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Comment Thanks, no. (Score 3, Insightful) 181

I'll take the 25% pay increase, please.

If Bernie thinks I'm 25% more productive, that will eventually be reflected in wages. Wages are a price for labor and eventually supply and demand will set the price at the market clearing level.

That said, there's nothing stopping my employer offering me either deal today. What makes Bernie think he knows better than my employer and me what work arrangement makes more sense for us?

Comment Re:and that 500K student loan can be come hopeless (Score 2) 78

Loaning 500K to 19 year old students without a degree is always a bad investment

No doubt. If someone earns a bachelor's degree with a half million dollar debt, many things went horribly wrong. That person is in a world of financial hurt.

OTOH, people graduating with $500k in student debt are almost entirely from medical and law schools. No one enters those at age 19 with no track record of academic success. And even then, I'm not at all sure many people graduate from Harvard Medical with that sort of debt. I believe the median is about half that.

Very few undergraduates graduate with hundreds of thousands in debt. IIRC, something like half have no debt at all and the median owed by those who borrowed at all is in the $30-40k range.

Keep those figures in mind when you imagine the typical person with college debt.

Comment It doesn't have to be. (Score 4, Interesting) 147

I drive a BMW and I love my iDrive system. It still has lots of physical controls for volume, temperature, fans, and the like. Those things I still to find the physical button (taking my eyes off the road) but it's pretty quick.

For most everything else can use the iDrive controller. It's a scroll wheel/joystick combo on the console. I think other brands have something similar. I keep my hand on the controller, glance at the screen, scroll, glance again, click. It's not as fast as other interfaces but it lets me control maps, entertainment, and the like with minimal distraction.

As UIs go, it's a pretty good implementation and makes good tradeoffs between functions and safety.

Comment Re:This isn't the answer (Score 1) 111

Congestion pricing is just a money grab to finance MTA at the end of the day, it was never about anything else. That said, they did stumble into a solution, limiting the amount of cars coming into the city.

It may have been a cash grab. Regardless, if you make something more expensive, you'll get less of it. If your goal is to reduce congestion in NYC, adding a fee is a quite reasonable way to accomplish it. As you say, there are lots of other ways to make driving more expensive (if you consider a lottery a cost, which it is in economic terms). Pricing could also be dynamic: the more crowded the streets, the higher the entry price.

(I didn't read TFA. Did they address the aggregate affect on commute times? I'd be curious whether it takes people more time to drive in traffic versus take the subway. It sounds like the people who still drive are better off. How about the people who switched to mass transit?)

My issue is the story doesn't address the question "is it worth it?". Sure, the visible benefit is lower congestion. But at what cost? What happened to all the people who now can't afford to drive in Manhattan? What jobs were destroyed or will never be created?

Don't get me wrong: I have no idea whether this is worth it. But beware of looking at the visible metrics and ignoring the unseen effects.

Comment Re:Peer review doesn't mean much (Score 1) 19

All papers should be reviewed

That's a quite absolute statement. I can believe there are some situations where review may not be necessary. Of course, readers ought to know that and treat the content appropriately.

Of course, what this doesn't address is a paper getting quashed because reviewers refused to approve it,

Reviewers don't decide if a paper gets published. That's the journal editor's (or editorial board) job. A reviewer can put in an absolute stinker of a report, and the author not make significant changes, but if the editor (board) thinks it's suitable for publication, then it will be published.

I'm sure that happens from time to time. The question is how often? I suspect rarely. Nonetheless, I think that's the point of this change, so readers can see reviewers had strong opinions which the author and editor did not address.

possibly because the paper contradicted the reviewers' findings.

If that is the case, then the editor did an unprofessionally atrocious job of choosing reviewers.

I'll have to ask my kids (both in in the physical sciences) about how this works today. It's certainly the scuttlebutt I hear, that you can frequently guess who your reviewers are and that you won't make it past review if you don't cite the reviewers papers and you definitely won't pass if you contradict them. Yes, that sounds unprofessional and yet I can easily believe that's how the world works. People aren't as upstanding and unbiased as we want to believe.

(As you write, I'd like to believe this is more common in humanities than sciences. I have no idea whether that's the case.)

I can believe it because many fields are vey narrow. There may only be a dozen other people working in the same narrow specialty you're working in, which means there are only a dozen plausible reviewers. And given those other dozen researchers are competing for the same grants and publication slots, well, I can believe there's sausage being made.

Comment Re:Peer review doesn't mean much (Score 1) 19

Peer review doesn't mean the paper is beyond debate.

