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Comment Re:More or less BS? (Score 2, Insightful) 58

Because the real credits are just as much BS.

Hey look we bought the side of the mountain that nobody would find reasonably to economically developer for 50 years or more anyway; we promise we'll keep it forest for 50 years - now we can sell some carbon credits.

If you are selling indulgences might as well not pretend they are something other than exactly that.

Comment Re:So what's your skill? (Score 1) 78

90% of the code written today is bog standard that does the same thing over and over again

I have very little doubt of that. However nobody is suing each other arguing my CRUD app infringes on your CRUD apps copyright because of how similar it is (generally speaking). However we all know the vast majority of LOB apps are handful of not really very different task oriented entry screens in front of an RDMS with some validation rules and query driven reports.

A lot of that code maybe most of it can be generated. I have little doubt it will be. However no-code/low-code variations of that theme have existed going back to FoxPro and MS Access in the middle 90s. There are still IT jobs, even if the IT Pro: IT Consumer ratio is much bigger than it once was. There will still be room for artists too but you have to multiple the affect here by the impacts of mass media and an increasingly global market place.

Comment Re:So what's your skill? (Score 1) 78

That remains the challenge here. These tools are going to force a redefinition of 'what is a create work'

The cat is now out of the bag society and industry are just going to have wrap their heads around it. Nobody is going to pay a livable salary to someone taking weeks with special use studio equipment to do what a machine can in a couple hours. At least not unless it gets way more expensive to build to operate the machine - but I don't see that NVIDA chips and data center cooling might be cheap and the power budget might not be small; but neither is that of a recording studio.

Comment Re:Huh? (Score 2) 124

This was my thought too -The guy wants to turn the iPad into MacBook without a keyboard.

The is nothing less 'portable' than something with pile of external dongles, adapters, etc hung off it just to make it useful.

USB-C or a conventional proprietary connector type-y docking station or port-replicator works for the desk but it does not travel. Nobody wants to walk into the conference room of the coffee shop and assemble and squid like array of thunderbolt gadgets, only to tear it all down (and probably have to close or restart half the apps using the stuff) 15min later.

Comment Re:Reasons (Score 1) 155

Indeed; Windows 3.11 + Norton Desktop 3 - was a better UI than we have today on any platform.

I ran NDW (not Commander) on 32-bit Windows for years until the lack of LNF support and the fact the rest of the world have moved to actually using long filenames made it unworkable.

However in terms of a cohesive way to find and working with everything on the system nothing has duplicated it since.

Comment Re:Like cockroaches... (Score 0, Troll) 41

STFU

Imagine the reaction the Chinese government if the US State Department or a large US business - so deliberately tried to circumvent and displayed such contempt for the intent of Chinese law. Bad actors are bad actors. Just because our own behavior isnt perfect does not mean we must just ignore problem behavior.

It might mean that we should exercise some discernment and proportion in our degree of judgement and condemnation but we can at least 'talk' about dilberate attempts to violate our policy without being 'racists'

Comment Re:And nothing will happen (Score 1) 173

I agree it looks bad. Given the MIC and deep state ties here where Boeing is concerned; I have no difficulty believing that anything *could* be possible.

However what *should* happen absent any evidence whatsoever this wasn't a freak medical condition?

Remember every event is coincident with some other event if you don't restrict the topics of the other event or allow enough time. Should we blow a bunch of tax dollars launching investigations into people who might want Boeing's critics silenced? Where do we stop, the Officers, board of directors, large share holders, Generals pushing for military contracts, Congress person with Boeing facilities in their districts, YOU with the mutual fund?

Comment Re:Gonna keep on getting worse. (Score 2) 256

Well the reality is no matter how you slice it the USA has contributed more to Ukraine in terms of actual goods than the EU. That should be looked upon as entirely unacceptable.

You are right though, for the most part this is a great way to pump a bunch of money out of the public treasury into MIC and its owners pockets. Funny how everything that touch Ukraine turns out to be money laundering scheme when you zoom out a bit.

Comment Re:No problem (Score 1) 256

That would be a really bad move. The fact those job creators are ultimately the ones producing the goods we all need. There will be "plenty" for them no matter what policy choices we make (sort of some revolution that has them stood against a wall anyway).

