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Comment Re:The enshittification is proceeding apace (Score 2) 64

On the plus side, TV has hit rock bottom decades ago,

No it didn't. The last 15 years have arguably been the high point of TV.

Decades ago, let's say 30 years to 20 years. Well, 30 years ago was about the first ever show with an entire multi-season story arc plotted out in advance (Babylon 5). There were of course many missteps because literally no one had done it before and the studio had no fucking idea what to do with it. It probably took another 10 years before people finally figured out how to execute such a thing. And now they've got good at properly executing single and multi-season arcs.

For example.

That's not to say there aren't some decent shows from the 90s and 2000s. There were a lot of shows after all, but quite a lot of them feel somewhat dated. Slow moving, clunky plots, weird retconning and plot holes due to lack of proper planning.

Minor point of order good sir, B5, as good as it was, wasn't the first show with a planned multi season story arc. The first American show was Hill Street Blues (1981) and there are earlier examples from the UK including The Prisoner (technically it only counts as 1 season but the story was split into 3 distinct parts with different themes) and Doctor Who would frequently revisit previous story lines. It could also be argued that ST:TNG had a multi season story arc with Q and Picard, they definately got the hang of it with DS9.

It's a bit of a shame what happened with B5, it was originally planned for 5 seasons but WB wouldn't commit to the 5th season so JMS had to wrap it up in the 4th... so he was effectively out of ideas when they greenlit the 5th.

Comment Re:Ah, the ketamine's Nazi's selling bullhit again (Score 1) 239

As much AI computing as necessary to drive all those 10 million robotaxis on Mars, right?

This is one of the biggest signs that AI's about to take a huge stumble and probably a fall as well... Musk is gloating about how much it's going to take off.

Comment Re:Liar (Score 3, Insightful) 239

I don't know.
I mean, I can see where you're coming from, but at the same time- I don't find it hard to swallow that he actually does believe his own dumb shit, like FSD will happen with only cameras.

This is the motherfucker that argued with scientists about nuking mars, like they were the morons.

Musk's fans have mistaken autism for intelligence. He's simply not that fucking intelligent.
He is a dreamer- I will give him that. But the guy isn't any more a business genius than Bill Gates or Jeff Bezos were before him. He was in the right place at the right time, with the right dream.

So honestly, I don't think he's lying when he says that dumb shit. I think he's just a fucking dumbass, who mistakes his success as proof of hyperintelligence.

A rather significant point of order good sir,

It's not Autism. Actual functional autistic people really don't need the comparison, they're not like Musk at all.

Musk has a complete disconnect from reality and is insulated from the consequences of his actions. This is the ideal environment for an antisocial personality disorder (ASPD) to flourish. Musk might also have ADHD, but again that's not to blame for how he acts and the disregard he has for anyone but himself, that's far more the realm of an ASPD. Autistic people do feel empathy, they're just not able to express themselves normally, people like Musk have no empathy what so ever.

I think we need to stop using autism as an excuse... especially for things like sociopathy and psychopathy.

Comment Re:Noble, but missing one key thing (Score 3, Interesting) 69

Most users are not very savvy, especially around new software.

That didn't stop people using Teams, a program that not only was rolled out to everyone with virtually no information beyond a few popup tooltips or training, but a program that drastically differed from the norms of other software (like no multi window support).

The users will be fine.

Just like the Office Ribbon caused a complete breakdown... oh wait, it didn't.

The "users can't accept change" excuse hasn't been valid for nearly 20 years now as almost everyone who grew up without a computer is nearing retirement. It's as stale and wrong as the "but who do I sue if things go wrong" argument (you can't sue MS if things go wrong, they have pages of legalese in the T&Cs expressly to prevent this).

People will adapt, those that don't will just find themselves in crappy, dead end jobs.

Comment Re: Noble, but missing one key thing (Score 2) 69

Capitalist efficiency is a myth beyond SMEs. From a certain size on upwards, it goes to hell. To be fair, soviet-type manufacturing efficiency is pretty much the same or worse and they also have worse product quality issues in general. But then I look at where Win11 stands now and it is clear that capitalism with monopolies in place can match soviet incompetence easily.

This. Bureaucracy is a function of size, not ownership.

I've worked in more small companies (sub 5000 employees) that have far too onerous bureaucracies compared to their size, more political infighting and fiefdoms than any of the government departments I've worked for. You understand why something the size of the NHS has it's bureaucracy, it's fucking massive so it can't function without it... However a mid size consultancy firm shouldn't have more, let alone significantly more and the NHS is pretty efficient once you consider how big it is and how many different functions it has to perform.

Comment Re:Remember you don't need a union (Score 1) 74

Where in Europe can a union go on a strike at a whim without notice? Not even in France is that an option. And the underlying principles still apply even if not legal. A union which strikes arbitrarily (resulting in their members losing income for the duration) would find themselves not facing heat from a corporation, but rather from the members themselves.

Don't explain to us where this happened, provide evidence that it did so we can see if it was true, or STFU.

It's just the typical anti-union propaganda that gets passed around by the Daily Mail. It never actually happened.

Unions are not completely innocent by far but they exist for a reason and that reason is that bosses were left unchecked for far too long and far too many abuses were committed. If we tallied up the abuses by companies vs the abuses by unions in the same time frame, you wouldn't even be able to see the abuses by unions column if the graph were projected on the side of a 20 floor building.

Comment Re:Remember you don't need a union (Score 1) 74

The number of people who have the luxury of looking at lay-offs this way are probably in the single percentage range of this country. Like....maybe 0.5% of the people running around are truly that 'wanted'. In the other 99.5% of cases, your sole source of income is gone and you're going to be scrambling to get another job before your next mortgage payment is due.

