> And yet there is scant evidence hospitals ever were at risk Are you suggesting that this story is inaccurate? Your claim is baffling in the face of… well, all the stories I’ve been reading the past two years.…
I think TIME is gunning more for the supermarket checkout reader with this piece, a crowd that would find anti-trust and fake USB cables to be quite dry.
You mean: roughly 100 million people will starve and suffer from malnutrition because Russia invaded Ukraine. It was an entirely predictable outcome based on one country's actions.
> But they do it with like minded people This is the main problem I see with your compromise. The self-sorting will create or enforce existing silos. The compromise is not only between you and your employer, but also…
This is really how it ought to go. Once a quarter, we all descend on one city for one week. We make big plans, we revel in each other’s company, and we see a new part of the world or see a familiar part of the world in…
>Working remote is just what I need, and I am way more productive. I acknowledge that you and many others derive personal satisfaction from productivity. I do too. However, I strongly believe we should move away from…
Do you believe they have the tools to create that vision of a better world?
This quote from the education commissioner cracked me up: In the letter to teachers, Education Commissioner Margie Vandeven said “an individual took the records of at least three educators, unencrypted the source code…
> Giving them housing doesn't mean they also get immunity from criminal laws. All evidence to the contrary. SF, Seattle, LA… seems like the free housing people are indeed immune to at least petty crime laws.
Note that the article is from 2013, and this is very much in line with Facebook’s stance overall: that they are just a forum for expression, and not in the business of policing speech. That stance has only softened,…
That term could fit most of the Santa Clara Valley if you’re operating on the definition provided by the person you heard that from. I won’t link their name here, since I do not believe it is worthwhile to give them…
We already have explanations for the obesity issues in the west. It's tempting to look for "the one thing," but the story is far more interesting than that: https://www.publichealth.org/public-awareness/obesity/
The author seems to have missed KoReader (http://koreader.rocks) and Plato (https://github.com/baskerville/plato), both of which are not user-hostile and work on Kobo and ReMarkable.
This is a design choice and not inherent in college loan forgiveness. For example, one could easily imagine a loan forgiveness program where only people making less than $50,000 a year have their loans forgiven. Or a…
> And yet there is scant evidence hospitals ever were at risk Are you suggesting that this story is inaccurate? Your claim is baffling in the face of… well, all the stories I’ve been reading the past two years.…
I think TIME is gunning more for the supermarket checkout reader with this piece, a crowd that would find anti-trust and fake USB cables to be quite dry.
You mean: roughly 100 million people will starve and suffer from malnutrition because Russia invaded Ukraine. It was an entirely predictable outcome based on one country's actions.
> But they do it with like minded people This is the main problem I see with your compromise. The self-sorting will create or enforce existing silos. The compromise is not only between you and your employer, but also…
This is really how it ought to go. Once a quarter, we all descend on one city for one week. We make big plans, we revel in each other’s company, and we see a new part of the world or see a familiar part of the world in…
>Working remote is just what I need, and I am way more productive. I acknowledge that you and many others derive personal satisfaction from productivity. I do too. However, I strongly believe we should move away from…
Do you believe they have the tools to create that vision of a better world?
This quote from the education commissioner cracked me up: In the letter to teachers, Education Commissioner Margie Vandeven said “an individual took the records of at least three educators, unencrypted the source code…
> Giving them housing doesn't mean they also get immunity from criminal laws. All evidence to the contrary. SF, Seattle, LA… seems like the free housing people are indeed immune to at least petty crime laws.
Note that the article is from 2013, and this is very much in line with Facebook’s stance overall: that they are just a forum for expression, and not in the business of policing speech. That stance has only softened,…
That term could fit most of the Santa Clara Valley if you’re operating on the definition provided by the person you heard that from. I won’t link their name here, since I do not believe it is worthwhile to give them…
We already have explanations for the obesity issues in the west. It's tempting to look for "the one thing," but the story is far more interesting than that: https://www.publichealth.org/public-awareness/obesity/
The author seems to have missed KoReader (http://koreader.rocks) and Plato (https://github.com/baskerville/plato), both of which are not user-hostile and work on Kobo and ReMarkable.
This is a design choice and not inherent in college loan forgiveness. For example, one could easily imagine a loan forgiveness program where only people making less than $50,000 a year have their loans forgiven. Or a…