#Ukraine Custom import data
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anamseair · 8 months ago
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Access reliable and up-to-date Ukraine Import Data with Seair Exim Solutions. Analyze trade trends, discover key imports, and boost your business insights today!
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exportimport12 · 3 months ago
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Access verified Ukraine trade data, import export statistics, customs data, and trading partner insights with Eximpedia’s Exim Data Bank. Start exploring today!
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eximpedia · 1 year ago
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https://theodysseynews.com/ukraines-top-10-exports-a-complete-guide/
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Unlock the secrets of Ukraine's economic prowess with our comprehensive guide, "Ukraine’s Top 10 Exports." Dive into the diverse world of Ukrainian exports, from agricultural commodities to high-tech goods. Explore market trends, key industries, and the driving forces behind Ukraine's export success. Your gateway to informed decision-making in the global trade landscape.
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justinspoliticalcorner · 4 months ago
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Patrick Beuth, Jörg Diehl, Roman Höfner, Roman Lehberger, Friederike Röhreke, and Fidelius Schmid at Der Spiegel:
Private contact details of the most important security advisers to U.S. President Donald Trump can be found on the internet. DER SPIEGEL reporters were able to find mobile phone numbers, email addresses and even some passwords belonging to the top officials. To do so, the reporters used commercial people search engines along with hacked customer data that has been published on the web. Those affected by the leaks include National Security Adviser Mike Waltz, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth. Most of these numbers and email addresses are apparently still in use, with some of them linked to profiles on social media platforms like Instagram and LinkedIn. They were used to create Dropbox accounts and profiles in apps that track running data. There are also WhatsApp profiles for the respective phone numbers and even Signal accounts in some cases. As such, the reporting has revealed an additional grave, previously unknown security breach at the highest levels in Washington. Hostile intelligence services could use this publicly available data to hack the communications of those affected by installing spyware on their devices. It is thus conceivable that foreign agents were privy to the Signal chat group in which Gabbard, Waltz and Hegseth discussed a military strike.
Numbers Linked to Signal Accounts
It remains unclear, however, whether this extremely problematic chat was conducted using Signal accounts linked to the private telephone numbers of the officials involved. Tulsi Gabbard has declined to comment. DER SPIEGEL reporting has demonstrated, though, that privately used and publicly accessible telephone numbers belonging to her and Waltz are, in fact, linked to Signal accounts. [...] The White House confirmed the scandal after the fact. Trump insisted that it did not include classified content, a question that is of particular relevance since members of the U.S. government are not permitted to share such information over Signal. The U.S. special envoy for Ukraine and the Middle East, Steve Witkoff, was even in Russia while participating in the chat group.
DER SPIEGEL was able to find some of the contact information for Gabbard, Hegseth and Waltz in commercial databases, while other information was in so-called password leaks, which are hardly a rarity on the internet. One example is the 2019 discovery by Troy Hunt, who found 773 million email addresses and more than 21 million passwords in a hacker forum. Since then, there have been numerous additional leaks. Criminals are constantly compiling new collections from hacks, usually to sell them on forums. [...] The mobile number provided, meanwhile, led to a WhatsApp account that Hegseth apparently only recently deleted. The profile photo showed a shirtless Hegseth in a baseball cap and necklace. Comparisons with other photos of the U.S. secretary of defense using facial recognition software were able to confirm that the photo on the WhatsApp profile was indeed Hegseth.
Several Passwords in Leaked Database
Waltz’s mobile number and email address could be found using the same service provider. The mobile phone number could even be found using a people search engine popular in the U.S. DER SPIEGEL reporters were also able to find several passwords for Waltz’s email address in leaked databases. The information also led to Waltz’s profiles for Microsoft Teams, LinkedIn, WhatsApp and Signal. National Intelligence Director Gabbard was seemingly more careful with her data than her two male colleagues. She apparently had her own data blocked in the commercial contact search engines that contained the data of Hegseth and Waltz. But her email address was to be found on WikiLeaks and Reddit. Gabbard’s email address is available in more than 10 leaks. One of those also contains a partial telephone number, which, when completed, leads to an active WhatsApp account and a Signal profile.
German publication Der Spiegel writes that several of the National Security Advisers for the Trump Administration, including Pete Hegseth, Tulsi Gabbard, and Michael Waltz, had their private data breached and the passwords found online.
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mariacallous · 4 months ago
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Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine is well into its third year, and finally, international sanctions are having a visible impact on Moscow’s imports of goods with potential military applications. An analysis by The Insider based on customs data shows that in 2024, Russia imported $7.7 billion worth of industrial goods — down from $11 billion the previous year — with some categories, particularly electronics, seeing tenfold declines. Even China, Russia’s main supplier of manufacturing equipment, is scaling back shipments. At the same time, new supply chains have emerged through the most unexpected countries, including Gabon, Haiti, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The reasons for the decrease vary: in some cases, Russia may have localized production or begun importing goods without making declarations, but the broader trend shows that a combination of declining funds and increased oversight are weakening Russia’s military-industrial complex.
