Sodium batteries are already in electric cars many months ago
Also you could buy individual cells on AliExpress
If you have been following the Chinese solar industry, you would be aware that solar manufacturers from China, such as Suntec etc have gone bankrupt over the past decade or more. China’s approach of allowing underperforming solar companies to go bankrupt is one of the reasons why their solar industry is so formidable.
I suppose the original source titled it better.
CATL expects its batteries to power electric aircraft with up to 3,000 km range
Is there a source that says its an LMFP battery?
That’s good to know.
To save battery life I suppose. Also some phones may kill a background app even when told not to thus preventing messages from being received.
Probably something that does not require a phone number while still using google firebase notification system? Basically a less buggy version of session messenger.
From my understanding briar requires both clients to be online at the same time to use?
But do you use the equivalent of a Nokia 3210 phone?
If I’m not mistaken, those portable power stations with AC inverters consume power even when not in use. You probably should use the DC output wherever possible.
AliExpress?
Sodium batteries are already in electric cars many months ago
Also you could buy individual cells on AliExpress
According to Euro NCAP all Chinese cars from 2022–2024 got the 5 star safety rating. While many non Chinese models got 4 stars.
Then you should avoid Toyota, Nissan & Tesla as well
https://www.reuters.com/markets/asia/toyota-says-partner-with-tencent-china-2024-04-25/
In the first half of the year, BYD commanded a leading 43.7% share among vehicles running on LFP batteries, according to data from the China Automotive Battery Industry Innovation Alliance. In the months between January and November, BYD held a 41.1% market share, besting CATL’s 33.9% share
Librewolf on PC.
Mull on Android
Literally in the title of the URL it says 2018. That is the old TSMC 7nm not the 7nm SMIC from 2023…
The article is referring to cellular network equipment not mobile phones.