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Comment Re:I'll Believe It When It Happens (Score 0) 10

As I understand it, the backstory is this:

1. The Reform Party just started accepting crypto donations.
2. Reform are predicted to stomp on Labour in the next election, leading to the greatest loss of Parliamentary seats of any party in the history of Britain from over 400 to under 20 in one election cycle.

So Labour are banning crypto donations because it will hurt their political opponents.

Just par for the course for the globalist authoritarians who run the party of government workers.

Comment Cat got your tongue? (something important seems to (Score 4, Insightful) 84

> People are feeding their blood test results into chatbots, turning to ChatGPT for advice on their love lives and leaning on AI for everything from planning trips to finishing homework assignments.

are they really though? i mean, i'm sure someone is but has this reached a critical mass? or are lots people becoming increasingly tired of all this AI bullshit and just ignoring it except for the places where we don't have that option? i could certainly believe we've managed to birth a upcoming generation of the laziest non-learning students in possibly the history of education as a concept, and i can believe that the loneliest of the lonely are out there trying to fuck a chatbot, but how many folks are out there feeding blooodtests into Gemini?

Comment Re:Core Competency: Lobbying, or engineering? (Score 1) 120

Right, what the free market wants to do is levelize our standard of living with our low-cost competitors, or import all the chips from them (with the security and supply risks that entails).

Simply shaming Intel for seeking government handouts does not solve our problem - how to maintain a domestic industry including internal competition rather than government choosing the winners and subsidizing incompetence.

Comment Re:Does anyone know what "preview" means? (Score 2) 72

Depends on what "preview” means. If it means an alpha build meant to be internal, such a bug is fine. To me this build was meant to be shown and tested by customers and closer to a beta build. Nothing ruins testing like the inability to test anything.

One time my company was asked to test some software for a supplier. The software would not run after install on any of our computers. There were no errors displayed to give us hints about what could be wrong. Despite weeks of correspondence with their development team, we could never get the software to run. After the testing period was over, they sent us a questionnaire. Unfortunately we could not answer most of the questions as we could never get it to run. One final question was about the readiness of the software for production. We said the software was not ready for production.

The development team was not happy about that and emailed asking for reasons why we said that. I assume their supervisors read the questionnaire responses. We told them that any software that would not work after weeks of correspondence and no hint about what to fix was not production ready. They responded they had since fixed all installation issues in the latest version. We answered back that we could only test the version we were given and that version did not work.

Comment Re: Sociopaths Running Amok (Score 1) 123

"We are letting sociopaths run amok." That is literally the definition of capitalism.

No, that is neither literally nor figuratively the definition of capitalism. How can anyone take anything you say seriously when you make such patently dumb claims? So where do all the sociopaths go in other forms of economic models?

Comment Re:robot parking lot: no need for lights, sounds? (Score 0) 60

From here in my comfortable chair it's hard to judge how bad the situation is, vs. to what extent it might be a form of protest by somebody who just doesn't like self-driving cars. There has been vandalism and harassment of a few types, from setting them on fire to calling dozens of them to the same place at the same time to cause gridlock. In San Francisco there was a huge flap because a waymo ran over a cat.

Comment Re:Core Competency: Lobbying, or engineering? (Score 1) 120

OK, it could be argued the government is the problem in the first place, since laws are a big part of why production here is economically nonviable. The problem is how specifically to solve that? Each law is there for a reason. It's easy to dismiss regulation broadly but harder in each given case.

If the US as a whole were a good place for this, a happy market solution would be for Intel to be eaten alive by another American competitor until either regains its competency or goes away. But surely you can see the national security risks of the more likely outcome - our supply depending on potential adversaries, including all the chips in critical infrastructure and defense hardware.

Comment Re:Yep (Score 2) 120

For most of my early life, Intel was about process engineering, not CPU engineering. They were usually a year ahead of other manufacturers so even if their CPU design was lacklustre they could win on the manufacturing process.

Then they lost the lead there and now their problems with CPU designs have caught up with them.

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