h a l f b a k e r yTrying to contain nuts.
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This reminds me of something my dad told me once about procuremnt of office supplies. Naturally, one would want to shop around for the best deal, however, one should not spend so much time looking-- after all, if a person is paid $20 an hour, and spends an hour to save 10 cents on some printing paper, he has not does his boss a favor. |
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The same principle applies here. Entering all your dirty dishes into a cleaning algorithm would take more time than what is worthwhile. |
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Each year Moore's law tells us it takes half as much electricity to calculate the optimal dish-load for a washer, but the amout of water, electricity, &/or yak powered conveyor motivator needed to wash the dishes stays approximately the same barring some half-baked Dyson fog-dishwasher or nano-silver coated dinnnerware. |
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Anyway of course you don't have to enter the dirty dishes manually. That's because your kitchen cabinets and drawers have an RFID inventory-o-matic connected via your home's IPv6 network to your washer (the same system orders new plates for you if you break one). Laser targeting systems highlight the optimal loading position for each dish. |
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<aside> By odd coincidence, as I was
reading this, they started an item on the
TV by introducing a person called Phil
Plate.<aside> |
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