Imagine it as a bet with a friend. You: "hey, I got this item worth 10 but I believe it will go down in the next five days." Friend: "no way." "want to bet? You will buy it from me for 10 whenever I want to sell it."…
No, I'm going to argue that you gained more through possessing the device than by having the money you spent. Unless your stance is that only money is wealth.
If you own the device where you read HN on: Would you say it is worth the money you paid for it? Why/ why not?
That sounds like a Chinese knife (often wrongly called cleaver - it's not meant for chopping). https://www.seriouseats.com/2019/12/chinese-cleaver-kitchen-...
It's true that a sharp knife feels great, but they said 'blunder' for a reason. A sharp knife will leave a clean cut on meat and not squish vegetables, but the question is if the average home cook cares enough about…
You mean when he is using your account (or family sharing) on the other machine?
Imagine it as a bet with a friend. You: "hey, I got this item worth 10 but I believe it will go down in the next five days." Friend: "no way." "want to bet? You will buy it from me for 10 whenever I want to sell it."…
No, I'm going to argue that you gained more through possessing the device than by having the money you spent. Unless your stance is that only money is wealth.
If you own the device where you read HN on: Would you say it is worth the money you paid for it? Why/ why not?
That sounds like a Chinese knife (often wrongly called cleaver - it's not meant for chopping). https://www.seriouseats.com/2019/12/chinese-cleaver-kitchen-...
It's true that a sharp knife feels great, but they said 'blunder' for a reason. A sharp knife will leave a clean cut on meat and not squish vegetables, but the question is if the average home cook cares enough about…
You mean when he is using your account (or family sharing) on the other machine?