Domain: medium.com
Stories and comments across the archive that link to medium.com.
Comments · 634
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This is some next level incompetence stuff
This one is well above average when it comes to pure stupidity
This writeup highlights some of the mind-boggling explanations from management:
https://medium.com/@rikardhjor...
My favourite:
"That someone probably, when updating at some point, seen that there was a free networking cable slot, and I guess they thought, some technician: ‘Aha, there should probably be a cable here, but it fell out [sic]’, and then they have connected a networking cable, so that it’s become connected to the Internet. That is just, like, how you do these things" - CEO of Voice Integrate Nordic AB -
EUSSR indeed
Despite the backlash from people, and the commission writing an article about how uninformed and uneducated people were https://web.archive.org/web/20...
Now deleted https://medium.com/@EuropeanCo...They just went on with it.
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Compilation of recommended books from "luminaries"
Here's a compilation of other "must-read" books from well known developers like "Uncle Bob, and Kent Beck, [and] Jeff Atwood and DHH:"
On medium, sorry for the interstitial: https://medium.com/@shvetsovdm/essential-books-that-every-programmer-should-read-a61565095781.
Will
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Re: And there's the opposite side of the coin
Except that she is very vocal about the fact that she has already crossed the puritan wing of SJW movement and got deplatformed from various platforms by these puritans in the past.
https://medium.com/@therealsex...
The moment the same powerful cabal gets a chance to finish wiping her digital presence off the internet, they will. They already showed no qualms in doing so in the past, to her or anyone else they deem guilty of "wrongthink".
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Re:Easy
> Scripting languages, basically do not do threading, of any kind, at all. They're too slow to synchronize across threads, which makes invoking threads inside them fruitless
Bullshit. You CAN do asynchronously loading of assets with JavaScript.
From d3wasm
I did a couple of changes to the idTech 4 engine in order to be able to start the game before all the data have been loaded. So, along with the initial 5MB executable download, there is a first 15MB download to fetch only what is necessary to load the game engine and enter the main menu. Then, the remaining ~380MB are fetched asynchronously.
> While you certainly can write an application or game with a scripting language, it will be slow, it will be limited by the operating system's own libraries (eg 32-bit libraries on a 64-bit OS as just one example) and generally require more maintenance than simply writing it in C to begin with.
I prefer C/C++ myself but you don't know what the fuck you are talking about W.R.T games and scripting:
1. You DO realize that there is a WIDE variety of games from "idle games" and simple puzzle games to full blown First Person Shooters right?
Are you telling me the JavaScript implementation of 2048, xkcd Sand Castle Builder, or Cookie Clicker is slow??
2. You DO realize you can "transpile" C/C++ code into JavaScript right, such as Doom 3, using Emscripten right?
Or how about RollerCoaster Tycoon? Here OpenRCT2 was ported to run inside a browser.
> yet GPU's APIs have standardized more or less on just four API's, OpenGL, Direct3D, Vulkan, and WebGL.
FTFY.
WebGL exists to offload rendering to the GPU inside the browser. There are TONS of playable WebGL Games
3. Lastly, Unity can target WebGL
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You might try telling that to the French
that some people can have things spoon fed them and still deny anything they see
Anything they see, such as the annual PV installations exceeding 100 GW and STILL increasing exponentially? That alone defeats your cherry-picked list of small inconsequential companies, but as you say, even spoon-feeding you with information won't make you see the light.
They are after all rioting over the increased taxes to pay for all that green power
While we are here lets look at the cost of electricity in Europe
https://medium.com/solardao/el...
The fact that you can force people to use these at gun point doesn't make them a good idea. As my list demonstrated without subidies on top of supsidies they still wind up being little more than nothing but a good way to divert money to political allies. France is showing the world that you can only go so far with this.
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Re:Meaning
Nope. Bad coders are dangerous and they are so in any language.
So people who aren't Bad Coders(tm) never slip up and make mistakes?
