finitemonkey
No user record in our sample, but finitemonkey has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
No user record in our sample, but finitemonkey has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
> Having roommates in late 30s out of necessity rather than choice 1. It's not as bad as you describe it. Not for tech workers, at least. Please go to the lady working at Walmart and ask her about her income and living…
You might want to check what the difference between mean and marginal tax rate is. For somebody with a lifestyle in which $162k a year is considered "barey livable" that should be sth very easy to understand. >save up…
Oh yeah. The media. How convenient. Nobody would have an interest in this if it wasn't for "the media" pushing for a story.
He's still busy microchipping everybody in the west, you know..
At age 19, you can disconnect from your parents if they do dumb things you don't agree with and drag yourself down. Quite literally in this case. It can impact your life financially, i.e., he might have faced foregoing…
> It's like climbing Everest, They died close to the shipwreck. Maybe the Titanic site will slowly fill up with corpses, just like Everest is doing. > Of course all lives should be regarded as being equal. Lives sure.…
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> likely brains of people in subordinate positions syncing with brains of people in dominate positions might have advantage surviving an organized social structures through human history than not. "Likely"? It's…
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> On the other hand, knowing the complexity of all algorithms and blindly assuming "good complexity = good performance" while never checking is a recipe for desaster. Exactly. That's the difference between an actual…
> They said “basically,” so no need to nitpick. The inflationary use of "infinite" especially in tech crowds that should know better deserves pushback. There are models of computation that actually model infinite…
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Apollo 1 has been too long ago. Collective memory fades. Each generation seems to need its own disasters to keep its safety standards up.
> and now they are incredibly powerful but can take basically infinite memory and time. Which is why the "RE" in the article is excrutiatingly slow, given that it needs to perform insane amounts of backtracking. In…
> The machine I'm using to type this comment is also a finite state machine, as due to having non-infinite memory, it also cannot count arbitrarily high. Right. And if you really want to push that argument further then…