However if you take away enough of their 'wealth' because of your pathetic jealousy they will pull back on the industrialization of what they have left. You think you have inflation now; just implement ^^ this ^^ type of policy and watch how expensive bread stuffs actually get!

Comment Re:I am going to roasted for this but is Amazon wr (Score 1) 70

That would be a reasonable approach, I agree but its not without its own set of challenges.

Now Amazon would have powerful incentives to cut off any clients who are say controversial and likely to trigger DOS attacks etc. We be able to add being 'unhosted' alright kinda thing to list of being unbanked, deplatformed, and canceled. You'd expose every client to the hecklers veto; no matter how deep their pockets.

I am not sure that is good thing either.

Comment Re:The way to make porn more dangerous (Score 1) 145

How many times are people going to try to push this argument. By this logic we should not restrict anything that might be harmful.

Cigarettes are obviously bad for kids but if you don't let them walk in to the C-store to get a pack what is the child smoker going to do? They look for some less legitimate source. Those darts are more likely to be laced with whatever or have harder drugs in them!

Yes it should stupid because it is stupid. Its likely saying we should legalize cocaine because it would take the money out of drug crime. Sure it would probably make life safer for a small minority of coke heads but keeping contraban status probably keeps the vast vast majority of the public from every trying a highly addictive and dangerous substance.

Making porn less accessible to children WILL result in fewer children accessing porn and given parents who are actually trying to monitor and manage their children online something of a fighting chance.

Comment I am going to roasted for this but is Amazon wrong (Score 1) 70

Lets say you hosted your own web infrastructure. Chances our bandwidth costs are fixed and so is the size of the total pipe. If you start getting 'packeted' you will:

still be on the hook for the extra power because that CPU never gets to idle, as you have to keep pumping out the 404s

still have your other finite resources like log storage consumed

be facing potentially costly loss of business if the request rate is high enough it effectively DOSs you. That might be more then the AWS bill depending on what your site is.

I guess what I am saying is that there is an actual cost to events like this and someone has to pay them. While the initial reaction is randos on the internet should not be able to just run up your AWS bill when you have assigned no access at all; I am not sure that right. Given if you were hosting your own stuff or even going the 'traditional' VPS or hosting provider route you'd be be on the hook for most of the associated costs. The *cloud* ultimately boils down to renting someone else's computer.

Comment Re:Omits 65% of the coal consumption worldwide (Score 1) 147

China is not going to collapse. That is just deep state propaganda.

Just look at the fundamentals. They have enough people, they have enough ability to produce and grow food to feed those people. They have at least a group of people that have achieved a high-level of education, skill and technical ability, its a not China of the late 60s that can't make ball point pens. The have powerful government that will be able to by fiat redistribute wealth in a way that prevents actual mobs of staving peasants, and culture that will all them to take heavy handed actions against agitators without it really damaging the states support politically.

This is not to say that they don't face serious demographic headwinds; because of many past bad policy choices. I think the Chinese economy is likely to slow down a lot - unless they make more imperialist moves. Which if successful could turn them into the ascendant super power, or could be their undoing. If they do nothing but stay the course they are on currently however they will come thru just fine perhaps after a couple decades of restricted grow while the demography works out. The ONLY things they need to get right or are 1) turn their technical investments toward deploying more mechanized agriculture, and 2) keep encouraging people to have babies, so the population reverts toward a younger mean.

I would be much much more worried about our own house. We continue to spend and operate as if the rest of the world lies in ruin after WWII and we are not just the military super power but the lone industrial power. This has not been the case for 30+ years maybe longer depending on when you want to say 'the American century' begins and ends. Look at economy. Look what a little supply chain disruption does to the purchasing power of our dollar. Look how rapidly the world is moving off the dollar. Realize those supply chain disruptions were largely in elastic items, not food stuffs; we grow our own mostly; but we are told constantly the US ag industry depends on migrant workers and illegal aliens. Now imaging the inflationary pressure if we stopped massively importing slave-wage labor and had to pay people minimum wage to pick berries... Look at how much of our economy is dependent on trade conditions that only exist because of our massive military investment in preserving the world order that isn't matched by the EU. All you have to do is look at Libya and Ukraine to see the EU can't and won't provide the security required to keep our trade focused highly specialized economies functioning. We have to do the heavy lifting and we only accomplish it with massive deficit spending with not hope of balance in sight. Its the West that needs to worry about the wheel coming off not China.

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