Also try reading this. It explains how a typical corporate process resulted in the rug being pulled and nobody realizing code that did work correctly now had cases where it wouldn't.
Now, before you say "Sure, but that could have happened in Java or C# too!", that's true, but in Java you wouldn't have given anyone the opportunity to overwrite the stack with data and code of your choosing.
What worries me is that most C programmers think they're good programmers. The better the programmer, the more likely it is they realize they too can make mistakes. The fact there's a whole bunch of people waving the C flag yelling "C is only bad if it's programmed by people who are worse than me" is deeply disconcerting for that reason.
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New Deal? Why Name It After a Failure
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Indeed, the IT industry is a disaster
My own article on this has a more extensive list of what is wrong in IT, and why all the technology is so non-robust and untrustworthy.
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Re:Why use a dodgy site?
That's what I do for audio, here's a great article on how to set this up on a Mac: https://medium.com/@kengroup24...
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Re:So get this...
Informants aren't spies. Deal with it.
It doesn't matter who paid for the Steele dossier, not even the fact that the initial work was paid for by a conservative news site, because the Steele dossier isn't illegal evidence, isn't being used as direct evidence of criminality, and the law doesn't care who paid for it.
Keep telling yourself there's no evidence of collusion. Where there's thick, sun-blotting smoke, there's...nothing? Is that how the old saying goes?
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Re:Don't like the science? Wait a few years
>
Great, if you had a handy decoder ring to help separate the few things they got right from all the other batshit they didn't.
Sounds like you're committing base rate fallacy. For most people, you have to also consider what did religion got right. Scientism has its own decoder rings...
"the absence of religion... replaced by all kinds of crazy beliefs... you realize there's no religious fundamentalism that's more irrational than an atheists' primitive use of probability" http://bit.ly/2Hi4pNK
Survival comes first, truth, understanding, and science later... In other words, you do not need science to survive (we’ve done it for several hundred million years) , but you need to survive to do science. https://medium.com/incerto/how...
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Re:Don't like the science? Wait a few years
Most of what had been "known" for millennia was wrong. That is the whole point of doing science.
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Re:Question
...the male is the gaudy and more beautiful sex. In humans, it's the opposite.
Quote>
I take that to be your opinion.
Actually, an analysis of Tinder users showed that males tended to gauge women's attractiveness on a bell curve, which would indicate a normal spread. Around 50 percent above and below the average. Women on the other hand, find 80 percent of men to be below average or unnatractive in looks. Here's the source https://medium.com/@worstonlin...
Fascinating stuff, and kind of flies in the face of the modern day dogma that men are shallow. We'll have to overlook the 80 percent below average math paradox.
Generally speaking, human males find human females beautiful/attractive and vice versa. Then, arguably, human male's beauty increases with age.
That is what is generally referred to as the wall, where women hit a point where their sexual marketplace value deteriorates quickly, but men's decline is much later.
I assume you're male. Can it be perhaps that you aren't that busy being pretty the whole day and that hence you don't appreciate your own beauty as much?
Yup, male. I've been told that I am "good looking". I fear that other than keeping in shape, my pursuits are more of the mental sort. So I sometimes come across as aloof to females. I am not a flirter. I do have an appreciation for feminine beauty, but not an appreciation for the mask-like makeup or especially the weird clown makeup many women hide behind.
And truth is, I think that much of my "attractiveness" is more related to my shape, my demeanor, and let us be frank, my money. It is not unnatural for the female of the species to look for a stable male who can provide for her I'm not referring to the more pathological "gold digger" sort, but of a more sensible outlook.
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Re:So how much?
FYI.. One example: https://medium.com/@tomac/how-...
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Did Relotius' story about Fergus Falls ...
... also make it into the "fake news" list?
https://medium.com/@micheleand...
