> 1. by eating less you are going to lose weight > 2. It's no(t) going to be easy > Not at all Self righteous nonsense. It does matter. I would suggest, that it would be compelling to stop with the deterministic…
How is that relevant to the topic or infrastructure comment?
SMH Your assurances that you know what the NSA (or proxy) would reason is laughable, for example. You have a view that he's a bad actor and it doesn't matter to me, other than it's a trivial thought experiment to…
Not just specific companies, but largely specific areas (which have to compete with specific companies). New grads will, statistically, never see signing bonuses in their career, much less out of school. People paying…
I have never seen a signing bonus. Options, yearly bonus, even rev-share, sure. > There can be other facets of a company that should influence your decision, such as what type of healthcare they offer, Almost…
> What are the motives for leaking information regarding our actions on foreign soil against foreign citizens? 1. Removing plausible deniability. "Well we might be deeply involved in domestic surveillance but we…
It keeps industries (affecting the currency, in the case of banks) stable. There's only 1 asshole to talk to, when it stops being reliable or the populace gets uppity enough for the political animals to notice.
> 26 cents per ride That's terrible. Other non-tech businesses, hell EVERY business that I've ever worked in that used AWS did better per transaction - healthcare, digital advertising, virtual office tooling, gaming. If…
> rock phosphate is a finite resource and the biggest supplies are mined in politically unstable places A similarity with oil? I think it's a forgone conclusion that politically unstable places are ripe for becoming…
> 150 degree weather I guess that depends on what you consider "weather" If I said "ground temperature", would it matter to the discussion? 60C (140F) was the Average temp in the triassic. With the amount of water in…
The survival of our technological civilization is very much uncertain. It has been since the nuclear age. If someone wanted to take meaningful action, they would be sinking container ships. In aggregate, they contribute…
I don't draw any "consequences", whatever that's supposed to mean. I have been following the article's claim and explaining it in simpler terms, because there was a misunderstanding of the claim. Who do you think…
You continually make the grave error of framing the criticism as if I had proposed it. I am clarifying what is plainly stated in the article, by Callender, but somehow has escaped the narrow focus of individuals like…
systemd wasn't necessary for init when you ignore Poettering's binaries which broke with common interfaces (now there are more, sigh). It's worse from a maintenance standpoint, for init. It's quite sane for a daemon…
It seems incredibly self-defeating, to quit over a lack of CODE REVIEW at any point in someone's career. Hiring someone just to review your code is not a sane business decision, so you might want to think about how you…
> No. It is posible to define the entropy of an object that has no internal indivisible parts, for example a black hole How? If there is no system of parts, there is no entropy. I'm not sure why you have a "black hole"…
> UBI is especially a terrible idea if you don't want people like Gates and Torvalds and Stallman to emerge naturally from an environment that enabled and fostered their genius every step of the way. The Pareto…
> The money taken from billionaires/millionaires would eventually dry up. The Pareto principle remains. Wealth is measured. Ergo, there will always be people who maintain a network of wealth that far exceeds the norm.
These aren't bold claims, if you've been reading about it for a decade. Even the New York times covered these points (more or less). https://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/04/technology/technology-in-... All these issues were…
> Yes well I'm talking about chopping trees down and building homes out of them https://youtu.be/zVPUFMwm73Y?t=228 Relevant: Coppice
The Rey-Palpatine clone is just as compelling... https://youtu.be/hzG3m-ZW198?t=358 There are hints with the theme of the Emperor being played at times. The sounds of his laughter haunt her visions, along with her…
> So you’re talking about software which doesn’t exist, right? It exists on my computer right now (didn't use an actual admanager, just coded a remote call). You want to believe the gun pointed at the door with a string…
As per the principle, the lack of failure is how success can be measured. ie Consequently, a successful endeavor (subject to this principle) is one where every possible deficiency has been avoided.
> That seems like a semantic distinction only. The semantics matter because of subjective interpretation. "I think" and "should" and "the majority of subgroup x" are not usually correlated to be the same thing, even…
No. I haven't looked through many js packages. I could make it without any effort via: > https://github.com/feross/funding/blob/master/messages.json Currently it's "manually curated" which is a fancy way of saying, it's…
> 1. by eating less you are going to lose weight > 2. It's no(t) going to be easy > Not at all Self righteous nonsense. It does matter. I would suggest, that it would be compelling to stop with the deterministic…
How is that relevant to the topic or infrastructure comment?
