Comment Re:Video editor? (Score 1) 129
Comment Re:Engineering (Score 1) 129
Comment Re:Just as useful to ask: (Score 1) 129
2. Hold down the power button on the infotainment center for five seconds
3. While still pressing the infotainment power button, lightly tap the ignition button
4. Douse the car in gasoline and light it on fire
Comment Always Part of the Plan (Score 3, Interesting) 56
Comment Bless Trump's Cashapp (Score 2) 64
Comment Re:Expesnive controller (Score 3, Interesting) 92
Comment Closing the Barn Door After the Horses Left (Score 2) 51
Comment Unlikely (Score 1) 56
Comment Re:Pluuueeeeeesssse, NASA (Score 1) 47
Last one to be eaten wins! What do they win? The chance to starve to death instead of being butchered for Haitian Steaks!
Your understanding of reality is...unique.
Comment Re:Phallic (Score 1) 47
Comment Re:This could actually be great! (Score 1) 35
In Adobe's case they've already moved over to a cloud-only, so at least users would get extra functionality for that business model. I'm sure I'm oversimplifying the implementation process, but it would be an interesting concept that seems almost inevitable given where things are going.
Comment Re:Coding AI vs "Many Eyes" (Score 1) 43
Comment Re:Par for the course (Score 1) 56
Comment Re:Why is slashdot posting these garbage articles? (Score 1) 155
But that is a weak causal story compared with the much more direct variables everyone is living through: housing costs, wage stagnation, student debt, childcare costs, healthcare costs
Many civilized countries that don't have these problems anywhere near the extent of the U.S. have also seen birth rates as bad or worse than the U.S.: Italy, Norway the Netherlands, South Korea, Japan, etc. And all of their governments have provided significant financial incentives to have children and they've all failed miserably.
delayed household formation
That's a big one but perhaps not for the reasons many would think. It's not so much the cost of housing that's the issue, it's the delay in women getting serious about starting a family. Continuing education and endless fun on the dating apps means that many women aren't getting serious about starting a family until their biological clock is at the buzzer.
Yes, smartphones may be associated with reduced in-person socializing or changed dating behavior. But that does not make them the root cause
It also doesn't make them not the root cause.
They could just as easily be a proxy for urbanization, class, education, income, broadband access, cultural change, or other regional differences
Emphasis mine. Social media and dating apps (both largely powered by smartphones) have changed our culture more than most people realize. Social media has been the primary tool powering tribalism, especially regarding political ideology. That political divide has been increasing gender division since women have been skewing further left and men skewing further right. At this point, the genders barely like each other, let alone feel motivated to find someone to start a family. The degradation of dating norms thanks to dating apps has further grown that division. This has gotten to the point where studies have demonstrated that fewer people today are having sex. Less sex, fewer babies.