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Comment No GeoGuessr? (Score 4, Informative) 18

The techniques described are basically what the top people on GeoGuessr already do.

For anyone who doesn't know, it's a game where the site shows you an image (from Google Street View) and you have to identify the location. The closer you get to the actual location, the higher your score.

Now, there are difficulty levels - it can give you just an image and that's it, or it lets you pan around to see more of the area. And for the beginners, it lets you walk around Street View.

And yes, there are experts at it who can basically ace the image location using just the provided image.

There are lots of tools and tricks they use - some relying on the medium (the color of the Google Street View vehicle can get you the country), but other aspects of the image they have to tease out.

To me this is just GeoGuessr in reverse, but there are many experts who even ask users to send them their photos for them to guess the location. And many are able to.

Comment Re:need to be able to own stuff and not forced sub (Score 1) 16

so no streaming and no Steam or Epic or whatever.

I get no streaming, but no Steam and no Epic seems like a waste.

Sure, you don't own anything, but that doesn't mean you can't take advantage of stuff. Epic has free games. They're not yours to own, but you can certainly play them while you still have them. After all, should Epic revoke your rights to them, you'd have gained some entertainment, and lost basically nothing.

(And yes, GoG exists, so I presume you're using that).

That's like people avoiding credit cards because they're a trap - instead of using them responsibly. And yes, there's mental fortitude in being able to handle temptation like putting it on a credit card, but not doing so knowing you couldn't pay it off.

Comment Re:buttons (Score 1) 22

Which is why you don't realize what you really want is buttons that come and go as needed.

Which meant the very first Android phone should've been a smashing success, right? It had a keyboard (because Android at the time was being rushed out to compete with iPhoneOS at the time, and support for on-screen keyboards didn't exist) and it was a slider, so you slid the keyboard away when you didn't need it, and slid it out when you wanted to type something.

Should've been a smashing success - it came out a year after the iPhone so we weren't too far removed from phones with buttons. People should've flocked to it after missing the buttons. You had the iPhone with no buttons, and this brand new Android phone with a full keyboard that hid away and was otherwise like the iPhone.

Comment Re:economic retaliation option (Score 2) 9

This is one way that the EU could slow walk subtle economic retaliation against the United States. Simply ban items made in the United States using some of the chemicals we continue to use that they are banning or have already banned.

They have done it in the past - Red No 3 food dye was only banned in the US just before the new year and takes effect in 2027. Europe has had it banned for a number of years already. And the products using it, including common ones like M&Ms and such, are formulated using natural dyes in Europe, and artificial ones in the US.

Most of the products already have formulations in Europe that could be used in the US.

Comment Re:Defence? (Score 1) 86

There was no innovation, no R&D and little legal risk.

Except R&D isn't a big part of it anymore. Most drug companies spend more on marketing the drug than on R&D of said drug.

The US is one of the few places where drug manufacturers can advertise directly to consumers, so you get drug ads that basically say to go to your doctor and ask about some new drug or other. Sometimes they'll tell you what the drug is about, what conditions it treats and such, othertimes they imply you already know (e.g., the Ozempic ads were most uninformative).

They'll be front and center spending money on Superbowl ads as well, and those ads can basically cost more than the R&D budget for 30 seconds.

Comment Re:Or donation (Score 1) 68

It's also an estimate for capacity for 10 plasmapheresis runs on each person over the course of a year; not 'treatment' being a single extraction. I don't know what you'd expect the number to look like; but it's a factor of ten more reasonable than if you were reading 'treat' as being a single extraction.

Comment Re:Trepanning back on the menu? (Score 2) 68

I'm not entirely clear why (possibly so you can do it more often/in greater volume without affecting oxygen transport capacity); but the cost estimate paper discussed plasma extraction and apheresis equipment, not whole blood extraction; so presumably leeches wouldn't get the job.

I assume that they'd be at least an adequate option; though, amazingly talented phlebotomists for the price, supply their own anticoagulants at no additional charge, no sharps waste; and they require very little training.

Comment Re:Gee it's almost as if something changed (Score 4, Interesting) 86

In other words, desperation is better for the wealthy class. Because desperation yields to abusive practices and tactics that hurt the populace who cannot escape it.

