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Comment Re:Is it really used by Apple? Not so sure. (Score 1) 221

Make the Manufacturer pay for the removal and decommissioning of the train, but don't allow them to do it, themselves. Require them to supply a replacement. The customer had a functioning product which they paid for, which became non-functioning due to an action taken by the Manufacturer.

Comment Re:Corporations don't have political agendas (Score 1) 245

Also, the novelty of CGI has worn off. Take the original Jurassic Park for example. If you released something like that today it would probably be a box office bomb too. It's basically the plot of Westworld but with Dinosaurs.

If they released a movie today, done the way they did Jurassic Park, people would be talking about how refreshingly good the effects were. CGI was a nascent technology in those days, they didn't know how far they could trust it, and they used it sparingly. That focus on Practical Effects, enhanced and smoothed over with CGI left us with a great looking movie, with effects that still hold up, ~30 years later.

Comment Re:HHGTTG? (Score 1) 138

There are hints. HHGTTG literally starts with Earth being destroyed by a callous race of mega-wealthy douchebags who love to stomp on anyone in their way.

You have managed to entirely misunderstand the single most obvious parody ever written. The Vogons are a jab at British government workers. The interstellar equivalent to Mr. L Prosser. The Vogons aren't wealthy, they just work for the government. The power they have comes from government authority, and they delight in using it to inconvenience others. Wealth has nothing to do with it.

Comment Re:Not this bullshit again (Score 1) 170

And eventually the number of simulated universes will be much larger than the number of real universes (one), so the probability is that WE are actually living in a simulated universe, not the one and only real one.

In fact, the odds are 50/50. If you're somewhere in the middle of the chain, you have visibility down to the lower levels of it, but not to the upper levels, without the upper levels choosing to communicate with you. As we are not apparently running this kind of simulation, we can only be at the Top of the Chain, or the Bottom of the Chain.

The universe does seem to have some simulation-like properties, but my suspicion is that this is a product of whatever the medium is that allows the universe to exist, rather than a literal computer. Whatever the parent existence is, there is no guarantee that it has properties which we would find familiar.

Comment Re:Inevitability (Score 1) 314

Being a "Trump Supporter" doesn't have a lot of correlation with being Anti-EV, but being Conservative does have a lot of correlation with being Anti-EV. Internal Combustion Engines are a known variable; today's Conservatives grew up with them, and have spent their lives getting familiar with them. As Conservatives, they don't like to change what they believe works, and EVs are new and weird to them. So they'll keep making the exact same arguments against them, that were made about the "horseless carriage" ("It's more dangerous!", "There's nowhere to refuel it!"), and they'll be wrong in the long run.

Comment Re:Not suprising (Score 1) 50

Saints Row was in kind of a good position to be rebooted. Saints Row 4 saw the destruction of Earth, and the death of the last remaining villain. They could have continued their adventures into space, but at some point we're not really doing Saints Row, anymore.

I think the real problem is that they kind of created 2 kinds of Saints Row. Saints Row 1 and 2 were mostly serious with some mild comedic elements, while Saints Row the Third and Saints Row 4 were entirely comedy. The fans of 1 and 2 didn't like the comedy, but the fans of 3 and 4 were able to enjoy the whole series. Saints Row the Third attracted new audiences, while also picking up fans from Saints Row 1 and 2, before they realized how different it was. Now, Volition could have returned to the serious formula of the first two games when they rebooted, but they'd lose their new audience. The gamble they made was to stick with the comedy formula from 3 and 4, and try to hold onto the newer audience. Unfortunately, because they updated their subject matter for the early 2020s, instead of what was kitsch in the early 2010s when SRTT succeeded, that newer audience failed to turn out. The audience of Saints Row is jaded of "woke politics" and didn't want that in their game. A big problem is that people saw a young black woman in skinny jeans with the sides of her head shaved, and assumed that the game was going to be preachy on "woke" subjects, when the reality is that the game lightly parodies that topic.

