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Comment Re:Long View (Score 1) 482

"Compensation has been commensurate to your skills for hundreds of years. It may suck for the unskilled, but that's what works."

More and more skills, knowledge and ability is being built into software (e.g., multiple subject matter experts consult with developer for new software release which ends up quite good but inflexible). This reduces/eliminates the need for entry-level tasks, so it becomes more difficult to enter the field. Eventually an advanced degree will be required just to click buttons.

Comment Re:Classic postmodern stupid (Score 1) 365

...there's a crapton of accumulated skills and techniques - mostly forgotten to the bulk of civilization - involved in building things...

And there are very many "professionals" "working" today who would be completely lost without computers - task automation covers up a LOT of incompetence and encourages fraudulent claims of capabilities.
Businesses

New York State Spent Millions On Program For Startups That Created 76 Jobs 238

Nerval's Lobster writes Last year, the New York state government launched Start-Up NY, a program designed to boost employment by creating tax-free zones for technology and manufacturing firms that partner with academic institutions. Things didn't go quite as planned. In theory, those tax-free zones on university campuses would give companies access to the best young talent and cutting-edge research, but only a few firms are actually taking the bait: According to a report from the state's Department of Economic Development, the program only created 76 jobs last year, despite spending millions of dollars on advertising and other costs. If that wasn't eyebrow-raising enough, the companies involved in the program have only invested a collective $1.7 million so far. The low numbers didn't stop some state officials from defending the initiative. "Given the program was only up and running for basically one quarter of a year," Andrew Kennedy, a senior economic development aide to Governor Cuomo, told Capital New York, "I think 80 jobs is a good number that we can stand behind."

Comment Gibberish (Score 2) 291

In these days of ever-increasing volumes of information being thrown about it's important to be clear and unambiguous in the first few sentences of writing. I, for one, don't have the time to not not figure out the negative-reverse implications of failing to undisclose previously inversely unhidden assertions. Not.
Earth

The Last Time Oceans Got This Acidic This Fast, 96% of Marine Life Went Extinct 417

merbs writes: The biggest extinction event in planetary history was driven by the rapid acidification of our oceans, a new study concludes (abstract). So much carbon was released into the atmosphere, and the oceans absorbed so much of it so quickly, that marine life simply died off, from the bottom of the food chain up. That doesn't bode well for the present, given the similarly disturbing rate that our seas are acidifying right now. A team led by University of Edinburgh researchers collected rocks in the United Arab Emirates that were on the seafloor hundreds of millions of years ago, and used the boron isotopes found within to model the changing levels of acidification in our prehistoric oceans. They now believe that a series of gigantic volcanic eruptions in the Siberian Trap spewed a great fountain of carbon into the atmosphere over a period of tens of thousands of years. This was the first phase of the extinction event, in which terrestrial life began to die out.

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