Just asking because the linked list of "fake news" is not "fake news" in general, but "fake news in support of Trump", while the "Real story"s are mostly pro Hillary opinion pieces. The problem then is, that the "fake" vs. "true" contrast in the selection is also a "Trump" vs. "Hillary" contrast, i.e. you can't distinguish if you select for "fake news believers" or for "trump supporters". In proper research you'd want to distinguish those by multivariate correlation analysis.
As it is their main result seems to be that trump supporters are conservatives and on average older than Hillary supporters.
Hardly surprising.
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PVS-Studio and Bug Bounties
PVS-Studio and Bug Bounties on Free and Open Source Software: https://medium.com/@karpov2007...
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Re:So sick of fucking gender gap
In the charmingly titled "When You Can't Throw All Men Into The Ocean And Start Over, What CAN You Do? Ijeoma Oluo - the mother of two boys, God help them - writes,
"This society is doing everything it can to create rapists, to enable rapists, and to protect rapists. This society is broken, abusive, patriarchal (and white supremacist, ableist, hetero-cisnormative) trash. This entire patriarchal society is responsible for every single sexual assault that occurs."
https://medium.com/@anthoknees/women-have-a-right-to-hate-men-df41b4de3842
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Re:good thing they created all those new jobs
Wouldn’t it be great if the U.S. were the tax haven where the rest of the world funneled all of their money?
It already is the largest and strongest or the second largest tax-haven after Switzerland, increasingly, and has been for a long time.
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KeePassX? KeePassXC? KeePassDroid?
What about KeepassX?
Or KeePassXC Password Manager? Question: keepassxc ... can we trust it ?
KeePassXC for Beginners says "Android users, consider KeePassDroid.
iPhone users, consider MiniKeePass". -
Re:They're trying to survive
Which has been enough to throw $30M at Pocket, fund rust, multiple poorly thought through attempts at entering the mobile/IOT/operating system space, attempt a single login system, but not enough to fund Thunderbird development.
Sadly here they had the right idea, just a shitty execution. Here's a long recount from one Mozilla engineer about Firefox OS, it'll just snip the relevant bits:
Everyone basically agreed that we couldn't compete with the likes of Android and iOS on their own terms. We couldn't catch up with Google on Android features and we could never out-Apple Apple on design. Mozilla was used to punching above its weight and had taken on titans before and won, but we wouldn't win if we played by their rules - we had to play by our own rules.
The way I remember it is that there were basically two schools of thought about how to differentiate Firefox OS.
The Web is the Platform
Connecting the Next BillionConnecting the next billion is "let's create something cheaper than the cheapest product on the market today" as a niche player with no experience in hardware. Yeah that didn't work. And the first one was basically an aversion to packaged software, I mean seriously:
Another serious problem was the lack of a key app, Whatsapp, which was essential for many of these markets. We failed to convince WhatsApp to make a web version, or even let us write one for them
I think they gave up way too easily not beating Android at their own game, because "everyone else" who offered any service competing with a g-service would be on their side. WhatsApp would gladly have replaced AOSP Google Hangouts. OpenStreetMap would gladly replace Google Maps. Every other email provider would help stop GMail. Dropbox or OwnCloud would help stop GDrive and so on and so forth. Their idea that "web apps are the future" drove away all the people who thought the current model was just fine, except Google is monopolizing it. Early Firefox got a lot of free help not because it was necessarily better than MSIE (as everything was built for MSIE), but to simply have an alternative like when clones took down the IBM PC.
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Re: I know this is too ideal, but ...
It's actually counterintuitive: "The Most Intolerant Wins: The Dictatorship of the Small Minority" https://medium.com/incerto/the...
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Re:News??
If slashdot is 'tech news', and the subject is Amazon Prime, then we should really be discussing UX design and Dark Patterns. EG
Amazon dark patterns force people to fill up their Amazon pantry
Then when they don't like this, Amazon dark patterns make it more difficult to leave low-rated rather than high-rated reviews
Then if the user wishes to leave Amazon, the user must navigate a complex, non-intuitive chain of commands that do not start with 'close my account'. This chain changes regularly, to ensure that current 'close your amazon account' instructions found on google do not work for more than a few days. I closed my account in March 2018. At that time, this was the process:
1. select 'let us help you'...