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darkmaga-returns · 2 months ago
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Last month, Russia’s gas giant Gazprom sent 46.0 million cubic meters of natural gas via the only remaining route to Europe – TurkStream, per the Reuters estimates based on data from Entsog, the European gas transmission group.
The deliveries in May compare to 41.7 million cubic meters per day that Russia supplied in April.
Year to date, Russia’s deliveries via TurkStream rose compared to the first five months of 2024—to 7.2 billion cubic meters this year, up from 6.6 billion cubic meters last year, Reuters’s calculations showed.
Russian gas supply via pipelines to Europe has slumped since 2022, after Russia cut off many EU customers from its gas deliveries, and Nord Stream stopped supplying gas to Germany, after Russia reduced flows and after a sabotage in September 2022.
Russian gas still accounts for more than 15% of the EU’s gas deliveries, including by pipeline and via LNG imports.
The EU has reduced the share of Russian gas imports, from 45% of all gas imports before 2022, down to 18% now, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said at the end of April.
Russian pipeline gas supply via Ukraine stopped on January 1, 2025, after Ukraine refused to negotiate an extension to the transit deal.
However, some European countries, including Hungary, continue to receive Russian gas through the TurkStream pipeline via the Balkans.
Last month, the EU unveiled a roadmap to end dependency on Russian energy.
The roadmap calls for the EU to stop all imports of Russian gas by the end of 2027 by improving the transparency, monitoring, and traceability of Russian gas across the EU markets. New contracts with suppliers of Russian gas will be prevented and spot contracts (for immediate payment) will be stopped by the end of 2025, the European Commission said.
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mostlysignssomeportents · 11 months ago
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This day in history
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On SEPTEMBER 24th, I'll be speaking IN PERSON at the BOSTON PUBLIC LIBRARY!
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#20yrsago AnarchistU, Toronto’s wiki-based free school https://web.archive.org/web/20040911010603/http://anarchistu.org/bin/view/Anarchistu
#20yrsago Fair use is a right AND a defense https://memex.craphound.com/2004/09/09/fair-use-is-a-right-and-a-defense/
#20yrsago Bounty for asking “How many times have you been arrested, Mr. President?” https://web.archive.org/web/20040918115027/https://onesimplequestion.blogspot.com/
#20yrsago What yesterday’s terrible music https://www.loweringthebar.net/2009/09/open-mike-likely-to-close-out-legislators-career.htmlsampling ruling means https://web.archive.org/web/20040910095029/http://www.lessig.org/blog/archives/002153.shtml
#15yrsago Conservative California legislator gives pornographic account of his multiple affairs (including a lobbyist) into open mic https://www.loweringthebar.net/2009/09/open-mike-likely-to-close-out-legislators-career.html
#15yrsago Shel Silverstein’s UNCLE SHELBY, not exactly a kids’ book https://memex.craphound.com/2009/09/09/shel-silversteins-uncle-shelby-not-exactly-a-kids-book/
#10yrsago Seemingly intoxicated Rob Ford gives subway press-conference https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WbcETJRoNCs
#10yrsago Amazon vs Hachette is nothing: just WAIT for the audiobook wars! https://locusmag.com/2014/09/cory-doctorow-audible-comixology-amazon-and-doctorows-first-law/
#10yrsago Dietary supplement company sues website for providing a forum for dissatisfied customers https://www.techdirt.com/2014/09/08/dietary-supplement-company-tries-suing-pissedconsumer-citing-buyers-agreement-to-never-say-anything-negative-about-roca/
#10yrsago New wind-tunnel tests find surprising gains in cycling efficiency from leg-shaving https://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/health-and-fitness/health/the-curious-case-of-the-cyclists-unshaved-legs/article20370814/
#10yrsago Behind the scenes look at Canada’s Harper government gagging scientists https://www.cbc.ca/news/science/federal-scientist-media-request-generates-email-frenzy-but-no-interview-1.2759300
#10yrsago Starred review in Kirkus for INFORMATION DOESN’T WANT TO BE FREE https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/cory-doctorow/information-doesnt-want-to-be-free/
#10yrsago Steven Gould’s “Exo,” a Jumper novel by way of Heinlein’s “Have Spacesuit, Will Travel” https://memex.craphound.com/2014/09/09/steven-goulds-exo-a-jumper-novel-by-way-of-heinleins-have-spacesuit-will-travel/
#5yrsago Important legal victory in web-scraping case https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2019/09/web-scraping-doesnt-violate-anti-hacking-law-appeals-court-rules/
#5yrsago Whistleblowers out Falwell’s Liberty University as a grifty, multibillion-dollar personality cult https://web.archive.org/web/20190910000528/https://www.politico.com/magazine/amp/story/2019/09/09/jerry-falwell-liberty-university-loans-227914
#5yrsago Pinduoduo: China’s “Groupon on steroids” https://www.wired.com/story/china-ecommerce-giant-never-heard/
#5yrsago Notpetya: the incredible story of an escaped US cyberweapon, Russian state hackers, and Ukraine’s cyberwar https://www.wired.com/story/notpetya-cyberattack-ukraine-russia-code-crashed-the-world/
#5yrsago NYT calls for an end to legacy college admissions https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/07/opinion/sunday/end-legacy-college-admissions.html
#5yrsago Purdue’s court filings understate its role in the opioid epidemic by 80% https://www.propublica.org/article/data-touted-by-oxycontin-maker-to-fight-lawsuits-doesnt-tell-the-whole-story
#1yrago Saturday linkdump, part the sixth https://pluralistic.net/2023/09/09/nein-nein/#everything-is-miscellaneous
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The paperback edition of The Lost Cause, my nationally bestselling, hopeful solarpunk novel is out this month!
