Comment Re:Too big so fail (Score 1) 22
I think this will turn out to be one giant lawsuit that, even if oracle wins, they'd still have already bet (and lost) the family farm. Blood from a rock.
I think this will turn out to be one giant lawsuit that, even if oracle wins, they'd still have already bet (and lost) the family farm. Blood from a rock.
You mean like an actual degree at an accredited university? In fact, I do have one, unlike you. The "auto-didact"ing I've only ever spoken about here was for one skill in particular, which has pushed my net worth into the seven digits. If that isn't validation, then feel free to tell me what makes you think you've done any better.
We do exactly this where I work (I'm part of the team who enforces that) and for exactly this reason. However in our case, until a few months ago, use of these tools was nearly completely banned with case-by-case exceptions for individual users, unlike Amazon. We only recently made one exception for just one AI tool where we have a particular arrangement that guarantees that nothing within our instance of it can be "learned" and regurgitated elsewhere, and anybody may use it without needing any policy exceptions. Nevertheless, we still drop a big interstitial on it that tells them that they're still forbidden from putting anything sensitive into it. We also don't allow e.g. "vibe coding".
Given that difference, I wouldn't be surprised if Amazon has no such walled off approach. In this case, they're probably just dogfooding.
So why do you think Kevin Trudeau went to jail?
I get it.
Definitely not.
You can chastise someone for failing to blame universities for educational inflation without even establishing what that inflation actually is.
Already did.
You need not figure the effect of differing labor productivity, nor higher demand, nor increased amount and quality of knowledge conferred, nor lower public support, nor anything, really.
The writer explored all of this in what I linked.
I'm the one full of shit because I believe, like every qualified economist
I disagree. One thing qualified economists all have in common is that they're all literate.
everywhere, that every human activity that fails to improve in efficiency at the average rate must become relatively more expensive than everything that does.
And what tells you that it hasn't?
There *aren't* a lot of things at play in medical inflation. There's only one, and I mentioned it just to show how poorly informed and educated you are in matters like this: we only measure what we actually spend. There isn't even the slightest attempt to measure a change in spending power. Spend $4.8T or so on ivermectin for literally everything medical next year, and nothing else: congratulations, medical inflation was -2%. But hey, I guess I'm the idiot for not recognizing the 'lot of things at play' in spite of nobody being able to say in play for *what.*
Context is very important, and you provided none, which meant that I had to assume you're talking about the relative spending the US does on health care costs relative to other countries, and yes, indeed there are many things at play there. But this is a common theme with you: You prefer weasel words, and I'm only going to respond in kind, starting with this post.
When I raised the problem of zero atmosphere I was referring to the fact that a simple meteor shower on Earth is merely entertaining instead of completely terrifying on a planet with NO protection against asteroids pummeling the surface at speeds far greater than any containment shielding is designed for. The 2013 crater we discovered on Mars has an observable impact radius almost 10 miles wide. Not to mention frequency:
..the existing observations of new Martian impacts suggest that asteroids of a given size impacting the planet are about 3 times more common than on Earth and the Moon..
Pretty shortsighted to say we need to build that to Earth standards without taking into account how much Earth is providing physical security. Not even the radiation problem is as large.
I bought a nice pair of gloves this year with ChatGPT, but when they arrived I found that they each had six fingers.
Its a trap.
Inigo Crontoya is looking for a six-fingered programmer who killed its former version.
That's a lot of words to show you still haven't thought about this to any depth. Why would "capture the productivity of the rest of the economy" have anything to do with the productivity of the sector itself?
You made that straw man, not me.
I need look no further than your reference to the productivity of various types of instructors to know you're not engaging this: the clear implication is that I believe the measure of productivity is the number *graduates.*
Not at all. Neither directly nor implicitly. Look at your posts dude. Look at mine. The whole premise involving productivity is entirely your idea. You came up with that entirely on your own. Moreover, my position is and has been that the productivity topic is a red herring. Rather, I was giving you the opportunity, and the benefit of the doubt, to explain why you think it has any relevance at all, and you couldn't do that. Congratulations, you're incompetent.
Is there anything in your long, irrelevant quote to suggest they're graduating more students? Or that they're not still paying total faculty more in nominal terms? (They are.) Or that any real reduction in wages isn't still well less than overall labor productivity?
No, no, no, and no. Again, this is your straw man, not mine. You built it, you tear it down yourself. Your talking points have the smell of a chatgpt hallucination.
You could absolutely say that the underlying economic forces are too complicated to come to a definite conclusion
Except I'm not. In fact, I've stated this numerous times already on slashdot: High money supply caused by excessive availability of student loans means educational institutions have little incentive to control costs. So guess what? Many of them don't, and it shows. Is that the only cause? Nope, but it's safe to say that reducing the availability of them would lower costs, and quite a bit at that, without sacrificing anything that we expect of educational institutions. As I already showed you, this has already happened before, and very recently at that.
Let me ask this: are you also so limited in your macroeconomic knowledge you believe you can assign fault for medical inflation as well?
Nope. In fact, I've done exactly the opposite on this: People here love to pin all the blame on health insurance companies, and worse, believe shooting people who run them in the back is totally justified. You're probably one of them at this rate. Meanwhile, it's been my position that there are a lot of things at play here.
Either way, you can stop projecting your incompetence already.
