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Comment Re:OMFG (Score 1) 294

It's centuries of contrary vs millennia of confirming history.

No, it's not. First, jythie was speaking of modern history and just getting that wrong. Second, why expect a return to so-called "empire building" (which incidentally, didn't affect most people)?

Before the few centuries of the modern age, empire building has been the norm for thousands of years. Any "leap forward" did only benefit almost exclusively the few elites.

This is just another variation of "but this time is different". What makes it different from the last few centuries?

Comment Re:That's all well and good... (Score 1) 112

I work at a pretty representative tech company. I plan and control the budget for these types of activities. I think I would know.

And in the following sentence you indicate you don't

We're not talking about you hacking away in your mom's garage...

The "moonshot" is not just a thing that "pretty representative tech companies", that happen to be in the developed world, do.

Comment Re:OMFG (Score 1) 294

That's what's important to you? Not having a country of happy people, healthy people, educated people, or good opportunity for all classes?

The odd thing here is that all of the examples given by AC were of countries with increasingly wealthier, happier, and better educated people. Maybe this issue isn't as important to you as you claim.

Comment Re:OMFG (Score 1) 294

Each leap forward has generally resulted in more medium income jobs being replaced by low income ones than high income ones. Each wave has resulted in a increased standard of living for a smaller and smaller percentage of the population.

I really get annoyed with how many slashdotters there are complaining about this without even a rudimentary acknowledgement of the centuries of contrary history. You could at least claim that somehow it'll be different this time.

Comment Re:Yet another makes the same mistake. (Score 1) 79

They are cutting themselves out of market reach by excluding consumers. Their success or failure depends entirely upon whether organizations, wealthy individuals, or municipalities will order large lots. People with deep pockets don't spend on impulse, and they're just as likely to create their own solution as invest in this one.

I don't know whether these guys are cutting themselves off from the market. But I do know that the deepest pockets, the Feds do buy on impulse. There's vast sums of money available for disaster recovery and piddling amounts available for disaster preparation (aside from terrorism, which does seem to consume an inordinate amount of disaster preparedness money). If these guys can store a large number of these units and ship them for a large scale disaster, then they could get a piece of that action, which might generate a profit.

But how often do Katrina scale disasters happen in the wealthier parts of the world? I'm not really seeing the need here.

Comment Re:Your government at work (Score 1) 336

100 years is relatively recent.

Last month is genuinely recent. That's when ISIS burned around 45 people. Then they stuck it on YouTube. They've also are in the process of committing genocide and allegedly selling human organs on the black market.

No where in the world is a bastion of righteousness.

What was the point of making that observation? I find it interesting how people are more concerned about a light case of hypocrisy in the US than a vile organization like ISIS. It's a pretty remarkable case of moral blindness.

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