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Comment It's not the price, it's the quality. (Score 1) 91

I cancelled last month because I got tired of wading through the dross. It had reached the point that when Netflix presented me with a page of titles, I was typing every single name into a search on IMDB or Rotten Tomatoes to find out if it was worth my time. Don't give me an ad-supported subscription Netflix - that just tells me that you value my time even less to force me to sit through ads after I've spent ages selecting a movie. Give me reviews and ratings. Give me better search and filtering capabilities.

Comment Not even 2 years in most cases. (Score 1) 393

HTC Magic - lasted 1 year 11 months.
Nexus S - lasted 1 year 9 months.
Nexus 4 - lasted 2 years 10 months.
Nexus 5x - lasted 1 year 4 months, had well-known boot loop issue, main board replaced under warranty. Screen died at 2 years 3 months.
Nokia 7 Plus - lasted 1 year 11 months, USB port stopped charging, whole phone replaced under warranty. Second phone is ~3 months old.

Comment Re:Electrode lifetime? (Score 1) 30

I have a Cochlear implant. The visual cortex implant is clearly following a very similar strategy to the CI (based on the article it looks roughly on par with where the CI was in 1977). For the CI, the 22 electrodes are inserted by a surgeon individually into the cochlear and are designed to curve around the cochlear as they are inserted. These electrodes have an active stimulation length of around 25mm and are typically expected to last decades - it is rare for them to require removal. In contrast the VCI, for the moment anyway, has an array of 100 x 1mm long electrodes simply pushed against the cortex. While I cannot be certain, I would speculate that their much shorter length means they lose contact more easily and hence require regular re-seating. I would anticipate that once all the theory and testing is worked out, these electrodes will be inserted more deeply and perhaps even individually, just as with the CI.

Comment Plenty of upside to go (Score 1) 86

If you extrapolate using the current 50% pa growth rate, then in 2025 Tesla could deliver over 4 million cars, 12 million in total. That's still only 1% of the 1 billion cars in the world today. The world's biggest car makers (Toyota, VW etc) only deliver around 10 million cars a year each.

Comment Well played Microsoft (Score 5, Informative) 111

Who employs more degree-holders in the US?

  • Amazon - 600K worldwide, but only about 60K it calls US corporate workers (likely to be degree holders) - the rest are low-wage fulfilment workers. Will pay tax on gross of 230 billion (2018).
  • Microsoft - 130K worldwide, with 80K in the US, likely to be virtually all corporate workers. Would pay tax on gross of 110 billion (2018).

So Microsoft is likely to hire more degree holders than Amazon, yet forces Amazon to contribute twice as much to boosting the graduate pool.

Comment Already a problem in Asia (Score 1) 278

Hong Kong has already banned e-scooters. Singapore was slower to react and is absolutely infested with them. You've always had to dodge bell-ringing cyclists on their footpaths but the sidewalks have become clogged with scooters too. They're faster and quieter than bicycles, many have even been modified to remove the speed limiters, and there have been several deaths already, of careless riders and unwitting pedestrians.

They're coming to your country too, it's only a matter of time.

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