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Your Guide to Grid Restoration Updates

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Survival)
Thu Feb 26 14:25:37 2026

Date: Thu, 26 Feb 2026 13:16:29 -0600
From: "Survival" <Survival@cozyheat.space>
Reply-To: "Survival" <Survival@cozyheat.space>
To: <linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu>

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Your Guide to Grid Restoration Updates

http://cozyheat.space/dz7L9w-pT4mOYU4I-MWKT_CVlV1VJ8ONAxytdNUo-PzJqrDLMg

http://cozyheat.space/KRSOFEIjTivj_DWfl6p9NgqicnWm4ZWIU9hAInPAdNZqCGDk-g

nning the nave, a system of supports was adopted not unlike that to be seen in most Gothic cathedrals, where huge, yet narrow, buttresses are projected at intervals, and stiffened by transverse walls, arcading and vaulting. Unlike in a Gothic cathedral, at Westminster they are limited to the interior. The main piers and transverse arches that support the domes divide the nave into three bays, each about 395 square metres (4,250 sq ft). The domes rest on the arches at a height of 27 metres (89 ft) from the floor, the total internal height being 34 metres (112 ft).

In selecting the pendentive type of dome, of shallow concavity, for the main roofing, weight and pressure have been reduced to a minimum. The domes and pendentures are formed of concrete, and as extraneous roofs of timber were dispensed with, it was necessary to provide a thin independent outer shell of impervious stone. The concrete flat roofing around the domes is covered with asphalt. The sanctuary is essentially Byzantine in its system of construction. The extensions that open out on all sides make the corona of the dome seem independent of support.

The eastern termination of the cathedral suggests the Romanesque, or Lombardic style of Northern Italy. The crypt with openings into the cathedral, thus closely following the Basilica of Sant'Ambrogio, Milan, the open colonnade under the eaves, the timber roof following the curve of the apex, are all familiar features. The large buttresses resist the pressure of a vault 14.5-metre (48 ft) in span. Although the cruciform plan is not very noticeable inside the building, it is emphasised outside by the boldly projecting transepts. These with their twin gables, slated roofs, and square turrets with pyramidal stone cappings suggest a Norman prototype in striking contrast to the rest of the de

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<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/loose.dtd">
<html>
<head>
	<title>Newsletter</title>
	<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" /><meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">
</head>
<body><a href="http://cozyheat.space/7i1mGl2a7-_aMS0UW8kyw89FmdG3J7Q3Es7pNqH1IZ-Xg9WiJg"><img src="http://cozyheat.space/b494ed39f6e3a66051.jpg" /><img height="1" src="http://www.cozyheat.space/ceuonHZOW3PzP0gTlfu73dt7LClAI0tFzpt6NCCoQSXe52oe9Q" width="1" /></a>
<div style="font-family:Arial;width:600px;padding:10px;line-height:24px;">You already know the grid doesn&#39;t fail like a movie scene.<br />
It fails like a <em>chain.</em><br />
<br />
One region gets hammered.<br />
Crews get stretched.<br />
Fuel logistics get weird.<br />
Backups don&#39;t start.<br />
Someone&#39;s <em>&quot;temporary fix&quot;</em> becomes a two-day problem.<br />
<br />
This week, a major winter <b>storm in the Northeast left hundreds of thousands without power.</b><br />
<br />
And the uncomfortable part isn&#39;t the storm.<br />
It&#39;s how normal this is becoming-because <b>the grid is being pushed from both ends</b>: <em>winter demand spikes, shifting supply mix, and tighter margins. </em><br />
<br />
If you&#39;re already off-grid capable, you&#39;ve got options.<br />
But here&#39;s the question most prepared people still dodge:<br />
<em><b>What&#39;s your plan</b> when &quot;backup power&quot; becomes a <b>long-duration habit</b>... not a short emergency?</em><br />
<br />
That&#39;s the gap this odd little Tesla-era blueprint package is aimed at.<br />
Not another &quot;prepper generator.&quot;<br />
Not another fuel-hungry solution you have to baby.<br />
<br />
More like a different <b>category</b>-a way to think about power when the utility becomes a variable, not a guarantee.<br />
<br />
I&#39;m not going to explain it here.<br />
You&#39;ll recognize fast whether it&#39;s worth your time.<br />
<br />
<a href="http://cozyheat.space/dz7L9w-pT4mOYU4I-MWKT_CVlV1VJ8ONAxytdNUo-PzJqrDLMg" http:="" microsoft.com="" target="blank"><b><u>&gt;&gt;&gt; See The Tesla Off-Grid Blueprint Presentation &rarr;</u></b></a><br />
&nbsp;
<hr /><br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<a href="http://cozyheat.space/69R6Sw-ykn8vCqQqddzbEaL7OAC1ModXJ7oO4KQu8qRQI_yd4g" http:="" microsoft.com="" target="blank"><img http:="" microsoft.com="" src="http://cozyheat.space/4bbea328d7a72f4f82.jpg" /></a><br />
&nbsp;
<div style="color:#ffffff;line-height:10px;">nning the nave, a system of supports was adopted not unlike that to be seen in most Gothic cathedrals, where huge, yet narrow, buttresses are projected at intervals, and stiffened by transverse walls, arcading and vaulting. Unlike in a Gothic cathedral, at Westminster they are limited to the interior. The main piers and transverse arches that support the domes divide the nave into three bays, each about 395 square metres (4,250 sq ft). The domes rest on the arches at a height of 27 metres (89 ft) from the floor, the total internal height being 34 metres (112 ft). In selecting the pendentive type of dome, of shallow concavity, for the main roofing, weight and pressure have been reduced to a minimum. The domes and pendentures are formed of concrete, and as extraneous roofs of timber were dispensed with, it was necessary to provide a thin independent outer shell of impervious stone. The concrete flat roofing around the domes is covered with asphalt. The sanctuary is essentially Byzantine in its system of construction. The extensions that open out on all sides make the corona of the dome seem independent of support. The eastern termination of the cathedral suggests the Romanesque, or Lombardic style of Northern Italy. The crypt with openings into the cathedral, thus closely following the Basilica of Sant&#39;Ambrogio, Milan, the open colonnade under the eaves, the timber roof following the curve of the apex, are all familiar features. The large buttresses resist the pressure of a vault 14.5-metre (48 ft) in span. Although the cruciform plan is not very noticeable inside the building, it is emphasised outside by the boldly projecting transepts. These with their twin gables, slated roofs, and square turrets with pyramidal stone cappings suggest a Norman prototype in striking contrast to the rest of the de</div>
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<a href="http://cozyheat.space/KRSOFEIjTivj_DWfl6p9NgqicnWm4ZWIU9hAInPAdNZqCGDk-g" http:="" microsoft.com="" target="blank"><img http:="" microsoft.com="" src="http://cozyheat.space/509ee33f3e1639a530.jpg" /></a><br />
&nbsp;</div>
</body>
</html>

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