Is anyone using Dropbox for "exotic" file types that aren't just a blob of bytes? Surely that's the most common, if not only, use case anyone really has for a cloud storage service.
Again, recruiters showing the exact attitudes that causes people to just blow them off.
Why don't you have a good hard look at yourselves and realize that judging people on surface criteria is a personality failure? You complain about people not being courteous, but that doesn't give you an excuse to judge people.
The PRC doesn't want to annex SE Asia. Only the parts of international waters it claims are its own (and Taiwan). btw, Taiwan also claims some of the very same territory the PRC is claiming that is claimed by other SE Asia countries.
But annexation of SE Asia is never a goal. The PRC would rather just lead the economic bloc and get the money.
Seems it went over your head, so I'll explain it. When an "SJW" makes a comment on something an alt-righter says, alt-righters go to the ultra-literal interpretation of what they said and cry about being persecuted for saying something "technically correct".
Basically, I'm highlighting the hypocrisy of your kind that you'll allow yourselves to "read between the lines" when it suits you, and retreat to the ultra-literal "technically correct" when it suits you.
No, not lots of gold being mined. In fact, very little. Lots of ground is being dug up and ruined, but gold yield is low, and the amount of gold being added to reserves do not match the real material growth of an economy.
Whether or not you think a debt driven economy is a good thing, the fact is a gold driven economy doesn't grow. No one wants to spend their gold because it is hard to get back. That's why all dictatorships in history (ie, kingdoms and theocracies) loved gold - wealth is much easier to control - and why those dictatorships stayed poor - because no one wants to spend. Judging by your comment history, you seem to be one of those gold-standard libertarians. It's funny how people like you actually want to go back to the old system of being oppressed over a rare metal. You'd think people with an unhealthy obsession with a free market would also want market forces to decide the value of money.
Seems you got triggered. And yes libertarians have been arguing that. Libertarians I've pushed over the edge regarding the need for a regulatory authority, for money to even work, started to retreat to the cryptocurrencies claiming that they prove regulatory bodies (aka governments) weren't necessary.
Just because you closed you eyes and ears to your fellow libertarians doesn't mean people like me aren't subjected to hearing from the wide range of libertarians their hare-brained ideas all the time. Maybe look around next time and see what nonsense your libertard friends really say.
No, I'm expanding on what "fixed" really means. If someone can just create a cryptocurrency out of thin air, then the old notion of "fixed" is inadequate.
It doesn't matter how easy it is to switch to another competing coin. The fact that a competitor can exist means supply has increased. If demand for a competitor is high, that affects the value of your coin whether or not you can sell it. And that makes it even worse because you can't do anything about it. At least with "real" money in a stock market, you can still trade. With crypto, per your own argument, you're stuck.
Not when it's easy for almost any company to create a new currency. There are more cryptocurrencies than there are real currencies.
If gold-standard libertarians were worried about governments printing money - well now we have your paradise where governments aren't in control of most forms of currency. Taking into account the ICO scams, how's your regulation free paradise working out now?
Not going to help with a project like an OS kernel. Almost everything needs to be "unsafe".
Is anyone using Dropbox for "exotic" file types that aren't just a blob of bytes? Surely that's the most common, if not only, use case anyone really has for a cloud storage service.
Isn't Dropbox written in Python?
And if VS Code can be written in Javascript and run on Linux, why would it be so hard for Dropbox?
Again, recruiters showing the exact attitudes that causes people to just blow them off.
Why don't you have a good hard look at yourselves and realize that judging people on surface criteria is a personality failure? You complain about people not being courteous, but that doesn't give you an excuse to judge people.
Nice to meet someone who lets others dictate his own tastes.
Guess you're not a book reader either.
The PRC doesn't want to annex SE Asia. Only the parts of international waters it claims are its own (and Taiwan). btw, Taiwan also claims some of the very same territory the PRC is claiming that is claimed by other SE Asia countries.
But annexation of SE Asia is never a goal. The PRC would rather just lead the economic bloc and get the money.
Seems it went over your head, so I'll explain it. When an "SJW" makes a comment on something an alt-righter says, alt-righters go to the ultra-literal interpretation of what they said and cry about being persecuted for saying something "technically correct".
Basically, I'm highlighting the hypocrisy of your kind that you'll allow yourselves to "read between the lines" when it suits you, and retreat to the ultra-literal "technically correct" when it suits you.
In case you haven't noticed, dick-for-brains, news reports on deaths all the time. "News" isn't "something that's never happened before in history".
How's it sexist? Women also have testosterone, just as men also have oestrogen.
Why do they hire in lots of twenty people at a time?
No one said it was.
Stop getting so triggered.
No, you fuck off. You completely missed the point.
And cannabis is linked to irresponsibility.
You shouldn't impose your lifestyle choice on others.
In case you didn't read my other comments, I was pointing out that was the problem with cryptocurrency.
No, not lots of gold being mined. In fact, very little. Lots of ground is being dug up and ruined, but gold yield is low, and the amount of gold being added to reserves do not match the real material growth of an economy.
Whether or not you think a debt driven economy is a good thing, the fact is a gold driven economy doesn't grow. No one wants to spend their gold because it is hard to get back. That's why all dictatorships in history (ie, kingdoms and theocracies) loved gold - wealth is much easier to control - and why those dictatorships stayed poor - because no one wants to spend. Judging by your comment history, you seem to be one of those gold-standard libertarians. It's funny how people like you actually want to go back to the old system of being oppressed over a rare metal. You'd think people with an unhealthy obsession with a free market would also want market forces to decide the value of money.
Your downvotes just prove me right about libertarians.
Then explain why there are now more cryptocurrencies than countries.
Seems you got triggered. And yes libertarians have been arguing that. Libertarians I've pushed over the edge regarding the need for a regulatory authority, for money to even work, started to retreat to the cryptocurrencies claiming that they prove regulatory bodies (aka governments) weren't necessary.
Just because you closed you eyes and ears to your fellow libertarians doesn't mean people like me aren't subjected to hearing from the wide range of libertarians their hare-brained ideas all the time. Maybe look around next time and see what nonsense your libertard friends really say.
The problem is economies grow. So you need a currency that grows along with it, and allows the economy to grow at reasonable pace.
No, I'm expanding on what "fixed" really means. If someone can just create a cryptocurrency out of thin air, then the old notion of "fixed" is inadequate.
It doesn't matter how easy it is to switch to another competing coin. The fact that a competitor can exist means supply has increased. If demand for a competitor is high, that affects the value of your coin whether or not you can sell it. And that makes it even worse because you can't do anything about it. At least with "real" money in a stock market, you can still trade. With crypto, per your own argument, you're stuck.
There's no "fixed" amount of cryptocurrencies either. There are now more cryptocurrencies than currencies. Don't like one? Create a new one.
Not when it's easy for almost any company to create a new currency. There are more cryptocurrencies than there are real currencies.
If gold-standard libertarians were worried about governments printing money - well now we have your paradise where governments aren't in control of most forms of currency. Taking into account the ICO scams, how's your regulation free paradise working out now?