I think it's part ignorance, part exceptionalism. Backdoors sound simple, and if you're thinking about physical backdoors people are generally pretty good at protecting them. That this is largely because they have a lot…
One big factor is simply that a customs authority can dictate whatever process it wishes for ships who want to load/unload cargo there. It's also not just customs, there are a ton of ancillary processes related to…
I've wondered if someone in Airbus is currently investigating how they would fare under similar scrutiny, but I suspect the answer is no.
Gridlock problems are particular to two party systems. A modern constitution would also include voting methods that don't result in a two party system. You could also reduce the risk by the constitution itself being…
What floors me about this article is that the data comes from phone users who have installed TruMotion based software. In other words they know their driving behavior is being actively tracked, and they STILL use their…
The fundamental problem with incentives is that they're asymmetric in nature: The incentivee has a lot more time (and direct motivation) to come up with a way to game the incentive than the incentivizer can spend when…
If I were writing the constitution for a representative democracy today, I think it would include mandatory sunsets for all legislation. Yes, this would lead to the legislature spending a lot of time just reauthorizing…
The difference between your cake and real life programs is that business processes tend to be rife with exceptions and details — frequently exceptions that are unknown at initial design time. The whole reason for the…
Yes, that's usually what enterprises end up doing for their second SAP implementation after the first one crashes and burns.
It's honestly trivial for me. I use a budgeting app (YNAB) that downloads transactions daily, and spend maybe 15 minutes a week total on it. I don't even record most transactions on the fly, but I know where we've used…
It doesn't take a huge amount of research to learn of altenatives like uncensoreddns.org so I think it is a little lazy to just go with Cloudflare.
A missing piece of information here may be that bicycle lanes on major streets in Copenhagen are physically separated from the roadway by a curb, so the only vehicle/bicycle interactions are at intersections.
I consider that too, but that's really just because the risk is acceptable to me compared to the hassle of airports, TSA and car rental.
I think it's part ignorance, part exceptionalism. Backdoors sound simple, and if you're thinking about physical backdoors people are generally pretty good at protecting them. That this is largely because they have a lot…
One big factor is simply that a customs authority can dictate whatever process it wishes for ships who want to load/unload cargo there. It's also not just customs, there are a ton of ancillary processes related to…
I've wondered if someone in Airbus is currently investigating how they would fare under similar scrutiny, but I suspect the answer is no.
Gridlock problems are particular to two party systems. A modern constitution would also include voting methods that don't result in a two party system. You could also reduce the risk by the constitution itself being…
What floors me about this article is that the data comes from phone users who have installed TruMotion based software. In other words they know their driving behavior is being actively tracked, and they STILL use their…
The fundamental problem with incentives is that they're asymmetric in nature: The incentivee has a lot more time (and direct motivation) to come up with a way to game the incentive than the incentivizer can spend when…
If I were writing the constitution for a representative democracy today, I think it would include mandatory sunsets for all legislation. Yes, this would lead to the legislature spending a lot of time just reauthorizing…
The difference between your cake and real life programs is that business processes tend to be rife with exceptions and details — frequently exceptions that are unknown at initial design time. The whole reason for the…
Yes, that's usually what enterprises end up doing for their second SAP implementation after the first one crashes and burns.
It's honestly trivial for me. I use a budgeting app (YNAB) that downloads transactions daily, and spend maybe 15 minutes a week total on it. I don't even record most transactions on the fly, but I know where we've used…
It doesn't take a huge amount of research to learn of altenatives like uncensoreddns.org so I think it is a little lazy to just go with Cloudflare.
A missing piece of information here may be that bicycle lanes on major streets in Copenhagen are physically separated from the roadway by a curb, so the only vehicle/bicycle interactions are at intersections.
I consider that too, but that's really just because the risk is acceptable to me compared to the hassle of airports, TSA and car rental.