2. select 'help'...
3. select 'need more help'...
4. select 'contact us'...
5. choose 'prime or something else'...
6. dropdown, choose 'update account information'...
7. dropdown, choose 'close my account'...
8. user is put into 'chat'...
As soon as the phrase 'I need to close my amazon account' is typed into the chat input, the user is logged out of chat and must repeat the above (I found this 'bug' was repeatable)
At that time, I had to find a way to communicate that I wanted to close my account without using the phrase 'close my account' in chat. -
Ops, you're a bastard or you child isn't!
1/3 of us are Bastards.
This sample shows 30%, near 1/3 of children&men are victimized by Parental Fraud.
https://medium.com/@jimpreston...Motherhood is sampling of all women's morals. 1/3 women will actively live life-destroying (to 'loved' husbands/lovers & their children) lies,the rest lie to cover for them.
Enjoy considering the #BelieveWomen !
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Re:The Jiminy Cricket Project
What Google needs to do is hit someone that has a sense of ethics and a. moral code, and have them approve all other project concepts.
That's definitely not an internal hire though...
You don't think the people who publicly protested the Dragonfly project would qualify?
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Stopping at the source
I totally commend people willing to clean up the existing mess, but yes, we need to stop the source. On Monday I attended a lunch lecture from Beth Terry, author of Plastic Free. It was part of a series hosted by Oceana (https://oceana.org). Here's a short post I wrote on medium: https://medium.com/@davepander...
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Re:So What
Nope.
The flying car we were promised parks in my garage and in the parking lot at my office, the mall, and the grocery store.
Source for this promise?
My guess it that it was just some BS that you promised yourself.
Most old concept art for personal flying vehicles are small helicopters or cars with wings. -
Re: This pretty much sums it up
Sounds like facsim as well. I think we are on to something.
âoeOpinion | Be Afraid of Economic âBigness.â(TM) Be Very Afraid.â by Tim Wu https://link.medium.com/EkkYua... -
Re:Sorry, not possible
Re: "Good grief man, you're either a troll or an idiot. No, I'm not conflating anything. And no, the Big Bang singularity was not a mathematical point. It had a measurable albeit extremely small volume. And there is a good chance it was part of a bigger volume, which all inflated at the same rate, outside our observable universe."
This is cosmology we are talking about here, and the "dark" data is very much telling you right now that something important and fundamental is wrong with the idea.
Many practicing scientists have themselves gone on the record to express their own displeasure with the idea, its origins, its ad hoc nature, and the matter-of-fact manner in which its proponents speak about its chronology - which is itself ironic because they've also expressed a willingness to confidently change the chronology in order to explain away contradictions.
The Soviet Nobel laureate, Lev Landau, famously observed that
“Cosmologists are often wrong but never in doubt.”
Martín López Corredoira is the author of more than 50 cosmology and astrophysics papers, often as lead. He's written papers on the structure of the Milky Way, stellar populations, and observational astronomy topics which required analytical calculations, simulations, statistics, photometrical and spectroscopical observations and analysis. He has remarked:
"Cosmology is
... is not a science. It has a lot of scientific aspects. We can know many things with the science: We can know how the galaxies are distributed - this is our measurement with observations - we can know how ... many metals are in the intergalactic medium or in some galaxy, and all of these aspects are scientific. But, with regards and considerations about the beginning of the universe, this is in some way crossing the barrier of the science, and going to something in between the science and metaphysical aspects, in my opinion."Eric Lerner's description of the ad hoc nature of the theory seems to also perfectly describe the way in which proponents behave when they are challenged on the idea:
"People have said that science is a method for asking questions of nature. And if that's true, then we can say the Big Bang supporters are people who don't take NO for an answer."