If I'm reading TFA correctly, Nature isn't changing which papers are peer reviewed or the review process. What they're doing is offering to publish all the communication between the author and reviewers. That might let others see whether they think the review was fair and unbiased. We might be able to see whether an author significantly changed the paper solely to appease a reviewer.

Of course, what this doesn't address is a paper getting quashed because reviewers refused to approve it, possibly because the paper contradicted the reviewers' findings.

More transparency is probably good unless this makes qualified people even less willing to review papers.

Comment Re:WTF is "nuclear-grade uranium"? (Score 2) 52

I don't know what nuclear-grade uranium means but it must be bad if it is included in a list along with "biological threats",

It reminds me of "military grade" guns in scare quotes. Military grade means built by the low-cost (or most politically connected) vendor using inconsistent and ambiguous specs carved in stone 20 years ago. It does not necessarily mean the deadliest weapon available.

Comment Re:Where have I heard this before? (Score 1) 52

Yup. Sure, AI could cause trouble. Monkeys could also fly out of my a$$.

It's not enough to say something could happen so we need to regulate. We need to assess how likely the bad consequences are. Given how much coaching Cursor needs to re-write some code for me, I don't think it's staging a worldwide robot revolution any time soon. TBH, I think it's much more likely some code monkey will use Claude or Copilot to create some faulty document which another drone reads and follows and causes problems.

Comment Re:Stop milking the superhero movies (Score 1) 183

They should just stop doing the superhero crap. It's boring, you can play that only a few times before you start repeating the same tropes over and over again. It's just basically Greek god stories but with the modern entourage.

I agree. It was amazing when they first started coming out. Now I'm tired of it. I'm tired of time travel stories too.

Here's the thing though: the beauty of free markets is Disney is free to try one approach, DC is free to try another. We'll see in the end which one works out better. I don't really care which approach they use as long as great content eventually shows up on my screen. I personally can't keep up with all the Star Wars and Marvel content Disney is cranking out so I'd be pretty happy if they slowed down.

I'm also pretty tired of claymation animation and live-action remakes of animated films. Go back to hand-drawn ones. Or invent some interesting artistic styles like Into The Spiderverse (although the sequel so over did it I couldn't finish it).

Comment Re:286 was magnificent (Score 1) 151

I am sure it was more than up to the task, and with the robust lithographic processes used, electromigration was unlikely to ever be a problem.

Fun bit of historical perspective. Back when I was a lad, I had an internship at Raytheon. We were putting together a proposal for the Mode Select Beacon System, one of those transponder things which would allow controllers to see which planes were where. The back end was to be of the art. We were going to build a custom system based on mirrored 68020 processors (we got a few pre-release samples to play with) and a butterfly processor-to-processor interconnect and a purpose built OS.

I don't think Raytheon's bid won because I never heard of the project ever again. Too bad, it would have been cool.

Comment Re:The right question is... (Score 1) 151

Who is going to get rich from this? IBM? Microsoft? Someone is going to get a pay day.

Hopefully the flying public, who will get a safer, more robust, and more predictable flights. We seem to always look at costs and never at benefits to the end consumer.

Alternatively, we could privatize ATC like like Canada and Europe, the bastions of state provision, and get an even cheaper and more robust system.

Comment Re:And the enshittification continues (Score 1) 185

Uh it’s just the last 5 speed manual. 6 speed manual cars are still available in usa.

Remember when four on the floor was normal and a five-speed was new and cool?

And remembering the other direction, a friend of my brother let me drive his car with three on the tree. That was and experience.

I'm glad I know how to drive a standard transmission. I personally don't miss it. My daughter asked me a while ago to teach her how but maybe that window has closed.

Comment Let's keep some metrics (Score 2) 25

I'd be curious to see some metrics after a few years. How many devices were actually repaired? What was repaired on them?

My prediction: 80% of repairs were screens. 15% were batteries. 4% were random parts damaged by water. 1% was everything else. And those last two, the repair was "replace the motherboard", not "fix the motherboard".

I'd also like to see metrics on the age of repaired devices. My prediction: 80% of repaired devices were three or fewer years old with a rapidly declining tail.

If I'm right, Washington could pass a much more limited bill, mandating manufacturers make it possible to replace screens and batteries for five years from introducing the product. That would be 90% of the benefit at a much more limited cost.

Comment _Beginning_ of the end? (Score 1) 80

More like the end of the end for VGA on laptops. There can't be many other models which still have VGA. As others have mentioned, there have been at least three generations of video outputs since then.

In other news, the ThinkPad my company just bought me finally got rid of the in-keyboard joystick and went with a large, buttonless trackpad.

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