Zahlen, bitte! 14 Strafzettel als Keimzelle für die norwegische E-Autowende
Norwegen hat EU-weit die mit Abstand größte Anzahl E-Autos auf ihren Straßen. Den Anfang zu dieser E-Wende schufen die Band a-ha und ein umgebauter Fiat Panda.
#Fiat #Panda schon wieder "verreckt"
Abschleppen war problemlos. Bis zu einem Park-and-Ride-Parkplatz. Dort hatte der laufende Motor die Batterie bereits soviel mit Strom versorgt, dass wieder geschaltet wurde.
just bent over and it hurt so
San Francisco trivia: where is the furthest south Panda Express in city limits?
Nice electric youngtimer from 1992: a Fiat Panda elettra
#EV
Perfect Network Resilience in Polynomial Time
Matthias Bentert, Stefan Schmid
https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.03827 https://arxiv.org/pdf/2602.03827 https://arxiv.org/html/2602.03827
arXiv:2602.03827v1 Announce Type: new
Abstract: Modern communication networks support local fast rerouting mechanisms to quickly react to link failures: nodes store a set of conditional rerouting rules which define how to forward an incoming packet in case of incident link failures. The rerouting decisions at any node $v$ must rely solely on local information available at $v$: the link from which a packet arrived at $v$, the target of the packet, and the incident link failures at $v$. Ideally, such rerouting mechanisms provide perfect resilience: any packet is routed from its source to its target as long as the two are connected in the underlying graph after the link failures. Already in their seminal paper at ACM PODC '12, Feigenbaum, Godfrey, Panda, Schapira, Shenker, and Singla showed that perfect resilience cannot always be achieved. While the design of local rerouting algorithms has received much attention since then, we still lack a detailed understanding of when perfect resilience is achievable.
This paper closes this gap and presents a complete characterization of when perfect resilience can be achieved. This characterization also allows us to design an $O(n)$-time algorithm to decide whether a given instance is perfectly resilient and an $O(nm)$-time algorithm to compute perfectly resilient rerouting rules whenever it is. Our algorithm is also attractive for the simple structure of the rerouting rules it uses, known as skipping in the literature: alternative links are chosen according to an ordered priority list (per in-port), where failed links are simply skipped. Intriguingly, our result also implies that in the context of perfect resilience, skipping rerouting rules are as powerful as more general rerouting rules. This partially answers a long-standing open question by Chiesa, Nikolaevskiy, Mitrovic, Gurtov, Madry, Schapira, and Shenker [IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking, 2017] in the affirmative.
toXiv_bot_toot
#Peugeot E 208 GT
Mich störte am #Panda des #Nachwuchs zuletzt sehr, dass es ein #Verbrenner…