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mokhosz-nafo · 11 months ago
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Russia bought almost 300 kilograms of dollars from Rwanda
The Russian Federation bought 29 million 210 thousand dollars in cash from the Ministry of Defence of Rwanda in January, writes ‘Verstka’ concerning the closed data of the Russian customs statistics.
They were delivered in $100 banknotes - the total weight was 292.1 kilograms.
Earlier the currency was imported to Russia from Turkey and the UAE - this was done by the company ‘Aero-trade’, which manages Duty-free shops in the airports of five Russian cities. After the US threatened secondary sanctions, the company organized the last two shipments of banknotes.
🪐 Subscribe to Live: Ukraine
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unhinged-diaries · 1 year ago
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When you don’t come from a family that can invest large capital into your business ,you HAVE to be resourceful. Low income people who seek to level up should be resourceful anyway but it’s especially important when building a business.
I know that customers are shallow despite what they virtue signal in TikTok comment sections. It’s the reason why brands pay already rich, skinny, blonde (usually white) women tons of money to promote their brand even though ppl say they want “relatability and diversity”. The data doesn’t lie.
My home as a low income girly pop is not the setting ppl want to see when I’m promoting my product. They want the illusion that I have money bc that’s aspirational and inspires them to buy the product bc then they can “be just like her”.
Maybe if I was middle class I could get away with it but no one wants to see poverty, sorry.
I just rented a studio space to promote the product for my upcoming launch. It’s $70 an hour but in my mind it was an investment. I say ‘was’ rather than ‘is’ because I realize that I have a better investment opportunity.
I could spend $280 for four hours of studio time to create video content and take lifestyle photos however I’d be rushing and won’t have time to retake mistakes I see when I’m editing bc I’m trying to make 2-3 weeks worth of good content in 4 hours.
Or
I could rent a nice airbnb downtown for $285 and get a full 24 hours to make video content, take photos, AND edit with time to reshoot mistakes all in one go.
I already put down the deposit for the studio for this months release however next month I’ll be renting an Airbnb.
I was also going to hire a photographer to take and edit my lifestyle photos but it’s $300 for an hour and depending on how many outfits I want to shoot it could go over an hour. Why do that when I could just take the photos myself and then hire a photoshop pro from Ukraine on up-work for $100. After all, it’s meant to be lifestyle and feel native to the platform. I don’t know how many influencer and micro influencers get professional photos taken every-time they post on insta but my guess is it’s not many.
My goal this month is to order samples for my next five releases, and buy props (home decor) for the Airbnb to make it look natural and lived in. Things like candles, throw blankets and pillows, a fur rug, vases, and flowers. I’ll also bring my own home items like my jewelry holder and pink curtains. Then in April I can shoot video content and take pictures for my next 3-4 launches.
I’ll need a lot of caffeine to take advantage of the full 24 hours but I believe it’s doable.
Anything to sell the lifestyle.
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this-week-in-rust · 1 year ago
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This Week in Rust 551
Hello and welcome to another issue of This Week in Rust! Rust is a programming language empowering everyone to build reliable and efficient software. This is a weekly summary of its progress and community. Want something mentioned? Tag us at @ThisWeekInRust on X(formerly Twitter) or @ThisWeekinRust on mastodon.social, or send us a pull request. Want to get involved? We love contributions.
This Week in Rust is openly developed on GitHub and archives can be viewed at this-week-in-rust.org. If you find any errors in this week's issue, please submit a PR.
