Comment Re:EMT do a lot more then just driving (Score 1) 736
Like, um, to know well enough not to drive? Yeah, sure. Go right ahead
Like, um, to know well enough not to drive? Yeah, sure. Go right ahead
I'd like to point out the conspicuous absence of the element Li in the NiMH battery chemistry. You're interestingly off-topic
New factories are in the process of being built. Always. Almost independently of what industry you choose. Even if it's horse/buggy repair shops.
very little life can survive being frozen
On the contrary, and Samantha Wright please correct me if I'm wrong, but I'd think a whole big hunking lot of single-cellular life can in fact survive being frozen. I mean, come on, human fucking sperm even does. Never mind that frozen life is well, frozen. While the DNA repair mechanisms are dormant, so are the copying mechanisms. Bacteria can live quite deep within porous rocks. I'm not exactly sure if it's really necessary for ejecta to be always heated up to sterilization. Now I'm not saying that this little life-from-Mars theory has got any legs to stand on just yet, but your arguments don't really do much to discount it, I don't think.
Must have never heard of prosecutorial discretion, then. Nobody, neither personally nor at any level of government, has any obligation to uniformly enforce all laws. I'd have hoped that people who think otherwise are just happy drug users - to my bewilderment, it turns out not to be the case
Most people would go crazy without having a job or otherwise being occupied somehow.
The major gain from Watson-like solutions is that you can have a multi-specialist system. It's nigh impossible for a family doctor to have specialist (as opposed to general) knowledge in other areas of medicine. Such specialist knowledge could be useful, though, so a Watson-style solution may turn out to be a vastly better doctor in the end. The human touch still matters, of course, but that means you can have a Watson-backed nurse relegating classical doctors into the dustbin of history.
We have enough buildings to house people for the next 100 years.
What?! What buildings? In the U.S., a typical 30-year-old house is ready for a major renovation, including serious energy-related overhaul. A lot of buildings older than say 50 years may need to be torn down and replaced as it'll be cheaper than fixing them up. Never mind that the population grows, so no, we still need new buildings all the time. Of course the population growth might stop or even reverse into a decline, but you'll still need new buildings. I think the real issue is that the middle class has been virtually relocated to China.
Well, there's still a subculture of people who do subsist on hunting and gathering. They even end up on TV shows, occasionally
Limo drivers: Ditto. Plus the driver is part of the service.
What service? Knowing where to go and actuating the doors? I'd presume a self-driving limo will do all that, no problem.
NASCAR drivers: Nobody cares about machines going in circles. It's not worth watching if there's no person in the center of that giant exploding crash thing.
Hence nobody watches bot wars, right?
While I'm not sure if correlation implies causation, it's certainly true that executive salaries are absurd. There is no job out there that's worth millions of dollars a year.
A lot of the data entry jobs are bullshit anyway. Most of the time it's due to workflows that are 20 years behind the times. Nobody really needs to fill out paper forms anymore in this day and age.
Well, they can, but it'd need to be a very specialized kind of a driver. Maybe an astronaut
While this is certainly a flame bait, there is, sadly, some truth to that. I was quite surprised to find out that most guys in a construction crew that we hired were illiterate.
Frankly said I'll take that over drunk drivers. A failing self-driving car will, presumably, do as much as possible, given the nature of the failure, to protect everyone involved.
Neutrinos have bad breadth.