But you need to be careful, because with desperation comes desperate action if one believes they have nothing to lose.

Think what Luigi Mangione did when he killed that CEO. Sure he's going away to prison, but the authorities have been treating him like he's Osama Bin Laden and going to cause another 9/11.

Or how they're trying to get all merchandising promoting what happened off the internet.

I think people are simply watching what's going to happen first. And the desperate might decide that there's nothing to lose and go for the big scores, Especially if more do the same and then realize that there's more of them than of the billionaires.

The Secret Service might be able to protect Mar-A-Lago against a small crowd, but a bigger crowd and they'd get Trump off the roof and onto a helicopter while the masses start razing it to the ground like the LA wildfires. And then the other billionaires like Bezos and such? All in Florida.

Comment Re:wow (Score 1) 214

It's arguably the fact that many people are very much not for gun laws that leads to these really stupid ones popping up.

There are some designs out there that are genuinely 3d-printed guns that manage to preserve a reasonably impressive 'hurt the target'/'mangle your fingers' ratio even without needing to step up to $$$$ selective metal sintering printers; but a lot of the popular ones are more a homage to the fact that you can really half-ass the technically-the-gun-for-regulatory-purposes receiver and then just buy all the more performance critical parts legally from competent professionals with real engineers and machinists and real CNC gear because those aren't the serialized and controlled part.

The WWII-era crash programs to design SMGs that could basically be knocked together in a garage if someone passed shop class; or the crazy stuff that some Khyber Pass dude is pulling off with a lot of experience, a beard, and a drill press older than he is are definitely also things; but it sure is a lot easier when building a gun is a lot like 'building a computer' would be if computer cases were legally controlled but you could still just hit newegg for everything else.

Comment Re:Defence? (Score 4, Interesting) 86

It's a strategy in multiple parts; and one that normally avoids walking directly into unwinnable fights (these guys are evil; but they aren't stupid and are in a position where the margins are good enough to allow for a quite sophisticated apparatus that justifies its costs by preserving and juicing the margins):

What you will see provided openly are fairly vague, high-level, defenses of drug costs being high: lifesaving innovation isn't cheap, look at how far we've come in outcomes for X disease in the last Y years, biologics are so much more complex than traditional small molecule synthesis stuff so you can't treat generics as equivalents, etc. etc. These arguments will rarely be overtly false; though they'll be careful to avoid getting dragged into the weeds on off-message questions like "sure, that's all well and good; but how are all the same things true at less than half the price over in western europe?".

Then there's the class of arguments that they don't exactly buy advertising for, because they don't focus-group very well, but which are made more or less openly, though usually in specialized company like investor calls, and based on actual pricing data: this is where you'll get the "Our gene therapy for Ghastly Y-Linked Genetic Disease X will be $1.5 million; because current standard of care is over $100k/year in esoteric recombinant immunoglobulins delivered in impatient infusions; so really it's a win-win". This sort of argument will studiously ignore any questions of whether esoteric recombinant immunoglobulins actually need to cost so much as out of scope; and will treat the development and production cost of cool new gene therapy as irrelevant; the price is purely a question of what the market will bear based on what alternative therapies currently cost.

Then you get down to things like the PBM markup stuff described here; where you simply don't justify or defend the markups; but you structure the various contractual and ownership arrangements and the publicly visible price signals such that you don't have to. In some cases this is done through sheer complexity: Unless the guy at the pharmacy counter happens to be a sick investigative reporter who does a very specific flavor of story the odds are basically zero that they know anything useful about the web of ownership and contracts between the pharmacy, the PBM, the insurance company, the drug manufacturer and distributor, etc.

Then you've got the other sense of "defend": "gag clauses". You don't have to present a principled justification of something in order to defend it; you can simply conceal or impose it. If the pharmacy can get a drug for $30; but the PBM price is over $2k; it's often cheaper for the patient to just exchange money for goods and services as though they actually lived in a free market economy and pay $30+whatever it costs to keep the lights on at the pharmacy; rather than "the drug cost $2,200; your insurance saved you $1,800; that'll be $400". So you contractually forbid the pharmacist from mentioning that option.