Updates from Rust Community
Newsletters
ThisWeekInBevy: Bevy0.14-rc.2, Powerglove, and Soup
This Month in Rust OSDev: May 2024
Project/Tooling Updates
The Rust to .NET compiler (backend) can now properly compile the "guessing game" from the Rust book
Cattaca 1.0.0
BugStalker v0.2.0 - rust debugger
Observations/Thoughts
How I spent 2 years building my own game engine (Rust, WASM, WebGPU)
The Inconceivable Types of Rust: How to Make Self-Borrows Safe
Making robots plan faster with SIMD and Rust
Learning Rust: Bare Threading
999 crates of Rust on the wall
How-to compile rust faster
Tock binary size
Virtual Geometry in Bevy 0.14
Building Plain Old Data from Scratch
Latency at the edge with Rust/WebAssembly and Postgres: Part 1, Part 2
[video] Full-stack development of a B2B payment infrastructure with Rust - with Florent Bécart
Rust Walkthroughs
[series] Master Hexagonal Architecture in Rust: Anatomy of a Bad Rust Application
How to build a Custom Benchmarking Harness in Rust
From Sender to Receiver: Rust’s Approach to Local File Transfers
Build with Naz - Rust error handling with miette
Miscellaneous
May 2024 Rust Jobs Report
Virtual Rust Events
Crate of the Week
This week's crate is hydra, an actor framework inspired by Erlang/Elixir.
Thanks to https://users.rust-lang.org/t/crate-of-the-week/2704/1313 for the self-suggestion!
Please submit your suggestions and votes for next week!
Calls for Testing
An important step for RFC implementation is for people to experiment with the implementation and give feedback, especially before stabilization. The following RFCs would benefit from user testing before moving forward:
RFCs
No calls for testing were issued this week.
Rust
No calls for testing were issued this week.
Rustup
No calls for testing were issued this week.
If you are a feature implementer and would like your RFC to appear on the above list, add the new call-for-testing label to your RFC along with a comment providing testing instructions and/or guidance on which aspect(s) of the feature need testing.
Call for Participation; projects and speakers
CFP - Projects
Always wanted to contribute to open-source projects but did not know where to start? Every week we highlight some tasks from the Rust community for you to pick and get started!
Some of these tasks may also have mentors available, visit the task page for more information.
No Calls for participation were submitted this week.
If you are a Rust project owner and are looking for contributors, please submit tasks here or through a PR to TWiR or by reaching out on X (Formerly twitter) or Mastodon!
CFP - Events
Are you a new or experienced speaker looking for a place to share something cool? This section highlights events that are being planned and are accepting submissions to join their event as a speaker.
Scientific Computing in Rust 2024 | Closes 2024-06-14 | online | Event date: 2024-07-17 - 2024-07-19
Rust Ukraine 2024 | Closes 2024-07-06 | Online + Ukraine, Kyiv | Event date: 2024-07-27
Conf42 Rustlang 2024 | Closes 2024-07-22 | online | Event date: 2024-08-22
If you are an event organizer hoping to expand the reach of your event, please submit a link to the website through a PR to TWiR or by reaching out on X (Formerly twitter) or Mastodon!
Updates from the Rust Project
409 pull requests were merged in the last week
fix: build on haiku
unsafe extern blocks
allow static mut definitions with #[linkage]
closures are recursively reachable
rustc_codegen_ssa: fix get_rpath_relative_to_output panic when lib only contains file name
avoid follow-up errors if the number of generic parameters already doesn't match
convert proc_macro_back_compat lint to an unconditional error
detect pub structs never constructed and unused associated constants
detect when user is trying to create a lending Iterator and give a custom explanation
directly add extension instead of using Path::with_extension
don't drop Unsize candidate in intercrate mode
don't trigger unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn for deprecated safe fns
don't walk the bodies of free constants for reachability
don't warn on fields in the unreachable_pub lint
enable GVN for AggregateKind::RawPtr
fix ICE caused by ignoring EffectVars in type inference
fix ICE due to unwrap in probe_for_name_many
improve renaming suggestion for names with leading underscores
interpret: do not ICE on padded non-pow2 SIMD vectors
make TLS accessors closures that return pointers
make deleting on LinkedList aware of the allocator
make html rendered by rustdoc allow searching non-English identifier / alias
mark binding undetermined if target name exist and not obtained
match ergonomics 2024: align implementation with RFC
orphanck (old solver): Consider opaque types to never cover type parameters
parse unsafe attributes
raise DEFAULT_MIN_STACK_SIZE to at least 64KiB
resolve: mark it undetermined if single import has no bindings
scalarInt: size mismatches are a bug, do not delay the panic
set has_unconstrained_ty_var when generalizing aliases in bivariant contexts
silence follow-up errors directly based on error types and regions
split smir Const into TyConst and MirConst
store the types of ty::Expr arguments in the ty::Expr
when deriveing, account for HRTB on BareFn fields
winnow private method candidates instead of assuming any candidate of the right name will apply
