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Comment Re:Easy solution... (Score 1) 611

The easy solution is to make highrise apartment and office buildings illegal through zoning.

Or make high-rise apartment buildings LEGAL so that more people live closer to their job instead of in the suburbs.

LA has too many parts of its "urban" area zoned as single-family residential (compare with Manhattan).

Comment Re:Experienced it recently (Score 1) 611

My brother and I were actually heading down to the Sunset Strip a couple weeks ago for a concert and my brother decided to try the Waze route.

raining hard

Dude, when it is raining hard, the 405 Sepulveda pass and the 110 Cahuenga pass became parking lots. If Waze took you over the hills, I'm sure that was the fastest route, even if it seemed like it was long!

Comment Exactly! (Score 1) 611

"Waze has caused trouble for LA residents by redirecting traffic from Interstate 405 to neighborhood side streets paralleling the interstate. "

Exactly, that is why I use Waze, so when the highways get backed up, I can go around them on the surface streets!

If you can't take the traffic, move to the suburbs!

Comment Re:We've already seen the alternative to regulatio (Score 1) 93

These days, when you hop into an Uber X, it's a less consistent experience. Sometimes it's a lost out-of-towner

I find this in "normal" taxis in New York and Chicago. The drivers are asking me where things are. I'm thinking "do you know what a GPS is?" Then they don't take credit cards (or the credit card reader "isn't working") or they do so by rubbing a pencil on a piece of paper on top of your card and you see the charge a month later.

Comment Re:A few good parts of regulation... (Score 1) 93

Because the walk from Bellagio to New York New York is complicated by City Center, it's a pain in the ass 20 minute one-mile hike

That is a failure of Bellagio, New York New York, and City Center, not of taxis. Next time, let your invisible hand direct you to a more walkable area like downtown Vegas.

Comment Re:Algorithm (Score 1) 602

I don't mind Starbucks not paying taxes in the UK, as long as they pay a fair share of taxes somewhere.

In 2012, Starbucks had operating income of about $2 billion and paid $674 million in income taxes.

In the last 12 months ending Sept. 27, 2014, Apple paid $14 billion in income taxes on $52 billion operating income.

Of course both of these companies paid significant amounts of sales taxes as well as income taxes.

Comment Re:Algorithm (Score 1) 602

Say they do 6% of their global business and revenue in my country. OK, then whatever profits Apple makes world wide throughout their empire throughout all associated companies, you've got to pay tax in my country on 6% of it.

So if a company can't make a high profit in your country, they simply would never invest in business operations in your country if you are going to tax them on revenues instead of profits. Sure, that is one scheme.

Comment Re:Bad Helmet Design (Score 3, Interesting) 233

Why does the helmet only have padding on the inside?

Most football concussions now come from "rotational acceleration", the twisting of the brain inside the skull. It is much harder for a helmet to protect against there than "linear acceleration" forces, the helmet has to literally slide around the head.

Hardware

How the World's First Computer Was Rescued From the Scrap Heap 126

anavictoriasaavedra sends this quote from Wired: "Eccentric billionaires are tough to impress, so their minions must always think big when handed vague assignments. Ross Perot's staffers did just that in 2006, when their boss declared that he wanted to decorate his Plano, Texas, headquarters with relics from computing history. Aware that a few measly Apple I's and Altair 880's wouldn't be enough to satisfy a former presidential candidate, Perot's people decided to acquire a more singular prize: a big chunk of ENIAC, the "Electronic Numerical Integrator And Computer." The ENIAC was a 27-ton, 1,800-square-foot bundle of vacuum tubes and diodes that was arguably the world's first true computer. The hardware that Perot's team diligently unearthed and lovingly refurbished is now accessible to the general public for the first time, back at the same Army base where it almost rotted into oblivion.

Comment Re:But who's going to support the welfare state? (Score 1) 338

John D. Rockefeller basally created the modern petroleum industry, dramatically advancing technology, and reducing the price of oil for customers.

Cornelius Vanderbilt was an early steamboat and shipping entrepreneur, and dramatically improved the operation of railroad lines into New York City.

Andrew Carnegie greatly enlarged the US steel industry, including the first serious of the Bessemer process. Personally, Carnegie was a leader in the American Anti-Imperialist League, in opposition to the U.S. annexation of the Philippines. He also gave away 90% of his wealth to philanthropies.

All three of these men created companies that enhanced the lives of consumers.

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