In general, though, it's best not to think of American drug prices as being 'defended' in the sense of a thesis or an argument being 'defended'; but in the sense of a fortified position being 'defended': there will be some deliberately-visible arguments advanced, just as the military force that occupies a defended position will generally have a PR-friendly reason for their presence there; but the actual defense is not an argument; it's a complex and carefully constructed collection of mutually supporting camouflage, entanglements, information asymmetry, and so on.

Comment Re:This is probably just payback (Score 1) 198

I also see no possible upside to accepting a job I'm not going to show up for(especially when there's usually at least some inconvenience associated with actual acceptance that goes beyond application: they'll read a resume on the basis of a "Yeah, it's legal for me to work in the US" checkbox; but if they actually plan to hire you HR is going to going to want their I-9, and payroll is going to want enough information to know where the money should go, if they are responsible for doing any garnishments, and so on); but it has not been my experience that you can expect to get an actual "thanks for applying, position has been filled" with any reliability.

Some outfits certainly do that; but it's pretty common to get nothing beyond an automated confirmation that your form submission went through. Sometimes the listing you responded to just stays up, sometimes it eventually disappears, you hear nothing further. I've even had people who were apparently interested enough to have me in for an interview who didn't bother with a "thanks for coming in; good to talk to you; we've chosen otherwise" when they chose otherwise.

It's an especially baffling thing when you compare it to the experience of trying to do a product return or raise a support case. Those experiences are not always pleasant or helpful; outfits making it deliberately difficult to actually get to the point of a ticket being opened or an RMA being issued; then trying to close the ticket with a cryptic bit of insane troll logic or ascribe a cracked LCD to water damage is not a surprise; but it's typically the case that, if there's a ticket open, you'll have some combination of automated messages and tier 1 agents absolutely hounding you until it is closed; with the sort of urgency that suggests that people are getting fired for letting tickets rot for too long.

Comment Asymmetric perspective. (Score 4, Insightful) 198

I am, perhaps to my detriment, both deeply bad at and deeply repulsed by playing weird social signaling and subtext games; so this strikes me as a weird hobby; but it seems striking how it's written up as 'catfishing'(despite that being a different thing, where you misrepresent yourself in order to attract interest, not the one where you attract interest and then silently stop reciprocating it) and "office treachery" when we had a report just a few days ago about a double-digit percentage of job listings being outright fictions with either no intent to fill or an already selected candidate for which they feel the need to pretend that a hiring process was actually done; and where nobody even bothers to write about the fact that job applications disappearing into the void without anything beyond an automated confirmation of receipt is the rule rather than the exception; and even in-person interviews are routinely conducted on a "if we are interested we'll call you back at some point; if we haven't called you back within six months I guess you should guess we aren't interested" basis; because that's just so normal and has been for years.

Why is it just normal when the demand side operates on a basis of deliberate obfuscation and contemptuous silence; but some kind of exotic malfeasance when the supply side just drops threads that are no longer relevant?

It seems like a fairly shit equilibrium position overall: scrambling to respond to surprises is normally a pain in the ass; and petty revenge basically never makes you feel better to the same degree that endless petty contempt makes you feel lousy; but that doesn't make it any less weird and partisan to write up one half of it like it's a juicy moral panic; while treating the other half as either so natural as to not be worth remarking on; or something that only snowflake losers who need to stop expecting to be coddled would be against.

And don't get me started on the uptick of job posting/hiring platforms promising that their hot new AI tools will help employers cut through the chaff and get right to the real people most worth their time. You think that asymmetry is going to last more than 30 seconds or so?

Comment Re:Lumping them in (Score 1) 107

A hybrid has both an electric motor and an ICE engine. Whether the ICE engine can drive the wheels mechanically doesn't matter - it's still a hybrid vehicle.

Hybrids combine the worst of both worlds - all the maintenance involved with an ICE vehicle (more in fact), added complexity, and adding the weight of a battery as well.

Oh, and not every mechanic can work on a hybrid - they need special training to handle the electrical danger as well. So said mechanic of course costs more in the end because of the training. (And they can work on both ICE and EVs).

So yeah, hybrids cost less and don't have range anxiety, but cost more in servicing - more oil changes (the engine can't get hot enough), more complex mechanics (if the ICE can drive the wheels), more expensive people, etc.

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