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Comment Why companies struggle to find developers (Score 1) 75

This is simple.

They want...
- Years of experience
- Great credentials
- Low salary
- Poor treatment at work

The high salaries in the summary are charry-picked, these are not normal. Most companies are trying to find senior developers for 100K, and that's not realistic. You get what you pay for.

Comment Cherry-picking high salaries (Score 1) 75

His company advertises base salaries up to $490,000 for a director of machine learning. Daniel Park's startup Pickle offers up to $500,000 base salary and expects candidates willing to work seven days a week

First of all, these salaries are not representative of what is offered to this "sea of talent." Real salaries are much lower.

Second, 7 days a week? This guy deserves to have a hard time finding people, if that's his requirement.

Comment Re:MAGA was successful (Score 2) 78

While Trump leveraged distrust of the mainstream media, he didn't initiate that distrust. It was developing for decades before he came along.

Most of the news outlets *earned* that distrust, by fixating on 1) drama and 2) political correctness. Fox News started out trying to go for "We report, you decide," but that tagline is long gone. Now they're as slanted on the right, as MSNBC on the left. Even NPR's reporting, with its high standard of journalism, finds itself left-of-center. https://www.allsides.com/media...

Comment Re:Badly designed survey (Score 2) 78

While you have a point, I don't think the result is totally meaningless.

I do distrust different sources to different degrees, and on different subjects.

I personally rank Fox News and MSNBC as the most slanted (in opposite directions). CNN somewhat less slanted, but still pretty lopsided. NPR more towards the middle, but still gives different treatment to the different political points of view. There's a pretty good analysis here: https://www.allsides.com/media... Though I don't agree with their "Center" ratings.

I can't think of a single news source that is free of bias.

Comment Re:it is impossible that the improbable won't happ (Score 1) 33

The only solution is to limit...

So how is that a solution? Do you think Russia, China, Iran, or you name a hundred other countries, are going to follow your suggested limits? Why would they do that? They wouldn't, any more than they limited their nuclear weapon production as people wrung their hands in worry.

Comment Re:Sequential is the way to go. (Score 1) 34

Nope, some of us are even cheaper. I won't even buy a "year's worth" of a streaming service, just one month at a time. I can watch everything I want on a service in a couple of months, because 95% of it is garbage.

You go ahead and spend $200 a month to keep all the services active, I'll use the extra $180 for other things I want.

Comment It is pretty good at finding stuff (for now) (Score 1) 25

It's actually quite good at finding the products you actually want to find, instead of the endless parade of irrelevant listings you get from similar searches on Amazon. Unfortunately, as soon as companies start paying OpenAI for prioritized placement, that quality of results will go out the window.

Comment Re:A key “elite” blind spot (Score 1) 345

NPR may not align with MSNBC on everything, but it certainly does take sides on culture-war issues.

NPR very consistently refers to sex-change operations or hormone treatments as "gender-affirming care," a phrase which on its face, makes a judgment about whether these medical procedures and treatments are a good idea. Whatever your opinion, the phrase is an expression of an opinion on this hot topic.
Similarly, NPR routinely uses gender-ambiguous pronouns, and often refers to "pregnant people"--both editorial choices that make a statement about their opinion on gender identity issues.
The same slant is seen when discussing hot topics like the renaming of teams and mascots tied to native Americans, or student loan forgiveness, or the role of the Federal government in education.

Comment Re:What is wrong with US banks? (Score 1) 17

Your information is a little out of date.

In the US, I can also pay anyone in the country, instantly, just knowing their phone number or email, if they registered with their bank.
Paper checks do still exist, but most stores no longer accept them, and most people no longer have them. I haven't had paper checks for years.
Chip cards are the norm.
Pennies, we do still have.

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