I believe the poster has $450K in cash, in addition to the real-estate holdings, and that is already more money than they know what to do with. I don't know if it makes sense to mortgage "the base" to add more cash to…
I don't know why this is getting downvoted; companies in other sectors (e.g. oil) get involved in US politics regularly. But there's little precedent for media companies to take action in US politics overtly. (IANAL,…
Demanding a "deeper, more consistent, and prolonged commitment than in the past" from people whose profession you've already made more difficult is pretty galling. It may be the case that their careers were going to get…
If the alternative is artists not being paid enough to make a living, then one side has to push until the other side loses. The work is being given away so cheaply by tech companies trying to commoditize their…
> [T]he other party has every right to tell them No Deal. Sure, but that's different than "You can't charge tech companies more than they themselves are making from the music." Of course you can, and you can do so…
Exactly this. Bandcamp's straightforward, egalitarian deal is exactly what any artist below the superstar level needs. Put your stuff out, set your price, handle your own publicity, Bandcamp takes their cut. That's it.
> You can't charge tech companies more than they themselves are making from the music. Sure you can. Tech companies are constantly losing money at the margins, by paying out more than they take in for a wide variety of…
There's some symmetry to the way the Internet Archive assumes consent to reproduce other people's content, and people assuming consent to take advantage of the Internet Archive's mirroring. I don't know if this is in…
I don't know, the "it's just" part kind of indicates that the real probability of things remaining correlated were not what LTCM thought they were, to the point where they couldn't afford to stay in the position long…
The coin flips are in fact what I was alluding to. I guess we disagree as to whether what LTCM was betting on were a form of coin flips.
> Instead you [the bank] go to an anonymous arb firm, for $1m in bonds, and you say, "okay we're going to sell you the bond that is actually ours, you will sell it back to us, here is your fee, now we can sell this bond…
I'm not quite sure what you mean, but if you can't reduce the size of your position without losing your shirt, you're not really winning; and if staying in your position requires you to put up more money than you can…
What does "launder arbitrage" mean?
> If LTCM was given enough credit to stick it out, they would have made a killing. Anyone making bets will eventually win big if there is no limit on credit, just by betting bigger and bigger until they catch a break.…
A burnt-down courthouse is less of a threat to civil liberties than actual paramilitaries literally grabbing people off of the streets. We're better off when vandals are the bad guys, rather than state security. EDIT:…
I disagree as well. The violence is an unintended consequence, but it's also a known consequence, and has to be taken into account. You can't separate the good and bad consequences of a decision and wave off the…
> If you're savvy enough to know how to buy cryptocurrency Savvy enough to know how to buy cryptocurrency, but not savvy enough to not buy cryptocurrency.
What you described sounds like a pain.
> strong disagreement about the cause of a bug That sounds more like a hypothesis than an opinion. In the less testable world of opinions (over, say, business strategy) it isn't always possible to settle things by…
No, by idle I meant idle, not what's left over after you've already put in a day's work.
> [T]he vast majority of it was driven by engineering-management-career resume-building and was actively detrimental to the editorial/content-production/journalism side of the house. Why didn't the non-technology side…
> I guess stable just wasn't good enough I suspect that's meant to be rhetorical, but from a business perspective, was stable good enough? Sometimes what works now won't be competitive in the near future.
I think there underlying question is why can't we afford to hang out, and why can't a business afford to let people hang out on their premises? The average person seems to have no large stretches of idle time. Neither…
Do the Duluth trousers "anchor the bottom of the pocket bag to the side seam" as well? To me this seems like a clever solution that I haven't seen before.
Slavery wasn't and still isn't that long gone. The reductio ad absurdum where any mention of a color is considered harmful is based in the assumption that the issue is with mentioning color. It might be useful to…
I believe the poster has $450K in cash, in addition to the real-estate holdings, and that is already more money than they know what to do with. I don't know if it makes sense to mortgage "the base" to add more cash to…
I don't know why this is getting downvoted; companies in other sectors (e.g. oil) get involved in US politics regularly. But there's little precedent for media companies to take action in US politics overtly. (IANAL,…
Demanding a "deeper, more consistent, and prolonged commitment than in the past" from people whose profession you've already made more difficult is pretty galling. It may be the case that their careers were going to get…
If the alternative is artists not being paid enough to make a living, then one side has to push until the other side loses. The work is being given away so cheaply by tech companies trying to commoditize their…
> [T]he other party has every right to tell them No Deal. Sure, but that's different than "You can't charge tech companies more than they themselves are making from the music." Of course you can, and you can do so…
Exactly this. Bandcamp's straightforward, egalitarian deal is exactly what any artist below the superstar level needs. Put your stuff out, set your price, handle your own publicity, Bandcamp takes their cut. That's it.
> You can't charge tech companies more than they themselves are making from the music. Sure you can. Tech companies are constantly losing money at the margins, by paying out more than they take in for a wide variety of…
There's some symmetry to the way the Internet Archive assumes consent to reproduce other people's content, and people assuming consent to take advantage of the Internet Archive's mirroring. I don't know if this is in…
I don't know, the "it's just" part kind of indicates that the real probability of things remaining correlated were not what LTCM thought they were, to the point where they couldn't afford to stay in the position long…
The coin flips are in fact what I was alluding to. I guess we disagree as to whether what LTCM was betting on were a form of coin flips.
> Instead you [the bank] go to an anonymous arb firm, for $1m in bonds, and you say, "okay we're going to sell you the bond that is actually ours, you will sell it back to us, here is your fee, now we can sell this bond…
I'm not quite sure what you mean, but if you can't reduce the size of your position without losing your shirt, you're not really winning; and if staying in your position requires you to put up more money than you can…
What does "launder arbitrage" mean?
> If LTCM was given enough credit to stick it out, they would have made a killing. Anyone making bets will eventually win big if there is no limit on credit, just by betting bigger and bigger until they catch a break.…
A burnt-down courthouse is less of a threat to civil liberties than actual paramilitaries literally grabbing people off of the streets. We're better off when vandals are the bad guys, rather than state security. EDIT:…
I disagree as well. The violence is an unintended consequence, but it's also a known consequence, and has to be taken into account. You can't separate the good and bad consequences of a decision and wave off the…
> If you're savvy enough to know how to buy cryptocurrency Savvy enough to know how to buy cryptocurrency, but not savvy enough to not buy cryptocurrency.
What you described sounds like a pain.
> strong disagreement about the cause of a bug That sounds more like a hypothesis than an opinion. In the less testable world of opinions (over, say, business strategy) it isn't always possible to settle things by…
No, by idle I meant idle, not what's left over after you've already put in a day's work.
> [T]he vast majority of it was driven by engineering-management-career resume-building and was actively detrimental to the editorial/content-production/journalism side of the house. Why didn't the non-technology side…
> I guess stable just wasn't good enough I suspect that's meant to be rhetorical, but from a business perspective, was stable good enough? Sometimes what works now won't be competitive in the near future.
I think there underlying question is why can't we afford to hang out, and why can't a business afford to let people hang out on their premises? The average person seems to have no large stretches of idle time. Neither…
Do the Duluth trousers "anchor the bottom of the pocket bag to the side seam" as well? To me this seems like a clever solution that I haven't seen before.
Slavery wasn't and still isn't that long gone. The reductio ad absurdum where any mention of a color is considered harmful is based in the assumption that the issue is with mentioning color. It might be useful to…