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Comment $180,000 per rider (Score 2) 99

Current estimate for the cost of the light rail system in seattle is $185 billion dollars. Current ridership is up, but ridership counts people trips, not unique people. so a weekday commuter gets counted as 5 "people". 185 billion divided by the likely number of people served by light rail is somewhere around $180,000 per user. that's the construction cost. the fares don't cover the operating costs, so there's that as well. a few more billion. somehow we in seattle have managed to take something that should be a societal good and gold plate it and pave the way with money. they're trying to figure out where they're going to get the current $30 billion dollar shortfall, and given their record, I would not be surprised if the total cost is north of 250 billion pretty soon. light rail is in addition to the cost of recently renovating the 520 floating bridge, just north of the murrow bridge the light rail is on. Original construction cost was $167 million in inflation-adjusted dollars. The replacement bridge cost 9 billion dollars. Civic construction in washington state is unbelievably expensive.

Comment i get office for free and stopped using it (Score 1) 99

i have a deal where i get a full license to office for free every year. and i stopped using it because it was a hassle to deal with. i can do everything i want to do with the google office suite for free. it really doesn't matter what they call it because in general i'm against license fees and software rental. i want a basic word processor and a basic spreadsheet and the ability to print now and then. If I need to use AI I can copy-paste it from any ai model i choose.

Comment Why commercial hives are collapsing (Score 1) 88

There are a few pollination events that draw hives in from the entire US; bees are loaded on semi trucks from all over the country and sent to california for the almond pollination. The almond crop represents a very large part of all commercial bee keepers revenue from the year. but this also exposes billions of bees to billions to other bees, so if there is a parasite, bacteria, virus or anything else that can be transmitted from hive to hive it's a huge exposure event for virtually the nations entire bee swarm. this is exacerbated by "package" sales, where bees are vacuumed up in 3 or 4lb packages, an unrelated queen is put into the package, and the whole thing is sold to bee keepers all over the country to start new hives with. We have similar issues with all of our domestic livestock; pigs, chickens, cows, sheep - biosecurity is a thing for bees, too.

Comment Re:Your tax dollars at shirk (Score 1) 59

Government officials love this sort of bust because it gets rid of a thorn in their side and allows them to claim it was to "save the children" simultaneously. Julian Assuange comes to mind as another example of somone accused of sex crimes but his real crime was he was considered a threat to governments. Anytime I hear "save the children" it almost always sounds like "lose free speech and civil rights"

Comment Re:I could be wrong (Score 2) 59

It was great for prosecutions. each ad had to be tied to a credit card, so when police found an underage sex worker they'd contact backpage or whereever the ad they located the worker with was published, get the credit card number, and they'd have the pimp or pimp-adjacent person identified. the thing about police is that they used to love prosecuting these crimes - it was easy, they got good press, they had a villian, and it was cheap. perfect police activity. when the online advertising shut down the sites that remained moved offshore and the prosecution became much more difficult. SESTA/FOSTA is the legislation that resulted in places like craigslist getting out of the personals business and there was a simultaneous increase (at least in seattle) of street sex workers because there wasn't any easy way to advertise, which also increased violence, shootings and pimp activity. We did all of this to "save the children" but the net result is that more children are trafficked now and harder to catch than before.

Comment Re:We used RPis in vertical farming commercially (Score 3, Interesting) 45

This whole vertical farm concept seems to be a way to raise sometimes very large sums of money, do some stuff, and then go bankrupt. Everyone involved gets paid a salary or consulting fees, and there's some fun stuff, but at the end the investors get slaughtered to pay for it. Here's the headline to a recent article about this: "As indoor farming startups with hundreds of millions in funding head to bankruptcy, critic says: ‘Boy, this is a dumb idea’"

Comment I was on the team... (Score 1) 37

that produced and presented the courseware for the first certifications. We had long discussions at the time about whether or not people would "fail" certification - that is, if they didn't exhibit a certain level of competence and understanding, would we issue them a certificate anyway? At the time, this was in 1989 and 1990, the consensus in our team was "no, if they don't get it they can retake the course for free or try again later, but we're not going to certify folks that cannot pass the test". How times change. Shout out to all of the other former microsoft university folks.

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