SMH Your assurances that you know what the NSA (or proxy) would reason is laughable, for example. You have a view that he's a bad actor and it doesn't matter to me, other than it's a trivial thought experiment to…
Not just specific companies, but largely specific areas (which have to compete with specific companies). New grads will, statistically, never see signing bonuses in their career, much less out of school. People paying…
I have never seen a signing bonus. Options, yearly bonus, even rev-share, sure. > There can be other facets of a company that should influence your decision, such as what type of healthcare they offer, Almost…
> What are the motives for leaking information regarding our actions on foreign soil against foreign citizens? 1. Removing plausible deniability. "Well we might be deeply involved in domestic surveillance but we…
It keeps industries (affecting the currency, in the case of banks) stable. There's only 1 asshole to talk to, when it stops being reliable or the populace gets uppity enough for the political animals to notice.
> 26 cents per ride That's terrible. Other non-tech businesses, hell EVERY business that I've ever worked in that used AWS did better per transaction - healthcare, digital advertising, virtual office tooling, gaming. If…
> rock phosphate is a finite resource and the biggest supplies are mined in politically unstable places A similarity with oil? I think it's a forgone conclusion that politically unstable places are ripe for becoming…
> 150 degree weather I guess that depends on what you consider "weather" If I said "ground temperature", would it matter to the discussion? 60C (140F) was the Average temp in the triassic. With the amount of water in…
The survival of our technological civilization is very much uncertain. It has been since the nuclear age. If someone wanted to take meaningful action, they would be sinking container ships. In aggregate, they contribute…
I don't draw any "consequences", whatever that's supposed to mean. I have been following the article's claim and explaining it in simpler terms, because there was a misunderstanding of the claim. Who do you think…
You continually make the grave error of framing the criticism as if I had proposed it. I am clarifying what is plainly stated in the article, by Callender, but somehow has escaped the narrow focus of individuals like…
systemd wasn't necessary for init when you ignore Poettering's binaries which broke with common interfaces (now there are more, sigh). It's worse from a maintenance standpoint, for init. It's quite sane for a daemon…
It seems incredibly self-defeating, to quit over a lack of CODE REVIEW at any point in someone's career. Hiring someone just to review your code is not a sane business decision, so you might want to think about how you…
> No. It is posible to define the entropy of an object that has no internal indivisible parts, for example a black hole How? If there is no system of parts, there is no entropy. I'm not sure why you have a "black hole"…
> UBI is especially a terrible idea if you don't want people like Gates and Torvalds and Stallman to emerge naturally from an environment that enabled and fostered their genius every step of the way. The Pareto…
> The money taken from billionaires/millionaires would eventually dry up. The Pareto principle remains. Wealth is measured. Ergo, there will always be people who maintain a network of wealth that far exceeds the norm.
These aren't bold claims, if you've been reading about it for a decade. Even the New York times covered these points (more or less). https://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/04/technology/technology-in-... All these issues were…
> Yes well I'm talking about chopping trees down and building homes out of them https://youtu.be/zVPUFMwm73Y?t=228 Relevant: Coppice
The Rey-Palpatine clone is just as compelling... https://youtu.be/hzG3m-ZW198?t=358 There are hints with the theme of the Emperor being played at times. The sounds of his laughter haunt her visions, along with her…
> So you’re talking about software which doesn’t exist, right? It exists on my computer right now (didn't use an actual admanager, just coded a remote call). You want to believe the gun pointed at the door with a string…
As per the principle, the lack of failure is how success can be measured. ie Consequently, a successful endeavor (subject to this principle) is one where every possible deficiency has been avoided.
> That seems like a semantic distinction only. The semantics matter because of subjective interpretation. "I think" and "should" and "the majority of subgroup x" are not usually correlated to be the same thing, even…
No. I haven't looked through many js packages. I could make it without any effort via: > https://github.com/feross/funding/blob/master/messages.json Currently it's "manually curated" which is a fancy way of saying, it's…