers last year, in part because e-bikes and their components were exempted from a list of Chinese products subject to a 25% tariff instituted by recently reelected US President Donald Trump, according to Shanghai-based consultancy iResearch. But the tariff exclusion ended in June, and the Biden administration has announced a 25% tariff on e-bike batteries starting in 2026.

Yet there are also unique factors that spurred the two-wheeler market. For one, motorcycles have been banned or heavily restricted in many parts of China since the turn of the century, largely due to road safety concerns. Around that time, major cities also started outlawing tens of millions of gasoline-fueled mopeds in an effort to tackle air pollution

Sales of electric mopeds boomed soon afterwards, with more than 32 million sold every year throughout the 2010s, according to Deloitte. Growth accelerated from 2019 after the central government revised safety requirements and handed out subsidies.

They are extremely affordable, too. At one store in north Shanghai, a candy-colored model produced by Aima, another popular brand, was being promoted at 2,399 yuan ($336), around 20% of what an average resident earns monthly in the city. “Most of the models we have are under 4,000 yuan ($560),” the store’s owner told me.

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freeAgent
1 day ago
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The sooner electric scooters replace all the obnoxious (and noxious) 2-stroke scooters around Asia, the better.
Los Angeles, CA
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Nov 7th, 2024 - Announcing Kagi Translate

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Announcing Kagi Translate

Never get lost in translation again. Today, we launch Kagi Translate, offering superior translations across 244 languages.

Key features:

  • Higher quality translations than Google Translate and DeepL
  • Zero tracking, no apps needed
  • Free for everyone (Kagi members get captcha-free access)

Try it now at translate.kagi.com or read the announcement post.

Kagi on mobile

We've added search buttons to our homepage to make it easier for you to choose your search type on mobile:

Install Kagi for Android and help us reach 5,000 installs needed for Kagi to submit application for Android choice screen.

Kagi iOS app is currently pending Apple review.

What else are we working on?

We are currently working on Kagi for Teams plan. This will allow you to bring your entire team or organization to Kagi. We'll have two options available: Professional and Ultimate tier, with fair and flexible pricing (inactive team members do not pay). We expect to launch in two weeks. Let us know if you would like to test this earlier by emailing support@kagi.com.

Improvements and bug fixes

Bangs

This release includes several new bangs and a significant cleanup of older ones. You can read the full changelog here. These changes were driven by our community, and we appreciate all contributions to our open source Bangs repo!
Here's a preview of our latest additions:

  • !attack: search <a href="http://site:attack.mitre.org" rel="nofollow">site:attack.mitre.org</a>
  • !jsr: jsr.io
  • !fast: moved to FastGPT
  • !javadoc: Java 23 API docs, docs.oracle.com/en/java/javase/23/docs/api/search
  • !startech: <a href="http://startech.com" rel="nofollow">startech.com</a>
  • dropout: dropout.tv

Kagi in the wild

Here is this week's featured social media mention:

Tag our account or use #Kagi when mentioning us in your posts!

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freeAgent
1 day ago
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I tried out the translation service earlier today and was mildly imipressed. Hopefully they integrate it more into their browser plugins and apps.
Los Angeles, CA
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AOL’s ‘You’ve Got Mail’ voice, Elwood Edwards, dies at age 74

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Elwood Edwards, the voice of AOL’s “You’ve Got Mail” greeting, has died at age 74 after a long illness, according to local Ohio news station WKYC, where he was employed for many years.

During a 2016 interview, Edwards recounted how he became the voice of AOL. His wife, who worked at Quantum Computer Services (which later became AOL), heard that the company was looking to add a voice to its software. “I’d been an announcer throughout my entire broadcasting career, and she volunteered me,” Edwards said.

In 1989, Edwards recorded the once-ubiquitous phrase, along with “Welcome,” “Files done,” and “Goodbye” on a cassette tape for just $200. “It started off as a test just to see if it would catch on, and lo and behold, in the mid-90s, it had really caught on.”

Screenshot: The Verge

As a longtime AOL user (yes, I still use AOL to this day), I’m ashamed to admit that I never knew there was a person behind that iconic voice — I thought it was computer-generated. Even now, Edwards’ voice will continue to live on in my inbox, which still declares, “You’ve Got Mail.”

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freeAgent
1 day ago
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Los Angeles, CA
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Read as many times as needed

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soberscientistlife:

Read as many times as needed

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freeAgent
1 day ago
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Los Angeles, CA
ScottInPDX
2 days ago
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Portland, Oregon, USA, Earth
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