juve1996
No user record in our sample, but juve1996 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 juve1996 has activity below (stories or comments). Likely we have partial data — the full bulk-load will fill profiles in.
Only if they always do the right thing, which we know they won't.
Seems to be accurate. The fact is there is a need for 5/5 competent managers but it's unlikely to find 5/5 competent managers. Just as there are 10x devs and 1x devs.
> I don't know why it is this way at my org, but the IT director does not want to talk to PMs, Devs, or Analysts. He would rather have a top level circle of senior managers who insulate him from the actual work. To me…
It's a better iteration but doesn't solve the core problems of VR/AR.
Another product that only exists when cash is cheap and you can continually con VC. Not anymore. The underlying product simply doesn't provide enough value to justify $10!!! a month, and that's on sale.
> You're right that we've never seen the effects of raising everyone's wages at once. We just saw it - a year ago - and it coincided with the worst inflation in decades. Look at the 80s - same thing - high inflation and…
You make an assumptions that is false. 1. Minimum wage increases != wage increases. It's a small subset. The poorest of the poor is never the problem. > Every consumer has some idea of what things are worth and if a…
> Because no one would actually be better off. Prices would instantly double. It's just a change of units, like going from getting paid in $ to getting paid the same amount in ¢. This is so basic but so many people miss…
It's definitely easier to say no in a corporate setting. You have way more options than someone in academia. It's really hard to transfer and your higher ups control pretty much everything.
The US government has been around for quite some time. The British pound, longer. It will take hundreds of years to compare to that level of resiliency.
It's not the trolley problem because in the trolley problem both outcomes are clear to the decider.
No, the problem is cost. The medical professional part is secondary because no one wants to pay for hypochondriacs who think their cough at 25 is stage 4 lung cancer based on webMD research, because getting a full body…
> Is it worse than death? Sure, why couldn't it be? Maybe it has severe, painful side effects. There's a reason many people with stage 4 cancer and low chance of survival decide not to go back on chemo. Maybe it kills…
I think this is spot on. Most people want to grow up, but they simply can't. They can't afford the same lifestyle without far more debt inducing schooling, both parents have to work, housing is unaffordable, our…
Yea, effort estimation is a waste of time much like building a piece by piece project plan of anything. The key is workflows, like how buildings used to be built. You just keep working on it - no stupid schedule that…
Happens to all social media because in order to succeed you need a critical mass of users. The best way to get this is to make it free.
Let's be honest, that's already happening anyway.
To me it's a natural consequence of wealth inequality. When you have mega funds like the oil countries have, where even losses like this are not really relevant, you will have this behavior. They know it's a moonshot.…
Is Australia currently not meeting their debts or at risk in the short term future of not?
People use knives a lot more than instant pots. They wear down quite quickly and many just buy new ones instead of sharpening. Vitamix blenders are priced quite high to make up for a lower sales volume. > Also, I don't…
I completely disagree with your examples. Cars have massively changed over time - even in short intervals, cars today offer a lot of value you wouldn't get even just 5 years ago in many models. And they're priced…
Just happened to me this week, same thing. Out of nowhere. It also auto-signed me into Edge, when I never did it before in my life. It really is getting ridiculous now.
Windows has lost significant market share over the last 10 years. I wouldn't call that a smashing success. In the US iPhone market share has increased and outperformed android recently. Sure, global market and all - but…
Toyota was in a well established industry with a huge market. This is not comparable.
Yea 20 million cheap VR headsets that haven't taken off into the expected market at all. Any hardware company could do that tomorrow. It's easy. Just source the parts. Apple is practically completely vertically…