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yokaze
Joined 995 karma

  1. Alternative framing: If you have to earn money and pay income tax, you are not really rich.
  2. I think the article points quite well out, these profits cannot be taken at face value, if they are financend by Nvidia in the form of investments.
  3. Well, Spain is fairly sparsely populated in the interior compared to France or Germany: https://maps-spain.com/maps-spain-geography/spain-population...

    Then you have the Pyrenees between the Iberian peninsula and France. Aside from being mountainous, also fairly low population density, and rather poorer regions to the point that you'll find abandoned villages.

    So, the only sensible connections are along the Mediterranean (Catalonia) or the Atlantic coast (Basque Country).

    Another reason is that Spain has high-speed rails only since the nineties.

    IRC, just in the recent years, there was a high-speed connection built to the Basque Country (from Madrid). From the Basque Country you can go to France with a light rail.

    So, the only high-speed connection is along the Mediterranean.

    In a way, it's a center/periphery problem.

    France is prioritising connections from/to Paris, Spain from/to Madrid.

    Unless either side improves the network at their side of the border, it also makes limited sense to improve yours.

    The EU is funding that.

  4. SAP also uses Openstack.
  5. It is not "not contributing more", it is not committing to tripling or quadrupling the defense spending.

    That number is purely posturing. Or if you want to frame it more positively: aspirational.

    Germany struggles to even meet the previously agreed 2% goal.

    I doubt, anyone takes that number seriously.

  6. I create a malicious chart or compromise one you use (with symlink to an arbitrary file and code).

    You download charts either as a tarball from a helm repo or oci registry with helm and helm will create the files and links with your permissions, and send me whatever I wanted to extract from your system.

    Yes, you should check things you download from the internet. But also, that is not how a chart is supposed to work.

  7. > The next piece that concerned me was GDPR which required EU citizens data to be processed in the EU.

    That's wrong. It can be processed outside the EU, provided the country has laws providing adequate protections comparable (or better) than the GDPR.

    Here more details: https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-topic/data-protection/i...

  8. It is being done in countries like Switzerland and Norway. Not exactly poor countries.

    As I understand, in both cases, the tax resident has to declare their global (netto) wealth and have to pay a small percentage (close or less than 1%) of that wealth.

    Don't you ever had tax obligations due to shares? Sell-to-cover is one solution. But I suspect at that scale you get enough dividends from these companies to cover.

  9. > there was (and still is) no single market for services, so how could have joining the EEC have caused any of these things?

    Well, let's address the "there still is no single market...". You are entitled to your opinion, but it differs to the official stance from the EU.

    Here the page about the Single Market for Services: https://single-market-economy.ec.europa.eu/single-market/ser...

    Now let's have a look at the Treaty of Rome (1957): https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=LEGISSUM...

    The summary says:

    > It created a common market based on the free movement of:

    > goods

    > people

    > services

    > capital.

    I assume we can differ in the opinion of how much of that has been achieved and at what time, and I agree it is far from perfect, but your statement is rather undifferentiated and categorical.

  10. I think, that's the part from the article, which states its message succinctly:

    > The West as a block of liberal democracies no longer exists.

  11. A car needs a battery pack, which consist of modules, which in turns consists of cells.

    That one has five modules per pack: https://www.batterydesign.net/2021-mercedes-eqa-250/

    That one has twelve modules per pack: https://www.batterydesign.net/mercedes-eqs/

    So, we talk about maybe an order of magnitude lower battery packs (5k-10k).

    They sold like 46k electric cars in Q2 of 2024.

    I think, the point of saying it is a modest start is more judged against the total number of cars sold in total (in Q2: 496,700).

  12. You don't get fined for downloading, you get cease-and-desist with a fine (?) from a lawyer representing the copyright owner for uploading.

    Downloading copyrighted is not illegal, offering is.

    You could try to argue technicalities in court, but that'll probably exceed the hundreds of Euro the copyright owner demands.

  13. Funny that you say that. In my personal experience, the degree of support is one of the reasons to switch. Like any large vendor, it takes almost more time to convince them that it there is a problem, then it would take to fix it, if you have the technical skills in house. (That was enough for Google to switch to their own switches).

    Haven't worked yet with IBM, but if they are of equal level, then I'd rather avoid them.

    But since you say IBM, they have IBM Cloud Manager, and through Redhat also an Openstack offer, and with Openshift a K8S offer. Various vendors offer either or both.

    There are also companies which operate internal cloud providers for other companies. Various public cloud providers offer you to operate your datacenter with their API in-hose.

    Yes, it comes with their hardware, but guess what, in three years chances are half of your hardware is deprecated and has been replaced anyway.

    Yes, all that requires effort. Considerable effort. But it is a one-time effort (i.e. fixed costs) compared to a X-fold increase of licensing costs. So, you look at the ROI, consider the risk of having that degree of exposure, and guess what...

    To reiterate: It doesn't have to be all in one go, it doesn't mean it has to be all of it. Maybe some of your payload will always stay on vmware, but thinking you can ask the big companies for 20x the license costs, and expect 20x the revenue is rather odd.

    You may guess, where I know that from.

