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Comment Re:I don't think, they worry about non-US users (Score 1) 259

Also, Hulu is ad-supported. If I was one of their 'sponsors', I might be a bit annoyed that Hulu was billing me for ads delivered to countries where I don't even do business.

You should factor that into your advertising budget.

Some percentage of people your ads get shown to aren't interested in your product and never will be, that some percentage don't have enough money to buy it, that some percentage are foreign tourists staying at a friends house who don't speak English and can't even under stand your ad, that some percentage looked away and muted the volume when your ad came on, some percentage ...

really if the idea that some fraction are foreigners jumping through hoops to watch your ads offends you I don't know how you cope.

Comment Re:Premature much (Score 1) 302

designing parts more interesting a Civil War flat-deck monitor is going to be difficult, at least for me

Moreover, if you had a particular knock for designing, you'd be able to find a manufacturer to implement your designs and sell them. A reasonably free Capitalist country is very conductive to just this sort of activity...

I'm probably better off ordering copies from Shapeway's than buying my own 3D printer and plastic.

This may still be true today, but consider the possibilities of the future: no need to pay and wait for delivery, no gas is burned to deliver your part. The hale and healthy men and women doing the deliveries can instead do something more useful, and the roads have fewer trucks on them. By downloading somebody else's design and printing it locally, you get your part within an hour or two — and for much less.

Comment Re:"Millionaires" - heh (Score 1) 333

If you are retired with a million dollars in your retirement account, one would hope it isn't sitting in a money market. Even AAA+ corporate, munis and treasuries will get you around 4% today and are considered safe. In addition, you would keep some of your funds in the stock market, maybe 20%. 5% would probably be low.

And if the stock market takes even a temporary crash, what then? You are suddenly drawing down your capital, and now next year you've got that much less capital earning interest so even if the market recovers you're still short. If it takes 3 or 4 years to recover your down a couple hundred thousand from where you started.

Meanwhile you are fighting inflation at say 3%.

Because you are LIVING off the interest, you cannot weather temporary market setbacks like you can during the saving stages of your life. Even a short term drop a genuine concern.

Retirement planning scenarios have to be CONSERVATIVE. If you do better in retirement great -- enjoy your blackjack, hookers, and blow, but you have to plan for things not going particular well with the economy.

Comment Re:Distributism vs Capitalism (Score 1) 16

Communism failed because Saint Albert of Gore was full of hooey when he spoke of the rule of law as an instrument of human redemption. The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics was foolishness, just as the National Socialist German Workers Party was foolishness, just like every other attempt to bring "social justice" through external means (Epistle to the Romans).

Comment Re:Piketty's Charge (Score 1) 16

It's been so long since any point of view besides the Cato Institute conventional wisdom has been allowed into mainstream discussion, that the mere description of the problem causes convulsive anger among the old Reagan believers, and that's probably why you're seeing such prodigious pissing and moaning from people who mainly end up demonstrating their unwillingness to even read Piketty's book.

I'm probably going to have to break down and get it, but not right away; my print backlog is majestic in scope.

Comment Re:Premature much - the DRM designer (Score 1) 302

But in the telecom industry it happens all the time.

Because governments — both local and federal — make it too hard for meaningful competition to arise. Some of the hurdles come from well-intentioned regulations and laws, others — from corrupt practices of rent-seeking politicians. But the result is the same, one needs to be Google-sized giant to enter into a telecom business today, whereas a hundred years ago there were competing phone companies — even running wires parallel to each other.

Whereas we both agree on what we don't want, it seems, we are at odds on how to achieve that. You'd rather outlaw the things you don't like, whereas I'd like healthy competition to sort things out.

And in software.

Lost me here. What are you talking about?

Comment Re:Premature much - the DRM designer (Score 1) 302

I don't mind a DRM logo on a printed part

Logos have little-to-nothing to do with Digital Rights Management. Your ability to modify a purchased (or freely downloaded) design should be out of the scope of this discussion.

I do mind DRM designed to only allow me to buy a design of something that is already manufactured by many places from just one vendor.

The DRM I was talking about would've prevented a customer from 3D-printing more items of a particular design, than the designer's license allowed. Like you, I would not want a printer, that was designed to reject otherwise perfectly fine consumables because they were supplied by a competitor. I make a point of defeating such designs in my own "2D" printer today just to spite its manufacturer.

And charge me $20 for a 5 cent part.

Yes, I would find that offensive too. Competition, however, would never allow that to happen.

Comment Re:Neocons (Score 1) 83

Never mind that the results ALWAYS turn to shit...

Chile, where we succeeded, is Latin America's top economy — now and for the last twenty years or more. Cuba, where we failed, is a shithole. As is Venezuela, where we decided not to bother...

The world is being run by idiots.

This is true, unfortunately. And most of the idiots are wearing a Che Guevara T-shirt.

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