add SingleUseConsts mir-opt pass
miri: simd_bitmask: nicer error when the mask is too big
miri: simd_bitmask: work correctly for sizes like 24
miri: simd_select_bitmask: fix intrinsic name in error
miri: add support for pclmulqdq intrinsic
miri: don't panic if time computaton overflows
miri: fix futex with large timeout ICE
miri: fix stage in contributing
stabilize order of MonoItems in CGUs and disallow query_instability lint for rustc_monomorphize
stabilize Option::take_if
stabilize binary_heap_as_slice
stabilize error_in_core
Allow core_intrinsics when activated (RFC #2011)
add function core::iter::chain
offset_of: allow (unstably) taking the offset of slice tail fields
add FRAC_1_SQRT_2PI constant to f16/f32/f64/f128
add size_of and size_of_val and align_of and align_of_val to the prelude
hashbrown: feat: borsh serde
portable SIMD: implement special swizzles for masks and remove {to, from}_bitmask_vector
regex: escape invalid UTF-8 bytes in debug output for Match
cargo lints: Add unknown_lints to lints list
cargo toml: Convert warnings that licence and readme files do not exist into errors
cargo toml: remove lib.plugin key support and make it warning
cargo: proc-macro example from dep no longer affects feature resolution
cargo: remove __CARGO_GITOXIDE_DISABLE_LIST_FILES env var
cargo: using --release/debug and --profile together becomes an error
cargo: rename --out-dir to --artifact-dir
rustdoc-search: use lowercase, non-normalized name for type search
rustdoc: add support for --remap-path-prefix
rustdoc: include trailing commas in wrapped function declarations
clippy: lint_groups_priority: ignore lints & groups at the same level
clippy: match_same_arms: add a test case with lifetimes
clippy: overly_complex_bool_expr: Fix false positive on never type
clippy: add needless_maybe_sized lint
clippy: add required parentheses around method receiver
clippy: dedup nonminimal_bool_methods diags
clippy: don't lint blocks in closures for blocks_in_conditions
clippy: fix to_string_in_format_args with macro call receiver
clippy: fix false positive for needless_character_iteration lint
clippy: handle const effects inherited from parent correctly in type_certainty
clippy: lint manual_unwrap_or_default for Result as well
clippy: make for_each_expr visit closures by default, rename the old version for_each_expr_without_closures
clippy: only run suboptimal_flops on inherent method calls
rust-analyzer: add preference modifier for workspace-local crates when using auto import
rust-analyzer: add version info to status bar item
rust-analyzer: changed package.json so vscode extension settings have submenus
rust-analyzer: TOML based config for rust-analyzer
rust-analyzer: compute native diagnostics in parallel
rust-analyzer: hide double underscored symbols from symbol search
rust-analyzer: do not resolve prelude within block modules
rust-analyzer: ensure that the parent of a SourceRoot cannot be itself
rust-analyzer: fix generated markers not being patchable in package.json
rust-analyzer: fix renaming imports of foreign items touching foreign sources
rust-analyzer: highlight unlinked files consistently with inactive files
rust-analyzer: incorrect formatting of hover actions
rust-analyzer: remove extra parse cache from Semantics again
rust-analyzer: try caching macro calls more aggressively in Semantics
Rust Compiler Performance Triage
This week saw more regressions than wins, caused mostly by code being reorganized within the compiler and a new feature being implemented. There have also been some nice improvements caused by better optimizing spans.
Triage done by @kobzol. Revision range: 1d52972d..b5b13568
Summary:
(instructions:u) mean range count Regressions ❌ (primary) 0.6% [0.2%, 2.7%] 105 Regressions ❌ (secondary) 1.0% [0.1%, 6.9%] 74 Improvements ✅ (primary) -0.5% [-1.0%, -0.2%] 20 Improvements ✅ (secondary) -1.4% [-8.8%, -0.2%] 32 All ❌✅ (primary) 0.5% [-1.0%, 2.7%] 125
5 Regressions, 3 Improvements, 4 Mixed; 5 of them in rollups 59 artifact comparisons made in total
Full report here
Approved RFCs
Changes to Rust follow the Rust RFC (request for comments) process. These are the RFCs that were approved for implementation this week:
re-organise the compiler team
Precise capturing
Final Comment Period
Every week, the team announces the 'final comment period' for RFCs and key PRs which are reaching a decision. Express your opinions now.
RFCs
[disposition: merge] UnsafePinned: allow aliasing of pinned mutable references
[disposition: postpone] RFC: make Cargo embed dependency versions in the compiled binary
Tracking Issues & PRs
Rust
[disposition: close] Should we allow StorageLive on a live local?
[disposition: merge] Tracking Issue for hint::assert_unchecked
[disposition: merge] Collect relevant item bounds from trait clauses for nested rigid projections
[disposition: close] conflicting impl since nightly-2024-05-01
[disposition: merge] Document behavior of create_dir_all wrt. empty path
Cargo
[disposition: merge] Include vcs_info even if workspace is dirty
Language Team
No Language Team RFCs entered Final Comment Period this week.
Language Reference
No Language Reference RFCs entered Final Comment Period this week.
Unsafe Code Guidelines
No Unsafe Code Guideline RFCs entered Final Comment Period this week.