  14. > Large customers are sticky. You can't migrate your hypervisor or cloud provider overnight. These are multi-year projects.

    Yes, but that scale, everything is an multi-year effort. The contracts likely as well. That doesn't mean, it's not going to happen.

    And it's not like all has to happen in one go.

    So before you were all in VMware, and that vendor is practically promising to hike up the prices to make you bleed.

    What are you gonna do?

    I'd rather start early to have a migration path, even if it is just for negotiation purposes. And if it's someone who has the resources to that, it's large customers.

  15. I think, that is a bit besides the point I wanted to make.

    Yes, it is very hard to know a priori, what is life-saving, and what not. No, I do not wanted to suggest that the work of doctors it is not important.

    The common understanding of doctors (their self-understanding included) is, that their work is very important, to the point that they exploit themselves. Or allow themselves to be "exploited".

    In this forum, more commonly you have people here working on productive systems, which can empathize with the feeling the responsibility for the operations and not wanting to drop the ball.

    People with that mindset think, they may safe a patient / the system, but working oneself to exhaustion won't solve those problems. And on the contrary, the exhaustion may be a contributing factor of making things worse in various ways. One directly by your actions, the other indirectly by covering up systemic problems.

  16. That's a straw man. We do not need "endless doctors" just more (or some way to use them more efficiently).

    The number of doctors are limited by the pipeline to educate them.

    Most countries I know, the number of people admitted to study medicine exceeds the number people wanting to study medicine vastly exceeds the positions to do so, and admissions are highly competitive. To a point, I'd say, that it is becoming ridiculous.

    So, there is not a lack of people wanting to become doctors, but a lack of people allowed to even start to study to become one.

  17. Sorry, that is bollocks. That is the story most people believe, and makes for a convenient story for those people actually to blame. Funnily, it is also the story most doctors themselves seem to chose to believe in.

    First, those are not the only choices. There is also the the option of training and hiring more doctors. 2

    Probably, there is also an option of making more efficient use of doctors time, but that one is more complicated.

    Most of the work of doctors is not life-saving.

    I think, you see a standard problem of pushing shit down or up. Government lowers budget, pushes quotas down, which gets pushed down further until it reaches the bottom rank and file, the doctors.

    They have to "do more with less" (Not limited to public sector, see Boeing), and that works for a while, until it doesn't.

  18. "Roughly the same abundances" meaning, why we usually (but not always) find evidence of dark matter in places, where we see regular matter.
  19. What worked for me: Search a web-radio with a (human) DJ and a published playlist. If find there a couple of artists / songs of a certain style that match my more non-mainstream interests, I'll listen to that. Usually, there pop up some artists I have never heard before.

    A variant on that is, look for such a radio in a different country.

  20. Usually, you do a multivariate statistical analysis, and "accounting for" means, it was one of the variables thrown in.
  21. Well, first off, while you can configure it that way, I don't think that is the primary use-case. The primary one is adding a "something you have" factor to the "something you know" factor.

    If you have servers in a controlled surveilled environment, you might be less worried about someone carrying a whole machine away, and you might be more concerned with someone just pulling a disk out and intentionally or unintentionally leaking the data. If someone can infiltrate your DC and take out a 4u server, then you have bigger problems to worry about.

  22. It's different. Rdma offloads the TCP transfer of host memory to the network device. This is about transferring device memory directly, avoiding going though the host.

    Had to read through the lklm message, at it wasn't clear from the article.

  23. > After removing punctuation, space symbols, newlines and tabs, we filtered out documents with less than 200 characters. These documents typically contain only meta data and no useful information.

    > But i guess "upsampling" in this case is just explicit duplication of the training data.

    Possibly, but duplication means weighing and that is important in unbalanced trainingsets and improves the results in practice.

  24. Well, in Spain you can use your eID directly: https://github.com/OpenSC/OpenSC/wiki/DNIe-%28OpenDNIe%29#up...

    And you can get a standard X.509v3 certificate from the FNMT (https://www.fnmt.es/en/ceres), or other agencies, which identifies you online for government purposes.

  25. "The Rolls Royce/Prada/... of beers"

    Champagne is a brand for sparkling wine. People pay a premium (justified or not) for it.

    My examples are even more unrelated than the beer, still the companies would likely defend their brand.

    Miller is trying to pull itself up with the brand Champagne and is pulling the brand down. (If Miller is champagne of beers, what does it say about champagne as a sparkling wine)

  26. > cause I progressively want to get closer to the metal (one day work with embedded systems)

    Don't see the point in going for desktop apps. If you want to broaden your skills, that's great, but it's not a progression in skills.

    For both server side programming as well embedded development, UI is less of a concern, and you control often the whole platform/OS.

    Desktop apps require skills in UI development and also you have to bother to learn multiple platforms. Libraries and languages only do so much in providing an abstraction.

    Also it depends on what you understand with Embedded systems. They range from full fledged windows/Linux/... systems (quite close to desktop apps and more UI programming needed) to PICs.

    In my view, the programming language is the least of the concerns and a small part of the skill set you'll need to acquire.

    Choose the tools you feel comfortable with in the problem space you want to work in.

    There is micropython as well.

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