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Comment Re:Will Push More Off-Shoring (Score 1) 172

Keep hallucinating. What will happen is that some things will simply not be available in the US anymore, and for others you will have to pay through the nose. The tariffs are one reason for that, but the more important one is that the US has grown unreliable (another blithering idiot may well get voted into office after Trump, directly or later) and businesses like that not one bit. They have moved out of countries for that reason alone.

Hence enjoy your delusions while the real changes are still possible to ignore. After that, good luck! You will need it.

Comment Re:A rare good move from Trump (Score 1) 172

But also watch as the world leave US tech from the like of Microsoft as they can no longer "trust" it and instead put $ into OSS that they can control/modify.

Indeed. I work with some people that analyze firmware and software for critical government uses here. Using FOSS makes that analysis massively easier, and placing some of your own devs in there makes it even easier and you get additional benefits.

Comment Re:Here it comes (Score 1) 14

I'm not sure online sales were ever part of Walmart's core competencies; I suspect they contracted all that stuff out to third parties.

The reason I suspect that is that one of my relatives bought a product from Walmart.com and needed to return it, so she called the number listed on the front page of the Walmart.com web site (and dialled it correctly; I later double-checked the call record on her phone against the walmart.com web page), and the representative who answered put her on hold, then forwarded her to a scammer who tried to trick her into allowing him to TeamViewer in to her computer remotely. When she refused, he got increasingly abusive and eventually hung up on her.

So whomever Walmart was contracting for online support, they were at least bribable, and arguably criminal.

Comment Re:The Republican party has been sabotaging educat (Score 3, Informative) 71

> I can tell that you have no idea what you're talking about because the vast majority of public K-12 school funding is through local taxes, not federal funding.

About 13% of public schools are funded federally. You say "the vast majority" as if to handwave 13% of their funding as unsubstantial. Most importantly, this funding goes to schools that do not have the local tax revenue to fully support them.

> The federal government has almost no control over it so they can't cut funding

The federal Dept. of Education plays a key role in ensuring equitable access to education. You know how they exert control over local schools? By creating and enforcing (or NOT enforcing) policies, because their job is ultimately to implement and enforce laws created by Congress that apply to public education.

> There are also many states that have charter schools that perform better for less money than the public schools, so it's not a money problem.

Charter schools have an abysmal reputation; approximately 1 in 4 charter schools end up out of business within 5 years, leaving their students in the lurch and those who paid for it with empty wallets.

It's just a scam to funnel public money into private hands and push indoctrination. Look at all the enshittification that's happened and is currently happening in the name of chasing profits - we cannot afford that in education, financially or culturally.
=Smidge=

Comment Re:Sigh. (Score 1) 30

It's inevitable that something like this will appear regularly, and one day it will be silently exploited.

That has already happened and MS did not notice at all. After 2 years, one of their customers noticed:
https://www.cisa.gov/sites/def...

The utter catastrophe of the MS cloud "strategy" is slowly getting worse and worse. Most "decision makers" at MS customers are deep in denial because they do not have an exit strategy. But there is really no way this is going to end in any other way than very badly. MS still cannot get basic stuff right at this time. That simply means they cannot fix the crap they built anymore and the only way to curb the mounting (and already extreme) cost of those defects is to move away to better products.

Comment Re:Funny (Score 1) 37

I don't think he will. It's that it'll take a couple of decades to fix what has been done. And some things, like the destruction of the US dominance, will never be undone.

Form an outside perspective, I think the "American Century" coming to an end is a good thing. People became lazy. Everybody has to try harder now.

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