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Comment Re:About time (Score 1) 33

You mean unlike the US pharma price-gouging, where people pay 20x as much as they do for basically the same product with the same safety in other places? Let's hope so. Americans may find out that most things can actually be treated without sending you into medical bankruptcy.

Comment Re:About time (Score 1) 33

The problem I think is that now the student has become the master, and the west is finding that out.

Like hat has never happened before and nobody could anticipate that....
Japanese cameras and then electronics for one close example. Or look up where "Made in Germany" came from.

Comment Re:Copyrights? (Score 2) 53

While it's true that the value of content is driven down by the signal to noise ratio, AI being noise, the fact that AI can't be copyrighted is an important distinction. Only humans can copyright, a court-tested fact.

Does that fact increase the quality of content? No. What it does mean is that humans can monetize their works and eat; AI can make content and sell you ads or influence you to buy something.

This reduces to a question: Do you want to feed humans or the AI muck? The choice is yours. Some humans probably don't deserve the feeding; the AIs are driving up all of your costs, from the power grid energy bills to the new AI trappings being foisted on you during your tech experience. You decide.

Comment Re:Raise the costs even more! (Score 1) 54

AFAIK, nobody has demonstrated a viable SMR prototype of any kind. No, marine reactors do not count, they have the wrong characteristics and are far too uneconomic for this, even worse than civilian designs. The two that exist (Russian and Chinese) do NOT come with any or any believable cost figures. In addition, the he Russian one is a military design and the Chinese one is a highly experimental pebble-bed reactor based on German patents. The Germans wrecked three of these and two are still highly radioactive ruins that nobody know how to dispose of. On the plus-side, pebble-bed reactors cannot melt down, which is a decided plus.

Still, anybody that has high confidence in the approach is simply an idiot.

Comment Re:Why? (Score 1) 23

I probably just crossed some age line where "everything I have now is good enough dammit!"

I am still using a 13 Pro Max, so you're not alone.

This whole "buy a new expensive phone every year or two" mentality has always bugged me. Yes, "battery life is better" on a new phone versus a not-new phone... but the question SHOULD be "is the battery life on that not-new phone actually an issue?". And yes, the cameras on a new phone are probably better, but is there an actual practical difference the end user will actually see?

A lot of those arguments seem to be post hoc justifications for a purchase decision that was already made.

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