One of inflation’s cofounders has turned his back on the idea:
"Inflation was proposed more than 35 years ago, among others, by Paul Steinhardt. But Steinhardt has become one of the theory’s most fervent critics. In a recent article in Scientific American, Steinhardt together with Anna Ijjas and Avi Loeb, don’t hold back. Most cosmologists, they claim, are uncritical believers:
'[T]he cosmology community has not taken a cold, honest look at the big bang inflationary theory or paid significant attention to critics who question whether inflation happened. Rather cosmologists appear to accept at face value the proponents’ assertion that we must believe the inflationary theory because it offers the only simple explanation of the observed features of the universe
...[I]nflationary cosmology, as we currently understand it, cannot be evaluated using the scientific method.'
The problem with inflation isn’t the idea per se, but the overproduction of useless inflationary models. There are literally hundreds of these models, and they are -- as the philosophers say -- severely underdetermined. This means if one extrapolates the models that fit current data to regimes which are still untested, the result is ambiguous. Different models lead to very different p
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Re:Courtesy of China
And that's happened as opiate prescriptions have plummeted.
Overprescribing was addressed in the worst possible way. Forcing people off their prescriptions of a standardized product led to seeking black market alternatives. This is yet another example of how prohibition takes something dangerous and makes it massively more so, since we keep falling for the same old idea that people won't take/can't get drugs if you simply ban them.
Make no mistake, this massive spike in ODs wasn't some unforeseen surprise, everyone familiar with opiate abuse predicted this. The policy makers were no doubt informed of this, and then actively chose massively increasing overdose deaths over people continuing to use a less fatal alternative under some medical supervision. Not only that, our new crisis of severely undertreated pain has come roaring back, and legitimate pain patients are ODing and killing themselves too. Another totally foreseen consequence. Once again, the government looked at a drug problem and said 'Lots of people are dying, how can we make even more people suffer and die?'. It's sadomoralism, they desire only to punish drug users (not just abusers), not to actually reduce the harm drugs cause. -
Re:You knew it when you bought it.
Actually, it wasn't changed, or at least not according to my reading of the terms and conditions. It still contains a clause saying that if you want to distribute binaries to end users, you must create an account with the App Store and comply with the policies thereof.
Just because Apple hasn't sued anybody over third-party distribution doesn't mean Apple has decided to allow it. You can bet your backside that if, for example, Steam decided to distribute via Cydia Impactor instead of through the App Store, there would be lawsuits flying.
So at this point the evidence is equivocal.
I haven't messed with this
.ipa sideloading myself; but I would imagine they are bending the rules for Enterprise App Distribution, because I know it involves a User step of "Trusting" the Developer, like is shown in this tutorial:https://www.goodbarber.com/blo...
It looks like the main issue is that Developer Certs. expire after 3 years; but other than that, it does appear to be "legal", as far as Apple is concerned.
But you might be right that this requires a full iOS Dev. ENTERPRISE license ($299/yr), rather than just the freebie one or the $99 one.
https://medium.com/@Intersog/d...
There's some interesting ideas near the end of this thread:
https://stackoverflow.com/ques...
But since the real rub is "signing", that's where Cydia Impactor may get around all of the above limitations:
https://www.shoutpedia.com/use...
The only disadvantage with that method is that you can sign Apps for a year only (with any level(?) Dev. Cert.) or for a week with a common AppleID. I don't know if "re-certs" are possible.
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Re:Not sure how unexpected this is
No, it won't be fine.
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Re:Inner ear
There are already potential solutions to avoid this problem. Palmer Lucky recently tweeted he has been working on it and anticipating sharing a hardware/software solution in the next year.
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NB
Here's a nice read about BitcoinSV and Mr. Craig Wright who desperately wants to be Satoshi Nakamoto but keeps blundering while doing so.
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Re:Magnetosphere
It's a problem, but one that is probably solvable even with current technology and a lot of engineering.
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Re:It's the padding, not the ads I find annoying..
