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asdff
Joined 13,773 karma

  1. Amazon has no moat today. What is even unique on amazon store these days? Fake chinese crap is what. Which you can also find on ebay, same item same product photos and probably still shipped to you in 2-4 days like what prime has been reduced to. If you can wait you can opt for the 3 weeks from china option at literally a quarter the cost.
  2. What is the vpn of choice these days for bittorrent?
  3. Seems this is a possibility with any service. Even stuff like music streaming. I tried to listen to loveless on spotify the other day and apparently it has been removed from the service. It is time to start making rips of physical media I own or rent from the library again. Back to the high seas again too. We traded control for convenience and that comes back to bite us.
  4. Not every company needs to participate in making llms. It isn't like apple consumers are going to ignore the smell that keeps them from android and pc and samsung headphones currently.
  5. The main thing is with the chinese ones you get lidar and a cached map from that lidar run (so you can send it to clean specific areas) and they cost maybe a third or less what roomba charges, at least when I was in the market.
  6. To lose 11 billion means you have successfully convinced some people to give you 11 billion to lose. And money wasn't lost either. It was spent. It was used for things, making people richer and buying hardware, which also makes people richer.
  7. The sentiment is basically that the "all hands on deck" manpower effort is futile and if anything even a political/propaganda effort to dissuade others from having similar thoughts. What good is it to mobilize 1000 FBI agents if they aren't going to move the case forward at all? What good is having a budget capable of mobilizing that many people for a single case and not to bear any fruit with it? Is this outcome better than what might have happened if this were relegated to local PD? Surprisingly the answer is "no, not at all." That is a big indictment on federal law enforcement and their abilities to turn their budget into actionable effort that makes the population safer. And probably suggests that such resource draining manhunts might even come at the cost of whatever the FBI does in fact do well.
  8. It is a crypto browser
  9. I think there is something to be said about the value of bad information. For example, pre ai, how might you come to the correct answer for something? You might dig into the underlying documentation or whatever "primary literature" exist for that thing and get the correct answer.

    However, that was never very many people. Only the smart ones. Many would prefer to have shouted into the void at reddit/stackoverflow/quora/yahoo answers/forums/irc/whatever, to seek an "easy" answer that is probably not entirely correct if you bothered going right to the source of truth.

    That represents a ton of money controlling that pipeline and selling expensive monthly subscriptions to people to use it. Even better if you can shoehorn yourself into the workplace, and get work to pay for it at a premium per user. Get people to come to rely on it and have no clue how to deal with anything without it.

    It doesn't matter if it's any good. That isn't even the point. It just has to be the first thing people reach for and therefore available to every consumer and worker, a mandatory subscription most people now feel obliged to pay for.

    This is why these companies are worth billions. Not for the utility, but from the money to be made off of the people who don't know any better.

  10. The problem of paying a facilities manager $25 an hour I guess.
  11. Probably lynx. If a website doesn't work on lynx it probably doesn't respect you either.
  12. How? Everyone is doing this crap. There is no alternative.
  13. It was that coupled with his oddly specific statement of banning ad blockers bringing in $150mm like they modeled it already. Two exact opposite statements you'd want from the CEO of the last bastion of sanity in the internet browser landscape.
  14. Ironically amazon.com works perfectly with javascript disabled. One of the few major sites that still do in my experience.
  15. Keytruda (pembrolizumab) has been pretty monumental.
  16. I think that depends on if you go out of state or in state. My alma mater has frozen in state tuition for at least 10 years now, maybe longer. Plenty of flagship in state schools are only around 12k-15k a year. In a world where you can now crack 15 an hour unskilled now while living with the parents over the summer you can probably cover a lot of that almost like it was in ye olden times.
  17. I'm not so sure it is nonsense. Those rural 50mph roads are generally considered the most dangerous road type and many states prioritize turning them into actual divided roads due to prevalence of fatal accidents. Admittedly the rush hour traffic experience depends a lot on where you live; in the midwest you probably only see congestion on the exit itself and are otherwise going the full 60mph on even urban freeways, whereas in places like LA or NYC you aren't breaking a 16mph average no matter what road you are on during rush hour. Not a lot of ways to die going 16mph...
  18. I think there is something to be said about provenance of the degree. For example there's been quite a lot of expansion in number of colleges or even community colleges expanding their systems while actual prestigious colleges themselves have only expanded so much.

    Here are the stats for Harvard enrollment of undergrads (1,3), along with US population (2,4) and percent Harvard student (not sure where I get number of people in the workforce with harvard degrees data but maybe this is a decent proxy):

    Year - ugrads - US population - % of US pop at harvard

    1990 - 22,851 - 248,709,873 - 0.0092%

    2000 - 24,279 - 281,421,906 - 0.0086%

    2010 - 27,594 - 308,745,538 - 0.0089%

    2025 - 24,519 - 343,000,000 - 0.0071%

    1. https://nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d13/tables/dt13_312.20.a...

    2. https://www.census.gov/data/tables/time-series/dec/popchange...

    3. https://www.harvard.edu/about/

    4. https://www.census.gov/popclock/

  19. 65% increase seems big but this also means only 13% more adult americans are degree holders which seems remarkably paltry to me after almost 40 years of "thou shall go to college" being preached to highschoolers.
  20. What percent of work from homers actually avoid the highway of death? Sure there are some living an urban car free lifestyle working from home, but plenty chose the opposite for their remote work, choosing space and inconvenience from job centers which in America inevitably means car centric exurban or rural living. I'd wager you are more at risk driving 5 miles for groceries on one of those single lane per direction 50mph rural roads than you are commuting in rush hour traffic at 16mph.

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