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Comment Re:End H1-B Hiring for Tech Jobs (Score 1) 171

This is true for most careers. The world population grew 800% in 100 years. We also went from believing in the ether to designing photonic semiconductors in 130 years. We have more lawyers than legal needs, more mechanics than cars to fix, programmers than projects...

The fact is, we have saturated nearly every market. We just have way more people than we need.

But we need top people.

I would rather hire an experienced engineer and give them 10 AI subscriptions rather than 25 coders.

H1B is great for getting talent. While I have had very little luck doing business with Indian workers, Chinese, Polish and Lithuanian workers have been amazing. Sadly, I believe I lack the cultural understanding of Indian needed to communicate effectively with them. I need to work with people who treat me as their equal but I have not found a meaningful way to convey this to my Indian peers.

Americans can be very good. It depends. The top 10% are pretty good. After that, I'd prefer to look for the top 10% from elsewhere. Americans somehow bring politics to work. Neither politics or religion belong in the workplace. Even American atheists can't just be atheist, they have to be Atheist.

Also, Americans always have to compete. They think everything is a game or a war. Even when it comes to sales. Everyone compares themselves to others. Like if I want to buy your product, to learn about it, I have to study your competitor because you never tell me why your product is good. You just tell me why it's better than theirs.

I am pretty happy the US is excluding itself from the world market. It's much quieter and mature. When Trump drove the dollar up and we could no longer afford to buy American, we learned how to do without American products. Trump and Biden may ruined American, but thanks to them, we're all learning how to live better by working together rather than through America.

Comment Sounds good (Score 1) 108

I honestly don't see the problem.

The US has about 300 million consumers. Sure, they spend tons of money on imports, but the market is so diluted that it probably shouldn't account for more than 5-10% of sales for most companies.

Additionally, there just aren't enough workers in the US to bother trying to setup shop there.

Just ship the product, charge the American consumer the tax and move on.

Why does anyone care about the tariffs except the consumers?

Comment Why should they care? (Score 1) 127

1) TSMC has no competition
2) The only people effected are the Americans. TSMC will just continue operations as normal. Companies using their service will just have to pay more
3) US companies can freely charge more to customers, normalize the inflated prices, optimize their supply chain and leave the prices high for Americans

Is Trump trying to make Taiwan decide that China taking over doesn't seem so bad compared to the US who now simply wants to steal Taiwan's security and IP.

Comment McCarthyism returns? (Score 1) 186

I may be telling my father that I may be forced to forfeit my US citizenship out of fear of persecution. He's getting older and I hoped to keep it at least until he passed away. I have to forfeit it eventually due to my pension but imagine traveling to the US and being stopped and persecuted because I like everyone regardless of geography. The only people I like less are people who bully me and try to force me to like someone else less

Comment Song writers too (Score 4, Insightful) 215

If an artist uses a song writer, has plastic surgery, uses musical instruments... They should all have to disclose this.

Velvet Sundown is no different than when a studio assembles a group of four boys, pays songwriters, dance choreographers, makeup artists, musicians, etc...

An artist sat down, used AI as an instrument and made music.

Comment Re:Now we just need.. (Score 2) 134

I get much better results than you. As a substitute university computer science lecturer, I also get much better results from my students than other lecturers. I'll share my secret.

Expect your subordinates to misinterpret you unless you provide enough details to that it's impossible to provide any result except what you were expecting.

I receive exceptionally good results most every time. It takes extra work to get started, but as with anything you get out what you put in.

Comment My wife flew to Paris (Score 2) 39

I wonder why Slashdot isn't publicizing that. She showed up at the airport, followed directions, boarded the plane, and flew... High up in the air. So high they had to use a plane with a pressurized cabin.

The flight was extra impressive because she's a girl. And it's always more impressive so we can say that "to all the little girls of the world, when you grow up, you can accomplish great things and let the world ignore everything else except that you're a girl. So, it's best to only do easy things like flying on a BO rocket rather than studying hard and working hard because the press doesn't reward hard work. They hype that you're impressive for being a girl".

Is it because she straight and white? Would Slashdot publicize her accomplishment if she was a different skin color or maybe a new and unexplainable sexual orientation?

Wait!!!

Great idea for Bezos. Space hookup trips. There are lots of things that are illegal on earth. He can facilitate those things by bringing rich people to space.

