Do you have citations to back up those claims? Have there been any hyperloops tested at faster than airline speeds? What's the construction cost and operating cost estimates?
What's the point? For each of the proposed US routes, you can already buy round-trip airline tickets for about $120. Is hyperloop faster? No. Is hyperloop cheaper? Probably not.
The article is a little bit hung up on doorbells, old doorbells versus "smart" doorbells. But to me, the doorbell has been obsoleted in a completely different way. If someone is coming over, they text me ahead of time and I can leave the door unlocked for them. The only people who ring the doorbell are solicitors or missionaries, both of which are ignored.
If you have all of those things, you are living in at least a medium sized city. Maybe not NYC or LA, but you're living somewhere in the top 50 of this list
As will any other company that cares about its reputation. You can't publicly bad mouth your employer's policies and expect them to keep handing you a paycheck.
It's common sense: don't bite the hand that feeds you.
If you're not going out, what do you do with your free time? Its not just art museums and hoity-toity restaurants; that's tourist stuff. Any social activity is going to better in a city: music, theater, dancing, gaming, trivia nights, adult sports. Even hobbies that don't strictly require a large group, like home-brewing or tabletop gaming, are much easier in larger cities where there are stores that serve those interests and networks of people to share with.
I grew up in small town (pop. 20,000). There was literally nothing to do but drink and watch TV. Hunting was by far the most popular hobby, but even that is seasonal. Even for more pay and a lower cost of living, I wouldn't go back to that.
I did live in the city was traffic, high parking prices and spending forever to get from point A to B
Newb mistake. Seasoned city dwellers use public transit and Uber.
Human drivers don't handle edge cases either as evidenced by the over 5,000 pedestrians are killed by human drivers every year and 130,000 being treated for non-fatal injuries.
Reddit, or any other website, is under no legal or moral obligation to treat both sides equally. They built the soapbox. They own the soapbox. They can give it to or take it from whomever they please.
1) I don't know why you're using quotes when when you're not actually quoting me or even paraphrasing anything I wrote. I made no statements regarding either of those quoted phrases, let alone tried to conflate the concepts. I'm just pointing out the economic value of transistor density in an information driven society.
2) Just FYI: agricultural yield per farmer has been steadily improving since its first invention. Cultivar selections, irrigation techniques, co-planting, crop rotation, plow methods, etc. have all been gradually improving for thousands of years.
Its not your fault because the summary is wrong, too, but there is a strong correlation (p=0.27-0.4, depending on year) between box office gross and RT scores. But there are other factors that are more strongly correlated, such as production budget and audience score.
If you follow the links back to the original source, Rotten Tomato score DOES correlate strongly with box office gross(p=0.4-0.6). But production budget and audience scoring have stronger correlations with box office gross (p=0.7-0.8). And that critic scores have not historically (pre-2010) correlated with production budget (no surprise), but more recent critic scores (2016, 2017) do correlate (p=0.79, p=.77).
So the conclusion is that box office gross is not caused by RT scores despite the correlation.
In an agricultural society, economic value is how much food can be produced. In an industrial society, economic value is how many manufactured goods can be produced. In an information society, it seems reasonable to measure economic value by how much information can be processed which will roughly correlate with transistor density.
Normalize for budget. If you follow the links, the study shows a strong correlation (0.8) between production budget and box office gross. Your three examples are consistent with that trend; Moonlight having the lowest production budget and Dunkirk having the highest.
If I've communicated what I'm agreeing to that attorney and the paperwork differs from that it is the Attorney's job to catch that
Sounds like hiring an attorney to do basic arithmetic on your behalf. Usually, comparing two numbers and determining if they are equal is task I can manage on my own. There are some computing devices that can help with that,too.
Do you have citations to back up those claims? Have there been any hyperloops tested at faster than airline speeds? What's the construction cost and operating cost estimates?
You can build conventional rail on elevated tracks. That's not an advantage, that's additional construction cost.
The fastest tested hyperloop is 220 mph. And commercial transportation rarely operates at the maximum tested speed.
What's the point? For each of the proposed US routes, you can already buy round-trip airline tickets for about $120. Is hyperloop faster? No. Is hyperloop cheaper? Probably not.
Good News! Slashdot did not post again on that topic. The article has nothing to do with Simulated Reality Theories.
The article is a little bit hung up on doorbells, old doorbells versus "smart" doorbells. But to me, the doorbell has been obsoleted in a completely different way. If someone is coming over, they text me ahead of time and I can leave the door unlocked for them. The only people who ring the doorbell are solicitors or missionaries, both of which are ignored.
If you have all of those things, you are living in at least a medium sized city. Maybe not NYC or LA, but you're living somewhere in the top 50 of this list
It's common sense: don't bite the hand that feeds you.
I grew up in small town (pop. 20,000). There was literally nothing to do but drink and watch TV. Hunting was by far the most popular hobby, but even that is seasonal. Even for more pay and a lower cost of living, I wouldn't go back to that.
Newb mistake. Seasoned city dwellers use public transit and Uber.
Human drivers don't handle edge cases either as evidenced by the over 5,000 pedestrians are killed by human drivers every year and 130,000 being treated for non-fatal injuries.
The only people complaining about "free speech" are the trolls. If all the trolls go back to USENET, that's just fine with everyone else.
That's why we have comment threshold settings.
Trolls don't create. You only destroy. When the creators take back control, trolls lose. Always.
Reddit, or any other website, is under no legal or moral obligation to treat both sides equally. They built the soapbox. They own the soapbox. They can give it to or take it from whomever they please.
You have a right to free speech, but nobody owes you a soapbox.
Fakes news are lies, but not all lies are fake news. Sometimes it necessary to be specific.
And how does Canada enforce such laws if the ads are being run on the internet from outside Canadian borders?
2) Just FYI: agricultural yield per farmer has been steadily improving since its first invention. Cultivar selections, irrigation techniques, co-planting, crop rotation, plow methods, etc. have all been gradually improving for thousands of years.
https://medium.com/@ybergquist...
So the conclusion is that box office gross is not caused by RT scores despite the correlation.
In an agricultural society, economic value is how much food can be produced. In an industrial society, economic value is how many manufactured goods can be produced. In an information society, it seems reasonable to measure economic value by how much information can be processed which will roughly correlate with transistor density.
You've never heard of Uber, Lyft, AirBnB, Dropbox, or SpaceX? Is this your first time on the internet since 2003?
Obviously, we operate in different tiers of the real estate market. Try buying a house in Seattle or the Bay Area and see if any of your schemes fly.
Normalize for budget. If you follow the links, the study shows a strong correlation (0.8) between production budget and box office gross. Your three examples are consistent with that trend; Moonlight having the lowest production budget and Dunkirk having the highest.
Sounds like hiring an attorney to do basic arithmetic on your behalf. Usually, comparing two numbers and determining if they are equal is task I can manage on my own. There are some computing devices that can help with that,too.