Online job search engines have made this even worse, where a lot of the 'jobs' you see posted are being posted by job clearing houses that are just resume fishing and not actually looking to fill a position.

Yep... I have one word, just one word: Debt.

The average person has gotten themselves into debt up to the hairline and seems to have lost no appetite for getting more. Back when I was a lad, saying you were living payday to payday meant that you were in trouble, that at the end of the month you couldn't put any money away for things you want (cars, TV, a holiday, et al). Now people are routinely living debt repayment to debt repayment. Money comes in on pay day and is instantly consumed servicing debt, so living expenses are put on the card (which for some reason people have started treating credit like it's their money) thus starting the cycle all over again, meaning all of their next pay is going to pay off the things they bought this month. Almost no savings and no safety cushion if they lose their job.

The idea back when I was a lad was that you could afford to pay your mortgage/rent for a few months if you lost your job. Of course not everyone did but most people understood you needed that buffer of savings just in case.

Comment Re: Eh (Score 2) 85

A bad actor doesn't have to be competent at troublemaking to be dangerous. In addition, Russian electronic warfare systems are known to be generally decent unfortunately.

Historically Russia has been terrible at electronic warfare and espionage. Ukraine would give evidence that is still the case.

Russia's espionage was good because they were extremely good at managing the human element (whilst western nations were pretty bad at it). They were able to set up spy networks undetected and were good at finding people to flip. Western powers usually ran rings around them on electronic surveillance and cryptography.

The biggest threat to the west from Russia (or anyone else) isn't electronic, it's who is compromised by Russia (notably by money).

Comment Re:click bait title? (Score 1) 85

Yes its a clickbait title.

The US also does this - check out the Orion/Mentor satellites, or the JUMPSEAT satellites. Public astronomers have tracked satellites launched by US launchers moving into position behind other countries communications satellites, where they can capture the overspill of the transmissions sent to those satellites - they have huge dishes for just that purpose.

But oh noes, Russia or China is doing it, must call them out on it!!

Yep, terrible headline for something we know has been happening since we started forming governments. Their spies spy on us, our spies spy on them, their spies are spying on our spies spying on their spies spying on our spies spying on us.

The big question is how successful they are at it? Russia has traditionally been quite good at spying but that's because they were able to find people to turn easily, techwise they usually couldn't get anything working.

Comment Re:New Subscription - only $149.99/month (Score 2) 167

For a Beemer, it's the Pretentious Dickbag Subscription. For another $799.99/month, we'll put a middle finger where the turn signals would normally be.

The thing is, in the mid 10's all the douchebags sold their BMW M3s and bought Audis... So you could buy a BMW without being a dick. However now you can buy an Audi without fear because all the dicks have sold their A4s and bought Teslas.

The biggest dickbag brand is a cyclical thing. It's Tesla's turn now, it'll be someone else in 5-10 years time.

Also, Beeemer == BMW motorcycle, Bimmer == BMW car.

Comment Re:Poor old Sony (Score 1) 69

Thought they could drop the quality and people would still keep buying simply because of the brand name. Shame no one told them that the world doesn't work like that any more (except maybe in high fashion but those people are just morons anyway).

Sony wasn't particularly good in quality to begin with... See: the Sony Timer. It just had a brand following which it's been shedding year after year.

Quality wise, the Koreans came in and ate their lunch, price wise the Chinese are eating everyone else's lunch.

Comment Re: Not Sure Which Is Worse (Score 1) 21

HP bloat is insane. Every 10minutes or so I get a command prompt appearing running some code and disappearing. It's their bloody battery manager which is so ingrained into windows the only way to uninstall it is a shotgun!

HP... Most laptops I just reinstall the OS from the source media but HP especially. Even MS makes it easy to download it these days.

Dust off, nuke it from orbit. It's the only way to be sure.

Comment Re:This is how they kill the poor (Score 1) 291

You forgot the most important part, the extremely high taxes on cigarettes which would most definitely be effective in reducing consumption of ultra processed food.

This,

Healthy alternatives are available and people are not addicted to unhealthy food like they are to nicotine (if you go of chicken nuggets, you don't get withdrawal).

My concern is, as what happens with so many good intentioned ideas it gets implemented poorly. See the UK's sugar tax, good idea in practice but realistically just shifted the problem to foods and drinks that were not covered (and also didn't raise nearly as much as predicted).

People forget that it wasn't just the high tax on tobacco that reduced it's usage, it was the concerted efforts to stop young people from picking up the habit in the first place that really cut down on tobacco usage. Without an effort to educate as well, efforts to restrict will be at best ineffective but more likely counter productive.

Comment Re:This is how they kill the poor (Score 1) 291

You can still buy cigarettes, and while there was once an attempt to ban alcoholic beverages, that didn't last. So, the most likely outcome is a big ugly warning label on the package that says in so many words "THIS SHIT BE UNHEALTHY, YO".

Which of course, people will just ignore just as they do the warnings on cigarettes and alcohol. Because ultimately, if you wanna put garbage in your body, that really should be your choice so long as you're fully informed.

Part of the problem is that a lot of people can't recognise unhealthy food, especially as a lot of it is window dressed as healthy. "low fat" but high in sugar, high carb or high calorie products marketed as "gym food", so on and so forth.

Here in the UK (and many other nations) there have been attempts to put warning labels on them (like the hexagons commonly found in South American nations) but these small warnings are often overshadowed by smarmy marketing using weasel words and pictures of happy, smiling healthy people on products that are well, shit.

Another part of the problem is that a lot of people have no idea how to cook, what foods go with what, how to prepare vegetables (other than boiling the shit out of them). Basic cooking lessons are stupidly hard to find and online recopies that call for 100s of specialist ingredients are counter productive too.

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