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Comment Re:Guess where will it be cheapest to operate Baxt (Score 2, Interesting) 414

I see real potential in giving every high school senior their own Baxter that they need to learn how to maintain... then they send them off to work and people's only remaining job is to fix them when they break down.

Of course, that's not how capitalism works, instead, we'll have robot maintenance specialists who maintain thousands of these things, specialists in highly specialized types of robots will be the most highly paid, flying all over the country on no notice to fix them when they break. For every working robot maintainer, there will be 99 people unemployed, or working in some sort of "service" industry like wiping the foam off of barrista's frothers, until they figure out how to get a robot to do that too...

On an emotional level, I can't help feeling that Kurzweil is a cracked loon about the singularity and all, but listening to him talk, it all sounds so rational how we're moving out of an economy of scarcity into one of abundance, just 15-20 more years and solar power will replace fossil fuel, 10 years after that, electricity will be virtually free to generate.... there will be a small problem with overpopulation and obliteration of the natural world, but with unlimited energy, computing power and machines that do everything for us, what can't we overcome?

Comment Re:Have some shame (Score 1) 589

And, then, there's the matter of timing.

Fresh BS degrees in electrical/computer engineering earned $30K in the '80s (if they could land a job in-field, sometimes that took several months to a year), slowly climbing to maybe $35K in the mid '90s, before shooting up over $70K (sometimes well over) in the space of less than a year, during the bubble.

After the bubble burst, it got... chaotic, but mostly worse for new grads. Post-bubble, there are still high paying opportunities around, and those are generally risk-reward tradeoffs. Risk more (for instance, by skipping college) and you'd better be getting good pay - it could pay off, handsomely, or you could be chucked out on the street after a couple of years, no fault of your own - just bad luck that the company you jumped to before college had a bad turn and laid a bunch of people off. You can always pick up the pieces and start over, but it can be hard to give up that house/car/wife.

Congrats on making it 6+ years, you've got a good argument that your work experience is as valuable as a college degree, but there will be many doors that are closed to you, not because you are incapable, but because the gatekeepers are incapable of making exception to their "degreed persons only" rules.

Comment Re:revolutionary! (Score 1) 483

Expensive, and presumptive regarding infrastructure/adoption. There aren't enough bike lanes in my town (and most others) to make Segway riding practical, even if I wanted to afford one. Plus, the fuel burning Sterling-engined version never came out, so I believe range is a problem for me as well.

Comment Re:Isn't this just bulimia? (Score 2) 483

I worked for Cyberonics for a couple of years. During those years, a bulimia researcher did a presentation at the company about a small (12 subjects/1 year) study in which she used Vagal Nerve Stimulation to help treat bulimia. The underlying hypothesis was that the massive vagal stimulation of purging becomes addictive, sort of like orgasm? (I'm not sure if that's my analogy or hers, she certainly implied it to me), and that electrical vagal stimulation can be a substitute for vomiting to "scratch that itch."

I think her subjects were mostly female, and prequalified as seeking to stop their bulimic behavior but unable to do so through conventional therapies. She reported a remission rate of 11/12 dramatically reducing their purging behavior with something like 6 or 9/12 completely stopping for the period of the study.

The company declined to fund additional research, mostly due to small size of the bulimic population and therefore limited economic incentive. Of course, I'm one to cast judgement on them, when they cancelled their employee stock purchase plan, cut bonuses (20% reduction in my effective annual income) and switched to a crappy healthcare plan, I hit the door in short order... not for just those reasons, but still.

If anyone is interested in similar therapies that don't involve $30K worth of implant surgery, you can get a weaker effect with transcutaneous neurostim. If targeting the vagus with TNS, I'd highly recommend physician guidance and likely no self-applications of the therapy.

Comment Re:About time (Score 1) 297

People who use cars are greedy for the time they save, not for the elitism they can exercise.

Wholeheartedly agree on the first point, but beg to differ on the second.

Perhaps the majority of car driver/owners are not into elitism, but if you look at the subset of population who can and do make significant campaign contributions.... "Some call you the elite, I call you my base." W

Comment Re:Seatbelt? (Score 1) 297

I haven't experienced any well-working courts, I have experienced lots of harassment from lawyers (professional and amateur) that the courts are indifferent to because I'm not willing to invest the time, money and effort into body-slamming them in actual court. Often, it is the party that tries the hardest that prevails, regardless of truth or justice.

In that respect, mechanical recording devices and cameras go a long way toward restoring justice based on historical fact instead of whoever brings the most believable witnesses to the stand, but, as you point out, mechanically recorded testimony is also fallible and subject to manipulation. Just not as fallible as human memory/testimony, in my opinion.

Comment Re:About time (Score 1) 297

Take your average middle class, tax cut receiving voter - sit in his car that delivers him from A to B on demand with zero waiting and zero interaction with the "distasteful public." Now, tell me that this person is going to vote himself into standing on the street-side to wait for and ride a city bus?

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