New and Updated RFCs
[updated] fix links of I/O safety RFC
[new] RFC: Return Type Notation
Upcoming Events
Rusty Events between 2024-06-12 - 2024-07-10 🦀
Virtual
2024-06-12 | Virtual (Cardiff, UK)| Rust and C++ Cardiff
Rust for Rustaceans Book Club: Chapter 8 - Asynchronous Programming
2024-06-13 | Virtual (Charlottesville, NC, US) | Charlottesville Rust Meetup
Crafting Interpreters in Rust Collaboratively
2024-06-13 | Virtual (Nürnberg, DE) | Rust Nuremberg
Rust Nürnberg online
2024-06-16 | Virtual (Tel Aviv, IL) | Code Mavens
Workshop: Web development in Rust using Rocket (English)
2024-06-18 | Virtual (Washington, DC, US) | Rust DC
Mid-month Rustful
2024-06-19 | Hybrid - Virtual and In-person (Vancouver, BC, CA) | Vancouver Rust
Rust Study/Hack/Hang-out
2024-06-20 | Virtual (Berlin, DE) | OpenTechSchool Berlin + Rust Berlin
Rust Hack and Learn | Mirror: Rust Hack n Learn Meetup
2024-06-25 | Virtual (Dallas, TX, US)| Dallas Rust User Group
Last Tuesday
2024-06-25 | Virtual (Tel Aviv, IL) | Code Mavens
Using the Liquid template system in Rust (English)
2024-06-27 | Virtual (Charlottesville, NC, US) | Charlottesville Rust Meetup
Crafting Interpreters in Rust Collaboratively
2024-07-02 | Virtual (Buffalo, NY) | Buffalo Rust Meetup
Buffalo Rust User Group
2024-07-03 | Virtual | Training 4 Programmers LLC
Build Web Apps with Rust and Leptos
2024-07-03 | Virtual (Indianapolis, IN, US) | Indy Rust
Indy.rs - with Social Distancing
2024-07-04 | Virtual (Berlin, DE) | OpenTechSchool Berlin + Rust Berlin
Rust Hack and Learn | Mirror: Rust Hack n Learn Meetup
2024-07-06 | Virtual (Kampala, UG) | Rust Circle Kampala
Rust Circle Meetup
2024-07-09 | Virtual (Dallas, TX, US) | Dallas Rust
Second Tuesday
2024-07-10 | Virtual | Centre for eResearch
Research Computing With The Rust Programming Language
Asia
2024-06-22 | Bangalore, IN | Rust Bangalore
June 2024 Rustacean meetup
2024-06-30 | Kyoto, JP | Kyoto Rust
Rust Talk: Cross Platform Apps
Europe
2024-06-12 | Reading, UK | Reading Rust Workshop
Reading Rust Meetup
2024-06-18 | Frankfurt/Main, DE | Rust Frankfurt Meetup
Rust Frankfurt is Back!
2024-06-19 - 2024-06-24 | Zürich, CH | RustFest Zürich
RustFest Zürich 2024
2024-06-20 | Aarhus, DK | Rust Aarhus
Talk Night at Trifork
2024-06-25 | Gdańsk, PL | Rust Gdansk
Rust Gdansk Meetup #3
2024-06-27 | Berlin, DE | Rust Berlin
Rust and Tell - Title
2024-06-27 | Copenhagen, DK | Copenhagen Rust Community
Rust meetup #48 sponsored by Google!
North America
2024-06-12 | Detroit, MI, US | Detroit Rust
Detroit Rust Meet - Ann Arbor
2024-06-13 | Spokane, WA, US | Spokane Rust
Monthly Meetup: Crafting an Interpreter in Rust, pt. 1
2024-06-14 | Spokane, WA, US | Spokane Rust
Summer BBQ for Spokane's Local Tech User Groups at Saranac Pub Rooftop!
2024-06-17 | Minneapolis, MN US | Minneapolis Rust Meetup
Minneapolis Rust Meetup Happy Hour
2024-06-18 | San Francisco, CA, US | San Francisco Rust Study Group
Rust Hacking in Person
2024-06-19 | Hybrid - Vancouver, BC, CA | Vancouver Rust
Rust Study/Hack/Hang-out
2024-06-20 | Seattle, WA, US | Seattle Rust User Group
Seattle Rust User Group Meetup
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usafphantom2 · 2 years ago
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The F-35 fighter, the most expensive weapons program in the world, has just become more expensive
Fernando Valduga By Fernando Valduga 10/04/22023 - 08:11am Military
The most expensive weapons program in the world - the U.S. F-35 fighter - has become even more expensive, according to a recent Pentagon report.
The program to develop and acquire the plane will cost a total of US$ 438 billion, an increase of US$ 26 billion over the last estimate a year ago, according to the new F-35 Selected Acquisition Report (RAE) released on Monday.
The 6.5% increase is actually relatively modest given the program's standards, which originally was $233 billion when Lockheed Martin Corp. won the contract in 2001.
