> "It's private because we fear bad people" I wonder if the thought process even goes that far. Oftentimes, the motive seems more like self-conscious social pressures, e.g., fear of embarrassment.
> applies to a member of the species Homo sapiens at any stage of development who is carried in the womb with embryonic or fetal cardiac activity The text of the Georgia statute you cited only uses detectable human…
I think the point is that if the vehicle's software can't figure out how to cope with something as simple as a cone on its hood, it's woefully unprepared for real driving conditions and a liability to everyone
> they are cheaper Time will tell, but I suspect it'll be economically unviable once the lawsuits start flowing
I don't understand why this part isn't talked about more. Seems like an elephant in the room to me. Have most people just not encountered confusing road conditions? A couple weeks ago, I was in West Virginia bobbing up…
Don't take that for granted
The recognition of harmful speech. See e.g., German restrictions on Nazi symbolism.
> YOU are an idiot, if you buy into racism Unfortunately, idiots can carry guns and have a propensity for acting on said racism. Refusal to confront that problem in the name of some free speech ideological purity is…
I'm all for reading labels, but don't go around spreading misinfo. None of those are on the packaging[1]. [1]: https://www.beyondmeat.com/en-US/products/the-beyond-burger
By the same token, bigger government allows more room for oversight and principled actors to dilute the effects of the unscrupulous ones. As others here have alluded to, our problem is quality, not quantity.
You could just say "Generally don't run a red light"
Yubikey in a lockbox?
Once you've fired the first 80%, 80% of the work will get done by 20% of the remaining 20%, so it's safe to fire another 80%, and so forth. Ultimately, each company should employ exactly one engineer.
I suspect there's some element of obedience or group belonging at play in ad consumption. Ads are so tightly-woven into the fabric of our world that any rejection of them elicits a feeling of…
So glad to see others calling-out the Permanent Apportionment Act. Maybe it made sense in a world without communications technology, but today we're able to scale to the numbers needed to support that ratio of…
> If the US was a low trust society due to it's gun ownership... I think you have the causality backward here > America is very high trust... We're as polarized as ever, virtually no one approves of our leadership, and…
> who gets to pick and choose? Generally, that's the role of a legislature. We could, for instance, exempt restaurants unable to afford renovations from that burden. Unfortunately, there are sticklers like you that…
Adding a degree to uniqueness would describe the delta between it and its nearest relative. Hence, "very unique" would mean something closer to exceptional or "off-the-charts" and is a perfectly reasonable construction.…
The very notion of intentionally handicapping one's own vocabulary is just plain bizarre
_Electric_ sheep, even!
I'm just amazed ads work at all. Anytime I receive an ad I didn't explicitly request, I boycott that company. I'd have hoped enough likeminded people in the world would naturally defeat the ad sector, but evidently I'm…
I feel like this point gets overblown. Subscribing to an "invalidations" message queue seems pretty straightforward. What am I missing?
Yes please. Can I have my touchpad buttons back already?
> forgetting some stuff running beyond the free-tier limit Weird, they banned my account for that. Tried AWS when it was brand new and assumed they'd just drop the instance when the free tier expired.
Maybe I'm crazy, but I remember when I was little red delicious were crisp and sweet and juicy and perfect in every way. Then over the years, they became more and more hit-or-miss, until they became the mealy,…
> "It's private because we fear bad people" I wonder if the thought process even goes that far. Oftentimes, the motive seems more like self-conscious social pressures, e.g., fear of embarrassment.
> applies to a member of the species Homo sapiens at any stage of development who is carried in the womb with embryonic or fetal cardiac activity The text of the Georgia statute you cited only uses detectable human…
I think the point is that if the vehicle's software can't figure out how to cope with something as simple as a cone on its hood, it's woefully unprepared for real driving conditions and a liability to everyone
> they are cheaper Time will tell, but I suspect it'll be economically unviable once the lawsuits start flowing
I don't understand why this part isn't talked about more. Seems like an elephant in the room to me. Have most people just not encountered confusing road conditions? A couple weeks ago, I was in West Virginia bobbing up…
Don't take that for granted
The recognition of harmful speech. See e.g., German restrictions on Nazi symbolism.
> YOU are an idiot, if you buy into racism Unfortunately, idiots can carry guns and have a propensity for acting on said racism. Refusal to confront that problem in the name of some free speech ideological purity is…
I'm all for reading labels, but don't go around spreading misinfo. None of those are on the packaging[1]. [1]: https://www.beyondmeat.com/en-US/products/the-beyond-burger
By the same token, bigger government allows more room for oversight and principled actors to dilute the effects of the unscrupulous ones. As others here have alluded to, our problem is quality, not quantity.
You could just say "Generally don't run a red light"
Yubikey in a lockbox?
Once you've fired the first 80%, 80% of the work will get done by 20% of the remaining 20%, so it's safe to fire another 80%, and so forth. Ultimately, each company should employ exactly one engineer.
I suspect there's some element of obedience or group belonging at play in ad consumption. Ads are so tightly-woven into the fabric of our world that any rejection of them elicits a feeling of…
So glad to see others calling-out the Permanent Apportionment Act. Maybe it made sense in a world without communications technology, but today we're able to scale to the numbers needed to support that ratio of…
> If the US was a low trust society due to it's gun ownership... I think you have the causality backward here > America is very high trust... We're as polarized as ever, virtually no one approves of our leadership, and…
> who gets to pick and choose? Generally, that's the role of a legislature. We could, for instance, exempt restaurants unable to afford renovations from that burden. Unfortunately, there are sticklers like you that…
Adding a degree to uniqueness would describe the delta between it and its nearest relative. Hence, "very unique" would mean something closer to exceptional or "off-the-charts" and is a perfectly reasonable construction.…
The very notion of intentionally handicapping one's own vocabulary is just plain bizarre
_Electric_ sheep, even!
I'm just amazed ads work at all. Anytime I receive an ad I didn't explicitly request, I boycott that company. I'd have hoped enough likeminded people in the world would naturally defeat the ad sector, but evidently I'm…
I feel like this point gets overblown. Subscribing to an "invalidations" message queue seems pretty straightforward. What am I missing?
Yes please. Can I have my touchpad buttons back already?
> forgetting some stuff running beyond the free-tier limit Weird, they banned my account for that. Tried AWS when it was brand new and assumed they'd just drop the instance when the free tier expired.
Maybe I'm crazy, but I remember when I was little red delicious were crisp and sweet and juicy and perfect in every way. Then over the years, they became more and more hit-or-miss, until they became the mealy,…