It estimates the decision to end production will save about $56 million a year
There have probably been farts that cost the government more than that.
Officials have argued that the rise of electronic transactions is making the penny, which first went into production in 1793, increasingly moot. The Treasury Department estimates that about 300 billion of the coins will remain in circulation, "far exceeding the amount needed for commerce."
Then why not decrease production without killing it off altogether? $56 million per year can't even buy you a decent ballroom these days.
I feel like the entire world is caught up in snake oil salesmanship to the point of destroying the entirety of functional society
The allure of "making money from money" is far more appealing to many people than making money from doing actual work.
which to my mind means the end of capitalism, and possibly civilization, shortly thereafter, but whatever
I can't think of any better example that captures the zeitgeist of 2025 than being casually dismissive about the potential end of civilization.
The same was true during the subprime mortgage crisis. Burry deserves credit for loudly and publicly stating that the emperor has no clothes at a time when few others in his profession would
I have a ton of respect for Burry. Everyone saw the housing bubble was about to burst, but he understood the underlying mechanisms and the magnitude of their collapse. And not only did he call it out, but he had balls of steel for going all-in on attempting to time the burst with his own very risky investments. And there's little doubt we're currently within numerous bubbles that are about to burst, including AI. However, I don't think his reasoning in this case is completely accurate. Most AI companies will likely be designing their own chips to be optimized for their particular algorithms. If that's the case, this potential underestimate of depreciation of previous-gen chips will only affect them for one or two of the five-year generations. And if I'm right, the chip companies and AI cloud computing companies will feel that pain much more since they'll be largely cut out of the market. With that said, there's plenty of AI companies that will go out of business in their current rush to attempt to dominate the market, but that's just how capitalism in general works in emerging markets: many will enter, few will win.
To the systems programmer, users and applications serve only to provide a test load.