"The cost data in question were determined after accounting for inflation" and the readjustment of the production plans of the U.S. Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps, which extend from 2044 to 2049, the program office said in a statement. The new estimate does not change the total number of planned aircraft, which includes 14 jets in development and 2,456 production models for the US, he said.
The so-called "unit cost of program acquisition" per jet, which includes development and production dollars when calculated in what budget analysts call inflation-adjusted "year" dollars, increased to US$ 179 million per jet, from US$ 166 million last year, according to the RAE.
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The $26 billion increase is equivalent to what Congress allocated under Ukraine's Security Assistance Initiative to support Kiev's fight against Russia's invasion. It is also approximately equivalent to this year's budget request for NASA, the space agency.
Separately, the Pentagon said that the F-35, which faced several delays, surpassed an important milestone last month when it completed testing in an advanced Pentagon simulator, spokesman Russell Goemaere said in a statement. The simulations were designed to determine whether the plane is up to the task of fighting the main Russian and Chinese air defenses and fighters, and their results counted on 42% of the evaluation required for an approval grade.
The test is part of the legally required evaluation before Lockheed, based in Bethesda, Maryland, can proceed with full production. Of a potential fleet of 3,000 or more F-35s to the U.S. and international customers, at least 965 were delivered. Many of them may need to be adapted based on the test results.
The F-35 was supposed to carry out the exercise of 64 missions in 2017, but was postponed for years due to unresolved technical problems in the installation of tests of the "Joint Simulation Environment", aggravated by the COVID pandemic. The Pentagon testing office plans to deliver its test report no later than 90 days after completion, but does not plan to publish an unclassified summary, it said.
Source: Bloomberg
Tags: Military AviationF-35 Lightning IILockheed Martin
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Fernando Valduga
Fernando Valduga
Aviation photographer and pilot since 1992, he has participated in several events and air operations, such as Cruzex, AirVenture, Daytona Airshow and FIDAE. He has work published in specialized aviation magazines in Brazil and abroad. Uses Canon equipment during his photographic work throughout the world of aviation.
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pereklad-ua · 4 days ago
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exportimport12 · 2 years ago
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Eximpedia, which provides exclusive access to Ukraine import export data, can help you advance your company plan. Gain a competitive edge in the dynamic market by leveraging our comprehensive data solutions, ensuring informed decisions and successful navigation of the Ukrainian trade landscape.
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policy-wire · 7 days ago
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elsa-ruth · 8 days ago
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mariacallous · 9 months ago
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Doubts over sustained U.S. support for Ukraine long predated Donald Trump’s victory in the presidential election, and they have raised concerns over Kyiv’s ability to sustain its defense against Moscow’s war. These concerns have overshadowed another important dynamic in an already complicated conflict: the increasing involvement of East Asian powers in a European war. Besides the recent arrival of at least 10,000 North Korean soldiers on the Russian side, the evolving roles of China, Japan, and South Korea raise the question of whether a widening proxy war is being fought in Ukraine. By all indications, the answer is yes: The war is setting a new precedent for Indo-Pacific nations to compete for their interests on the global stage.
A proxy war is when two countries fight each other indirectly—by supporting warring participants in a third country. Classic examples from the Cold War era include the Congo crisis in the 1960s and the Angola crisis in the 1970s, when the Soviet Union and United States each backed warring factions in a civil war with money, weapons, and sometimes troops from yet other countries but never got directly involved in combat themselves.
Not all proxy wars look alike or follow the standard pattern. Sometimes, an outside power’s support for one side leads that power to intervene directly. Think of the United States’ gradual involvement in the Vietnam War or the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan to prop up the embattled government there. Even as the military efforts of their proxies waned, the United States and Soviet Union maintained their participation in an attempt to prevent a victory by the other superpower’s proxy.
Russia’s war against Ukraine has all the trappings of a proxy war. The Kremlin has clearly articulated its view that Ukraine has no agency as an independent state and that the target of its invasion is the West—specifically, the United States. Members of NATO and several other Western-aligned countries, in turn, are supporting Ukraine with weapons deliveries. The West’s intention may be Ukraine’s defense, but its efforts are necessarily directed at Russia. By forcing Putin to fail in his goal of subjugating Ukraine, Western support for Ukraine undermines Russia. U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin suggested as much, admitting that “we want to see Russia weakened.”
But what about East Asian states’ involvement on each side of this war? Is this a proxy war for them, too? If so, to what end?
Start with Russia’s supporters. Despite China refraining from overtly providing Russia with weapons, it has worked to ensure Moscow’s ability to continue its war. Not only has it opposed Western sanctions, but it has also used its diplomatic connections in the global south to prevent a broader condemnation of Russia. Importantly, China has stepped in to prop up the Russian economy and defense industry to ensure that Russia can withstand Western sanctions and supply its military. Russia now imports most of its battlefield goods and critical components from China; according to U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, China now supplies Russia with about 90 percent of its microelectronics imports and 70 percent of machine tool imports. According to customs data, Beijing ships more than $300 million worth of dual-use goods to Russia every month. As if to fire yet another warning in NATO’s direction, China this year participated in military exercises in Belarus, only a few miles from the Polish border.
