I was turned off by systemD and the direction Linux distros taking by adopting it as it seems a departure from the Unix philosophy. I was also turned off by the restrictive communication/behaviour rules forced upon the FreeBSD community. So I decided to give OpenBSD a shot and was pleasantly surprised. You can perform a lot of server functions with just the base system, working with it is intuitive, and it's surprisingly up-to-date.
The top 25% of the country does not own a Ferrari although probably most of the Ferrari's in the country are owned by the top 25%. So even though it might be a predictor for the top 1%, it fails miserably as a predictor for the top 25% since you're unable to properly categorize the other 24%.
The only representative experiment would be if they would offer:
- a living wage,
- until the end of their lives,
- for minimum wage workers.
The amount of people who quit their jobs should tell you if UBI is feasible at all, or not.
I was turned off by systemD and the direction Linux distros taking by adopting it as it seems a departure from the Unix philosophy. I was also turned off by the restrictive communication/behaviour rules forced upon the FreeBSD community. So I decided to give OpenBSD a shot and was pleasantly surprised. You can perform a lot of server functions with just the base system, working with it is intuitive, and it's surprisingly up-to-date.
The top 25% of the country does not own a Ferrari although probably most of the Ferrari's in the country are owned by the top 25%. So even though it might be a predictor for the top 1%, it fails miserably as a predictor for the top 25% since you're unable to properly categorize the other 24%.
the Google + team how they made their product so non-addictive.