This is just an indicator they don't know how to do a professional job of prepping their podcast.
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Re:A form factor is finally back
The original 256M Pi1 A+ was replaced by the 512M Pi1 A+ which is still available. Farnell. CPC, RS, Allied and newark are all showing it as in-stock.
As for power draw according to https://medium.com/@ghalfacree... the idle power draw is significantly higher than an A+ but lower than any B-series pi. The full-load power draw is lower than a 3B+ but higher than everything else.
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Re:Linux on a new Mac — why?
A Mac running X11/Linux is the only (legal) way to develop and test macOS and X11/Linux versions of one application on one machine.
No, it isn't -- and I suspect you already know this.
You can run Linux in a VM on macOS. So "only (legal) way" is already provably a lie.
There is however a more lightweight way to accomplish the same ends -- install Docker for Mac and XQuartz, and configure the Docker Container to export its DISPLAY to the host. Done.
(Oh look -- that link is to a blog from a team that actually uses this in development!)
Perfectly legal at that. Who knew? Obviously not you.
Yaz
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US claims it does no economic spying...
but I think there are loopholes. The NSA and CIA are tasked by Congress and give the reports to Congress. So the NSA/CIA can say they do no economic spying, but the congresspeople can whisper what they know to their donors and corporate friends. Or some economic spying can be "in the interest of national security". Leaks have indicated that the US spied on other countries as part of the lead up to trade conferences so the US could cheat:
https://medium.com/economic-po...
Is that not spying for economic gain? -
Re:Safety
The full list is a lot longer than that:
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Re:What?
Or the thief goes in when someone exits.
The exit is narrow like a turnstile in a subway station. Two people can't pass through it in opposite directions.
Here is a photo of the entrance/exit.
If you pass through (in either direction) without scanning your phone, the cameras will see it and sound an alarm, and possibly call the police.
Of course you can run in, grab stuff, and run out with it, but you can already do that at any store. The staff is unlikely to physically confront you. The main difference at Amazon Go is that everything you do will be recorded, making it easier for you to be apprehended and prosecuted.
Most criminals have better things to do than stealing a bag of chips from a grocery store. Also most retail "shrinkage" comes from employee theft, not customer theft, so by reducing the number of employees, Amazon Go will likely have less of a theft problem than traditional shops.
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Occam's Razor
Apply Occam's razor.
I did, and it told me that people often present false dichotomies on the Internet.
While the idea of a language acquisition window is complex and, like many ideas, not fully understood, it is mostly regarded as false. The article presents some interesting conjecture, but I agree that it provides very little evidence to support an actual "loss of dexterity". The pendulum doesn't always realize it swings.
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Sex,No Faul Divorce, other possible connections?
Did they specify the percent who requested they lie were women researchers,
or raised under single mother,
or #NoFaultDivorce'd muted fathers?What percent of Statisticians agreed to (so perhaps lied) & the percentage of them women,
or raised by single mother,
or ...1/3 of mothers #ParentalFraud (stat. sample of All women) to those they 'love'.
Most would sell your&Children's soul to damnation just for the pleasure of watching them Suffer/suicide/die.
No Vote, no legal contracts, no testimony, no place of power over others,..
#SexSegregationhttps://medium.com/@jimpreston...
This sample shows 30%, near 1/3 of children&men are victimized by Parental Fraud.
Motherhood is sampling of all women's morals.
1/3 women will actively live life-destroying (to 'loved' husbands/lovers & their children) lies,the rest lie to cover for them. -
Re:Remote monitoring...
The rule requires constant human monitoring while the car is in use. There's still a "driver", just not in the car. This is more of a publicity stunt than a real change.
You're missing a couple essential words:
"Continuously monitoring the status of test vehicles""If a Waymo vehicle comes across a situation it doesn't understand, it does what any good driver would do: comes to a safe stop until it does understand how to proceed. For our cars, that means following well-established protocols, which include contacting Waymo fleet and rider support for help in resolving the issue."