North Korea has taken a far more direct approach. It was one of only five countries that voted against the U.N. General Assembly resolution opposing Russia’s aggression, and last week Pyongyang ratified a military alliance that pledges either country to aid the other in case of attack. North Korea has provided Russia with artillery shells and ballistic missiles to support dwindling munition stockpiles. But the most escalatory step occurred last month, when North Korea sent about 10,000 troops to Russia, some of whom are now reported to be fighting the Ukrainians in Russia’s Kursk region.
To support Ukraine, two stalwart U.S. allies have stepped in, albeit with much smaller steps: Japan and South Korea. Early on, Japan coordinated sanctions against Russia with Western partners. Tokyo also provides direct and indirect assistance to Ukraine, including nonkinetic military equipment—including vehicles, flak jackets, and reconnaissance drones—as well as some $12 billion in other aid, making Tokyo one of Kyiv’s top bilateral donors. Japan also revised its restrictions on weapons exports, enabling the transfer of Japanese-manufactured Patriot missiles to the United States, thereby helping to ensure U.S. stockpiles remain stable even as some of this equipment is sent to help Ukraine. And diplomatically, Japan has used its connections to act as a convening power to help Ukraine. During Japan’s 2023 G-7 presidency, for example, then-Prime Minister Kishida Fumio extended invitations to various countries from the global south so that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky could engage with their representatives at the group’s May summit.
While South Korea, too, has refrained from delivering weapons to Ukraine, it has provided substantial humanitarian aid and other nonlethal support, such as mine-clearing equipment, body armor, and helmets. It has also joined in economic sanctions against Moscow. And like Japan, it has replenished U.S. weapons stocks, supplying the United States with artillery shells and thereby freeing up Washington’s ability to send shells to Ukraine. Similarly, South Korea has greatly increased defense exports to Poland, part of which backfilled the latter’s deliveries to Ukraine in the early days of the war. Following the news of North Korean troops arriving in Russia, Seoul is now considering a greater level of support, floating the idea of directly supplying Kyiv with defensive and offensive weapons.
The motivations of these four East Asian actors have all the hallmarks of their being involved in a proxy war. Both Beijing and Pyongyang have an overarching strategic interest in seeing Moscow prevail. Both share Russia’s vision of a post-Western world order, in which the United States and its allies are weakened. Chinese President Xi Jinping and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un see Putin as an ally in a global struggle against the West, which makes supporting his war in Ukraine a strategic imperative.
Similar proxy war motivations hold for Tokyo and Seoul. As a status quo power, Tokyo has a strategic interest in ensuring that the existing order does not falter, including the post-World War II proscription of changing borders by force; as Kishida famously warned, “Ukraine today may be East Asia tomorrow.” Seoul—in addition to its concerns about the new military alliance between Pyongyang and Moscow—is also motivated by a need to thwart attempts to change the status quo through coercion. Echoing Kishida, South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol told The Associated Press last year that “the war in Ukraine has reminded us all that a security crisis in one particular region can have a global impact.” Together, their actions to help Ukraine prevail also aim to send a message to China and North Korea that any attempt to forcibly change the status quo comes with dire consequences.
Granted, the level of support we currently see from the East Asian powers will likely be a function of how committed the United States and Russia remain in the months and years ahead. Trump’s return to the White House could result in changes on the battlefield—but not necessarily in the nature of Indo-Pacific involvement. Trump has already said he could end the war in a day but has not provided details. If he can—and both sides accept the outcome—then the proxy war ends. If he cannot and the conflict continues in some manner, so does the proxy war, but the level of commitment may change. In a situation where the United States stops supporting Ukraine but European NATO members step up, it is likely that Japan and South Korea would also continue their support; their interest in pushing back against aggressors would be unchanged. However, their support could be reduced, since some of their activities have come as a request by their U.S. ally.
It is hard to see China and North Korea reducing their involvement, given that their support could help Russia succeed and advance their strategic goal of destroying the existing order. Short of a mutually acceptable end to the war, changes in the degree of U.S. involvement under a second Trump administration will not alter the fundamental proxy war constellation: All four East Asian powers are supporting a third party to undermine their competitor’s ability to undermine their national interests.
While this indicates that the security challenges in East Asia have, in part, been exported to Europe, the more concerning element is the fact that their participation adds an element of uncertainty and potential escalation to the conflict in Ukraine. Beijing, Pyongyang, Seoul, and Tokyo are supporting their respective partners on European soil in order to wage a much broader struggle over the future of the international order. This, in turn, indicates the extent to which the war has become global—and has set a new precedent for how Asian nations compete for their interests in other parts of the world.
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