Comment Re:Translating old code to... (Score 2) 66

I was thinking precisely this.
Rewriting code in a new language might give better static code analysis, but, it doesn't make it safe.
I have a lot of application code I can translate to Rust, but unless I completely rearchitect all of it, it would be terrible Rust code.

I did however just revisit Rust. I wrote a simple CNC milling code generator. I explicitly told it how I want it structured. Copilot handled it nicely. I could maybe see myself vibe coding a useful tool with it. But I HATE abbreviations like pub, fn, and mut. And f64 feels like single letter naming. The language might be structurally elegant, but it's awkward and tacky... Like as if you're hoping to take with "James Robert Paddington II" and the phone gets answer by "Jim Bob Jr." Or "J.R. Jr.. Junior Junior... Get it?".

So Rust is kind of a language Jeff Foxworthy could make a standup routine out of.

Comment Re:I am surprised... (Score 1) 86

Wouldn't China footing the bill for R&D and proving the tech viable potentially be a major benefit to everyone else?

Companies like Huawei can quickly, reliably and affordably deploy renewables across any country who wants to benefit from China's taking the lead. You should see their data center tech. Trade restrictions forced Huawei to innovate amazingly for power and cooling. They're like, if we need 10 Chinese GPUs to math one NVidia GPU, we'll have to invent data center tech to support it. The have end to end tech solutions from diverting divers to solar and battery and waste heat recycling and carbon capture.

The UK could never do this. The british government sabotages every major project as soon as they find how to line their wallets from it.

Comment Re:He seems like a wise man. (Score 1) 68

Do you believe that anyone exists who is a better fit for the job?

They would
1) Need to control inflation so people can shop
2) Cause inflation so mortgages become more affordable over time which results in equity and retirement funds
3) Strengthen investor faith in American credit so investors will continue to buy bonds and feed the economy. This is done by increasing the interest rate.
4) Lower the interest rate to reduce burdens on the people
5) Strengthen the dollar so the US can avoid issuing too many treasury bonds during trade deficits
6) Weaken the dollar so American inflation remains low while exporting exports remain affordable enough to attract customers.
7) Able to work with the major branches of the US government where generally everyone is hostile because he has to screw voters of both parties daily to keep the economy afloat.
8) Able to work with reserve representatives in 200 countries to maintain the balance of the economies. This includes Russia and even Iran.

But, would I be correct that you know someone ... Maybe even yourself who would be a better fit for the job?

Comment Violation of civil liberties (Score 1) 15

I smoke a pack a day. I haven't looked at a cigarette pack in years because the EU passed laws requiring grotesque images to be printed on the packs, but my guess is that there is a warning somewhere on the pack telling me that if I choose to smoke, it will hurt me.

I believe banning Deepseek from the store is contradiction and a violation of my liberties. I don't believe the government has the right to ban me from harming myself in their eyes.

First, I seriously doubt Meike Kamp is informed enough to make decisions on my behalf. I do feel he has the right to attempt to warn me of the dangers as he perceives them. I also believe his job should make him pressure Deepseek to operate using EU laws while operating in the EU.

That said, if I believe the rewards outweigh the risks, then I want the option to use Deepseek.

Also, privacy is long dead. I also distrust the Chinese government less than the Trump or Modi governments. If you ban Chinese apps, you should also ban Americsn apps and operating systems.

Comment CSEE still pays (Score 1) 128

Anyone with an actual computer science degree should be ok. However, most universities don't teach computer science anymore. They teach IT or programming.

Computer scientists are taught how to think and problem solve. They are mathematicians and sometimes physicists with keyboards.

The applied computer skills like Cyber Security never belonged in the university except as an add-on.

My daughter starts her summer internship on Monday. The largest university in this country has a total of 9 students in entering their third year studying CSEE in the physics department. Every one of them are being attacked with extremely good offers by companies begging for their education. By comparison, thousands are studying applied computing such as programming and cybersec and only 60% of this year's graduates are likely to find jobs.

Comment Re:How many of those jobs (Score 1) 62

I won't discount the possibility of a TI error, but if this is the case, they should have never manufactured more than a few hundred units. If every 20th chip fails immediately off the reel... and in a dangerous manor, none of the chips on the reel should be shipped. That is grossly negligent to continue producing such a flawed design.

Almost all similar problems I've experienced have been related to poor input power conditioning. Most often when I try to trim the BOM for cost.

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