>"If we are adding in FreeBSD, Android etc, might as well also add in MacOS. They are all quite similar from a user point of view and all based off one or the other NIXes"
Not really. It isn't free, much of it isn't open, doesn't use X11 or Wayland, doesn't use any of the Linux desktop environments, and it really only runs on Apple hardware. Very different in many ways from Linux or BSD.
Although I think that throwing "unknown" and "BSD" into the Linux count is not valid.
Is a college degree in art history economically worthwhile? No.
On the other hand, this used to be what academia was all about. Essentially, trivial pursuits of knowledge that didn't necessarily have any real-world value. Most people who engaged in this were already wealthy enough that the economic utility didn't really factor into it. Then, somehow we used these very same institutions as a form of vocational training, which is probably a bad idea.
For completeness’s sake, I'm not at all the opinion that these need to go away entirely, however I do think that they should be funded much the same way that scientific research is funded through government grants. It should NOT be funded with random Tom, Dick, and Harry's who take up an ill-conceived effort to make a career out of it, complete with massive student loan debt that they then expect the taxpayer to reimburse, even though their day job is more than likely going to mean that all the education they got ultimately goes nowhere. And, like scientific discovery, only a handful of people are needed to document any findings. There's absolutely no need for an entire graduating class of students every single year to study only one aspect of history -- if they want to study history that badly, the best way they could contribute to the field is by majoring in anthropology, particularly by getting their hands dirty by either digging through dirt or digging through archives of historical documents.
I did tell you
No, you didn't. All you did was spew weasel words combined with a poor attempt at misdirection. You're sitting here making vague claims about additional costs being necessary for economy-wide production gains, which you're just assuming without any justification whatsoever, must somehow apply to higher education, then adding speculation on top. So be specific: What productivity gains are you talking about in particular? Productivity gains should mean increased instructional value gained from less effort, and yet where's the evidence in support of that? From that article, we even see indications to the contrary:
In fact, the makeup of teaching faculty continues to change as U.S. colleges employ fewer full-time, tenure-line professors and more adjunct instructors and other lower-paid contingent faculty, according to a report published by the American Association of University Professors in March 2023. Based on IPEDS data from the NCES, the report indicates that from fall 1987 to fall 2021, excluding medical faculty:
Contingent faculty as a percentage of total college faculty grew from 47% to 68%.
Part-time faculty as a percentage of total faculty grew from 33% to 48%.
Full-time tenured faculty appointments dropped from 39% to 24%.
Also, from fall 2002 to fall 2021, the number of graduate student employees increased 44% while full-time and part-time faculty combined rose 19%.
So while the cost of college keeps climbing for students, the average pay of the person teaching them is decreasing.
Tenured faculty tend to be more productive, and yet they're being reduced in number and even being replaced with people, some of them being other students, who are arguably less productive. So how is it you believe that these costs are to provide for increased productivity, when they're actually reducing their instructional expenses without any indication that there's an increase in productivity? Do you still think it's by stuffing more students into the same class? Again, you tell me. And actually explain yourself this time.
Something that might help, by the way:
Maybe by stuffing your capstone senior seminars with 95 students? Or convincing the students, their parents, the faculty, and future prospective employers that that's actually the way they want it?
That wouldn't be surprising if it's already happening anyway, given schools are spending more on administrative costs while in at least some cases actually reducing instructional spending. But across the board, administrative expenses are growing faster than instructional expenses.
https://www.usnews.com/educati...
How?
It's already happening despite increased inflation-adjusted tuition rates, so you tell me.
That's part of it but you need to remember that every single one of those Rich fuckers is a crook.
Yet you're the one who speaks favorably about shoplifting.
This means they fully expect their kids to be the target of a wide range of scams and ripoffs and they want their kids to be able to think critically so that they don't fall for that shit.
Which you failed to do when you talked your "kid" into spending huge sums of money that he never even had for a degree that's basically worthless, and will pay for it for the rest of his life.
Some of them are so dumb they still do like Trump. But if that happens the elites have solidarity and they take care of each other.
https://www.merriam-webster.co...
Occasionally you will get somebody like Bernie Madoff or Elizabeth Holmes that manages to get through that system but when it happens and they get caught they go to jail for decades.
So what does that say about you, given you're even less intelligent than they are?
You both are wrong. The question is whether it's worth the cost. There's no question or concern over political crap like rsilvergun thinks there is. The question is more: Do you get what you pay for?
And to me, this isn't a simple yes or no answer. The answer I'd give is: What degree did you get, and what did you pay for it? No matter what degree you have, I'd say that if you spent more than $150k, under any circumstance, then you got ripped off. Period.
rsilvergun keeps whining that his imaginary "kid" borrowed $300,000. There is no rhyme or reason to spend that much for any degree, let alone one that has nearly zero chance of ever paying that off within his lifetime. And worse, he blames that on, of all things, republicans, even though the government has been keeping up with inflation when it comes to pell grants and other funding.
And at the same time, he holds blameless the very institutions who have been raising their tuition rates at several times the rate of inflation for decades, and then conned his dumb as into believing that he needs this really bad, even though he really didn't. Or at the very least, he could have done far better by going to community college first, then going to a public in-state university, where borrowing may not even be necessary at all. But at the end of the day, we live in a free society, which also includes being free to make one incredibly bad life decision right after the other.
The notion of a "record" is an obsolete remnant of the days of the 80-column card. -- Dennis M. Ritchie