The way I read it is that there must be people on staff to make sure no car is stuck and help the cars get going again via remote operation, but there's no dedicated safety driver. It now depends on the car to alert the fleet operator that it needs help. If you got a clearer description that says other way please give a source, the master is probably the DMV site but it seems to be down right now.
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Re:You forgot one thing
From: https://medium.com/@getongab/g...
"Gab unequivocally disavows and condemns all acts of terrorism and violence. This has always been our policy."
They have had this policy for a while: https://medium.com/@getongab/g...
everyone has it as a policy but what do you do to enforce it? Twitter bans users.. it's why GAB exists to be the place where people banned can go. Gab therefore doesn't ban people who harass and threaten.
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Re:You forgot one thing
From: https://medium.com/@getongab/g...
"Gab unequivocally disavows and condemns all acts of terrorism and violence. This has always been our policy."
They have had this policy for a while: https://medium.com/@getongab/g...
everyone has it as a policy but what do you do to enforce it? Twitter bans users.. it's why GAB exists to be the place where people banned can go. Gab therefore doesn't ban people who harass and threaten.
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Got a riddle for you
In a corporatist system of government, corporate censorship is state censorship. When there's no meaningful space between corporate power and government power, it doesn't make much difference whether the guy silencing your dissent is Mark Zuckerberg or Jeff Sessions. America most definitely has such a system.
That entire paragraph is plagiarism.
And when independent candidates run for office and can't get their message out for being shadow banned, and the corporatist candidates are always the number one trending subject, you'll be there to finger wag for not bothering to set up their own world-class content distribution system first.
Any time you try to talk about how internet censorship threatens our ability to get the jackboot of oligarchy off our necks you'll always get some guy in your face who's read one Ayn Rand book and thinks he knows everything, saying things like âoeFacebook is a private company! It can do whatever it wants!â Is it now? Has not Facebook been inviting US government-funded groups to help regulate its operations, vowing on the Senate floor to do more to facilitate the interests of the US government, deleting accounts at the direction of the US and Israeli governments, and handing the guidance of its censorship behavior over to the Atlantic Council, which receives funding from the US government, the EU, NATO and Gulf states? How "private" is that? Facebook is a deeply government-entrenched corporation, and Facebook censorship is just what government censorship looks like in a corporatist system of government.
Well that sure looks familiar too.
What takes random paragraphs from internet sources based on key words, with a time span ranging in years, and cobbles them together to make forum posts?
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Re: You forgot one thing
So to recap: Heather Heyer died directly from blunt force injury as per the Medical Examiner’s Office. This kind of injury causes heart attacks. That heart attack, triggered by the crash, may have played a part in the circumstances for her death, but are not listed as the official reason. It simply wouldn’t make sense to do so. If there was no car crash, there was no possibility of a heart attack in that moment.
It's time to crawl back under your rock, mangastudent.
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Trump lies
All False statements involving Donald Trump
Trump’s Lies Have Grown Far More Frequent—and More Dangerous
The 25 Worst Lies From Donald Trump’s First 200 Days
Donald Trump has said 3084 false things as U.S. president
How Trump Gets Away with Lying, as Explained by a Magician
The Other Side: President Trump’s lies a clear and present danger
Trump lies about having ‘no financial interests in Saudi Arabia’
Trump's Relentless Lying Threatens Our Democracy.
This Is as Obvious and Blatant a Presidential Lie as You're Going to See
It’s True: Trump Is Lying More, and He’s Doing It on Purpose
President Trump Made 1,950 Untrue Claims in 2017. That's Making His Job Harder
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Re:You forgot one thing
They have had this policy for a while: https://medium.com/@getongab/g...
Yeah, and I have a "policy" that I don't break the speed limit...except when I do, and that's pretty much whenever the fuck I want to.
So yeah, let's have a policy. Hell, have two policies if you want, or a dozen. They mean nothing without enforcement.