They had a real shot at success. They took their time, they made a big game, but in the end they misjudged their audience, and now the price is paid.

Comment Re:Oops (Score 1) 274

Aspartame was shown to cause cancer in mice decades ago. It's a well known piece of information. What's less well known, however, is that you will die from water intoxication, before you can drink enough diet soda to consume the human-scale dose. They had to give those mice a hell of a lot of the stuff.

Comment Discouraging automation is the wrong move. (Score 4, Insightful) 187

We are never going to obtain post-scarcity if we start taxing robots and automation. You want to obtain the goal that Socialism can't accomplish? Let the automation happen. The solution doesn't lie in paying the workers more, it lies in eliminating the need for the jobs they're doing.

Comment Douglas Adams clearly didn't realize what he knew. (Score 3, Insightful) 98

What really gets me, is that an author choosing a number based on arbitrary qualities to make a funny joke, just happening to choose the answer that turns out to be correct and meaningful, is something that would absolutely fit snugly into the world that Douglas Adams was writing about.

Comment Well, I mean... (Score 1) 70

I'm pretty sure that I know where my cameras are, and I'm definitely not committing crimes in front of them. It's not clear to me that Amazon or Google giving that data to the police for any reason that isn't helping me or my neighbors. Given the context, if it's helping my neighbors, it's a net benefit for me. If someone doing illegal stuff in view of my driveway gets caught because my camera recorded it, then my neighborhood is improved and it's a net win for me.

If you're not behind a closed door, your reasonable expectation of genuine privacy is dubious at best.

Comment Re:Translation (Score 4, Interesting) 59

The problem is that with less money floating around in the wild via wages, fewer people have money to spend. The response to that is to lower prices. When two companies producing the same kind of product have reduced their costs, unless they are colluding to keep their prices up, they both lower their prices to make their product more appealing than their competitor's. That's market forces.

Automation will reduce employment. There's no question about that. The remaining jobs will tend to be those that command higher wages, but there will be fewer of them. We're going to have a rough couple of years, but when we come out through the other side, we're in post-scarcity territory.

Comment I think the argument is incomplete. (Score 2) 203

It's fun to think about whether or not we're a simulation. The idea has a bit of a forbidden fruit kind of appeal to it. If it's true, then everything we thought we knew is wrong, and will have to be re-considered. I've heard the idea about the odds of being in a simulation are astronomically in favor of the simulation, but I'm thinking that there's a load of other factors involved that we're not accounting for. Bostrom touches on difficulty and desire as being potential complications, and that's a good start, but I might point out that if an event necessary to our existence is unlikely to occur, our very existence is evidence enough that the unlikely has occurred.
I've never heard anyone really speculate on the minutia of the simulation's nature though, and I think that we'll get better answers if we can sort out whether or not reality does behave like a simulation. There's quantum weirdness, sure, but while that might be evidence of a simulation that wasn't designed for us to examine things that small, it might also just be evidence that our understanding of it is incorrect.

I don't think I know enough to figure it out that way, but I do know that other people posting things with unique personalities and varied levels of coherence is evidence enough for me that all of this user-generated content isn't created procedurally. All of the characters in a book, no matter how well written, have some common elements to their personalities, as they're limited by the mind of the author. A good author will figure out what makes the character tick and write to that, but the tools he uses to get there are a finger print. I'm used to seeing different perspectives on the same subject from the Left and Right, both of which are internally consistent, and I will still manage to argue about it with either a liberal or a conservative, by coming out of nowhere with a completely different interpretation. It's not random, but the source information does get mangled. I think it's evidence enough that I'm not alone, talking to a bunch of bots. At the very least, we are all bots.

Comment Re:Google/Youtube is a real pain (Score 2) 63

On any platform other than web browsers for PC, the ability to watch or listen to a YouTube video without the YouTube app in the foreground is a feature of Premium. Using the web browser version on the iPhone was a work around to get a Premium feature without paying for it. Whether or not the feature should be Premium or Standard is a whole different matter.

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