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Comment Re:Apart from Wayve? (Score 1) 69

NYC by the way has also recently legalized jaywalking.

And:

continuous vigilance and precise movement ... since machines are great at that.

Right. Put these two factors together and you'll have a situation where nobody will be moving around in robotaxis, either European* or American. It'll be a bunch of Waymos waiting for some hobo wandering around in the middle of the road.

*Actually, the Europeans don't put up with out of control behavior nearly as much as Americans do. In American cities, it takes weeks for "support services" to move tent camps. On a visit to Amsterdam a few years ago, I watched them move a tent camp with water cannons.

Comment Re:What do they care? (Score 1) 43

I don't use an agent but I use AI to find the exact thing I want on Amazon and it gives me the link and I buy it, without having to wade to the crap that Amazon's "search" throws at me.

Glad to see I'm not the only one who noticed that over time Amazon's search feature has enshitified. If that's the correct verb. It used to be fairly good. These days, nah, unless I'm looking for a book or other product from Amazon directly, as a search for the marketplace it's crap.

And since it used to be better, something must be responsible for that. Greed, most likely.

Comment Re: Cue the hate... (Score 1) 68

Not 99% but definitely some of the most useful ones. And yes, stack traces are one of the things that only Linux users send you without an explicit request.

And the advantage of debugging a (this specific exception) error in (this specific file) on (that specific line) over a "hey, the game crashed when I jumped out of the car" bug report cannot be overstated.

Comment Re:What do they care? (Score 1) 43

Some possibilities:
-The agent buys the wrong thing and Amazon sees a substantially higher rate of returns or other bad customer feedback
-The agent buys one thing despite Amazon search results trying to push a different option
-Amazon's upsell for "you may also like" is tanked by the agentic purchaasing.

Comment Re:So, the plan is ... (Score 1) 76

Add to that the problem of hydrogen embrittlement, where you have to keep replacing those storage tanks every few years,

This.

I didn't even touch on this because I've never worked the problem of hydrogen storage at power generation scales. But an application I worked needed hydrogen (and cost/efficiency wasn't an object). After considering all the tank/plumbing issues, we went with just making it as needed.

it quickly becomes obvious that this project is a giant money pit in which Southern California will burn dollars and turn them into a negligible amount of temporary power storage.

Has anyone done a study of burning the dollars directly in a thermal plant?

This is quite possibly the single most clueless idea ever to come out of California's government in the history of California's government.

Not even close.

One thing hinted at: The hydrogen production/storage/transportation could also be used for fuel cell vehicles. So this could be a bail-out for all the people who bought those Toyota hydrogen cars and now need a station at which to fill them. Typical totalitarianism where the plebes have to finance the wants of the Inner Party.

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