Comment Re:Pedestrian cycle! (Score 1) 363
Bring back the Barnes Dance!
Bring back the Barnes Dance!
Practically every commercial satellite launch is insured. Typically runs $20-30 million for a $250-350 million satellite.
Note that, absent immigration, US population is declining.
No, it's not. It's just not true, not even close. Natural increase (i.e. births minus deaths) is still positive, and is expected (by the Census) to remain so through their entire forecast period (through 2060). Natural increase is also currently a bigger source of population growth than net immigration.* By 2023, the Census expects immigration to exceed natural increase as a source of growth.
*And yes, the Census figures include both legal and illegal immigration.
See table 1 at the below link:
http://www.census.gov/populati...
"The price-per-gig on the EVO model comes out to around $0.40/GB, which is where SSD prices have more or less been stalled for a few years now."
Really? A few years?
The 850 EVO 500GB is currently $162 at Amazon (0.32/GB). In December, it was $252 (0.50/GB).
That's a nearly 40% decline in six months.
I'm getting 500GB SSDs today for what I was paying for 250GB drives a bit over a year ago.
Agreed. It would be crazy at this stage to be pulling new twisted pair copper. I get why you'd want to use DSL and leverage the twisted pair that's there (cheap solution), but not why you'd want to add new copper lines.
Nope, the city didn't pay Verizon any money. In fact, Verizon pays about 5% of their TV revenue to the city as a franchise fee.
The city did provide something valuable to Verizon, however: the right to offer TV service in NYC (along with Time Warner Cable, Cablevision, and RCN). Verizon wanted that, and agreed to buildout requirements as part of their franchise agreements to get it.
Short version, Verizon gets the ability to offer cable television service in New York City. In exchange, Verizon has to make that service available throughout the city, not just in higher-income areas.
It's not, and there's a lot of debate between the city and Verizon about how much of the homes that don't have FiOS service available are because of buildings not letting Verizon in vs. Verizon not doing the work.
It's not easy to install FTTH in a high-rise building, particularly an pre-war building, which probably has riser space designed for enough wiring for a couple hundred watts of lightbulbs and a fridge, along with a single phone line, in a two bedroom apartment.
In my building, which is post-war, the crews had to drill two 4" wide holes in each floor by the laundry area on each floor to run the conduit to get the fiber up to the apartments. Took better part of six months from starting the process to bringing up service.
There's zero exclusivity in the franchise agreement. Anybody can get one (who can show the financial wherewithal, etc.). The city does have the ability to decide who gets to offer TV service in NYC, and, since Verizon wanted that right (non-exclusively), they had to sign a franchise agreement.
Google could get a franchise agreement in NYC tomorrow if they wanted to, but they'd have to agree to terms like Verizon's, which include passing all the homes in NYC, not just those in certain areas.
"I'm so tired of your snarky half wise/idiot dipshits that enter every discussion, make some stupid comment that you think is clever, and then when challenged you run away thinking you accomplished something."
You clearly spend a lot of time looking in a mirror. Look, if you want to believe that there's a huge amount of empty space running under Manhattan streets, just waiting to be wired with fiber, be my guest. You're also welcome to believe that the main problem is dealing with the CHUDs down there. Both beliefs are equally true.
If you want to think that the primary cost of network deployment is the license, not the fiber (which is cheap) or the labor (which is NOT), let me pose one question to you then: Google has deployed minimal amounts of fiber, in markets where construction and deployment is much cheaper than in NYC, and where they have all the licenses. Are they just idiots, who don't have your understanding of network and construction economics?
Finally, one more question for you: do you understand the difference between the license needed to run fiber and the franchise agreement needed to offer TV service on the fiber you've run? Because it doesn't sound like you understand that there's a difference, with one being much more complicated to get than the other.
In new york there is PLENTY of room in the conduits to run as much cable as people could possibly want to run.
Really? How interesting. You really need to call up Verizon, AT&T, Level 3, Cogent, etc. etc. etc. and let them know about these hugely extensive empty conduits under NYC, since they'd love to make use of them.
The reality is that the conduits are often totally fully, requiring extensive reroutes (many date from the late 1890s). There's also a lot of dead cable in there (providers who went belly up, or old copper phone lines), but getting to the conduits to clear that out usually requires ripping up the streets. In addition, there's a natural reluctance to rip out cables unless they're known to be dead, as nobody likes getting their phone service cut off.
You mean the Dachau Concentration Camp? I've been there, and while there were certainly Swastikas on items in the exhibits, there definitely wasn't a Swastika flag flying in a position of honor.
My God, I had forgotten about DAK. I loved those catalogs!
absolutely should you shop around for nonemergency care.
you don't shop around for an oncologist when you have cancer (not that you don't have the time, you lack the knowledge to make an educate choice)
Consistency, thy name isn't circletimessquare.
I'm amazed that someone who claims to live in Manhattan doesn't believe that people frequently shop doctors and hospitals (NYP, Mt. Sinai, or NYU Langone, ever heard of them?) for all but emergency care.
Also, I'm amazed that someone who claims to know a lot about healthcare thinks that nonemergency care is "orthogonal to the main fucking point of what healthcare actually is," when nonemergency care makes up about 98% of all health care spending.
you don't shop for care when you're having a heart attack or you have a broken arm or any emergency
you don't shop around for an oncologist when you have cancer (not that you don't have the time, you lack the knowledge to make an educate choice)
all you have done is enunciate related topics like doctor supply that does not disprove the fucking actual topic: healthcare is a natural monopoly. you need a hospital to cover a given area, and you don't shop around for various hospitals when you need emergency or knowledgeable care
please understand the fucking basic facts of a topic then open your ignorant mouth
or shut up, because you don't matter. all of our social and economic peers and even most countries less developed than us understand that healthcare has to be single payer. and they all spend far less than us and have higher quality care. so it doesn't matter what you think or what you say, history has passed you by, and we will drag the retarded propagandized wing of americans into the realm of common sense, and they will live longer and spend less on healthcare in spite of their abject ignorance
Just a hint: you might spend some of the time you devote to working yourself up into a lather to actually understand the health care system a little better. Then, you might understand that the wisdom of single payer (personally, I prefer the Swiss system, but the NHS works very well) has nothing to do with whether it's a natural monopoly or not, and that a lot of single player markets have very significant provider competition for a lot of services.
Also, as a note, people definitely DO shop around for a wide array of non-emergency health care services, including primary care. People choose to go to one oncologist or another, they choose which OB to use (and hence what hospital to use) when they're having a baby, etc. That's true in the US, it's true in the UK, it's true in Germany, etc. etc.
Hackers of the world, unite!