Those that want to tax other people often aren't interested in doing much more themselves. For a bad example, a while back the head of Greenpeace used a private jet for a short summit on global warming. Another, Warren Buffet wasted hot air calling for higher taxes, but did not give any money from his giant trust to the government.
If you want to force other people to do something, show that you're doing it yourself, not just SAYING you will at some future date. This isn't about scale. I think that 7/gal is just stupid. It is about actually sacrificing and doing something instead of whining others should pay more.
Every time you fill your gas, please write a check for twice as much and make it payable to the U.S. Treasury. Until you are willing to put your money where your mouth is, shut up.
The title says it's not because of increasing labor costs, but then points out that places like Walmart and banks are already using automation. Perhaps they found it cheaper than what ever they paid an employee at the time they automated?
It's just the cost of McD's to automate is higher than grocery stores and banks.
and, if you've seen any YouTube video of Common Core math, know it absolutely sucks. Recently, there was a study that showed that rote memorization of simple math starts the process of higher though processes. I think Slashdot had a post on it.
Common Core is such a big carp at such a basic level that anyone who was a part of promoting or creating it should never doing anything with education again.
True, but this is at least partially developed and Facebook isn't creating something completely new, although integrating the technology into FB might be the "developing". This might be more like the 10 store strip mall being turned into the Mall of America. FB is paying the full price for Mall of America just to get the revenue of a family run property.
I don't see how they can increase the revenue 100x or more (using the real estate metaphor) as I'm guessing the data mining from that would overlap their current business. My current ability is only getting 10-20x on CD, DVD, and toys; and that's why they're the media empire billionaires.
In residential rental real estate, the rule of thumb is monthly revenue of 1% of the property or annually, 1 eighth of the property's value. The biggest companies like Exxon, Walmart, and Apple have a revenue to value ratio close to 1:1. Their last year's revenue is one thousandths of the purchase price.
Hey, Facebook, give me a million bucks and I'll give you 1,000 each year. Heck, I'll double it, $2,000 next year.
Why not just buy the batteries and charger and skip the cost of the car?
Depending on source, Japan's electricity cost is 50-100% higher than the U.S. At $20k per car and the above $800/yr per car saved (In U.S.$400-530), what is the return on investment per year (this question doesn't include upkeep like maintenance cost of the car)?
How fast do you wear out the batteries due to the increase of charge/discharge cycle?
Comparing the savings of time shifting usage with approx $120,000 cost of the cars, what could the same company do to reduce consumption using $120,000 to reduce energy consumption (therefore reduce amount of the evil CO2 created)?
How many mile will you loose if if the cars are used for commuting?
Would have posted on the original site, but my login cookie gets blocked.
Regular DVD to 1080 is amazing different. When I first bought the Xbox HD-DVD add-on (Yeah, that was stupid), I played The Matrix DVD and HD-DVD side by side.
Holy shit, Laurence Fishborne's pock marks are scary in 1080.
Cell phones were cheaper with many millions of land lines not laid. The fiber or copper for the cell towers would have been used anyways as part of the land lines so were fixed cost anyways. Oh and other countries/charities also gave them money. Now we tell them to place millions more solar panels and windmills and hundreds of natural gas plants as low supply backups.
Yeah, you can jump to 100% clean energy too! Just pay triple on your electric bill. You even can jump to an electric car for only another 6k above the gas model. So, money on green power or money on a Obamacare plan cause Ocare law let the your insurer drop the plan you wanted to keep? They get the choice of clean energy or food.
And more in 10 other Asian countries. This is a twofer: Let's loose money by not making loans on a nearly fool proof business model and let those countries become ignore the U.S more for their new friends who will do what they want and we don't!
The problem of more tech is that the new "jobs" are further and further from the source of value/product creation. Each of these new jobs give diminishing returns on useful output and therefore pay less. It's like a private sector "jobs" program, but one that requires more and more irrelivant $100k degrees.
I'm one of those right wing nuts that yell, "Get a job, slacker." but there's less to be had and we will need some kind of mandatory, permanent payments for those who do not work.
"Let's not fix this pathing agent that ruins every service and traffic. But there is good news, I just saved a bunch of money on my car insurance switching to GEICO."
And we ran out of oil. The ozone's gone. We're in a nuclear winter. "... In the 1970s hundreds of millions of people will starve to death...". I guess Paul Ehrlich was right. The sky fell.
I'll keep my "end is upon us" sign in my closet for now.
In industry, they're using it to transfer all of the energy they payed for through compressed air. It's the primary source. Excess waste energy cost the exact same if you use it or not, but you get more energy out of it if you can store it for later in stead of no energy at all.
With a giant "free" salt mine tank and with a small power requirement (10's MW) , the cost of storing the energy might be cheaper even with all of its inefficiencies than the cost of using batteries or buying it off the grid. The "wind mine" isn't wasting 85% of all your energy, but 85% of "free" excess energy.
My gut says that it would be cheaper to buy the power, though.
Those that want to tax other people often aren't interested in doing much more themselves. For a bad example, a while back the head of Greenpeace used a private jet for a short summit on global warming. Another, Warren Buffet wasted hot air calling for higher taxes, but did not give any money from his giant trust to the government.
If you want to force other people to do something, show that you're doing it yourself, not just SAYING you will at some future date. This isn't about scale. I think that 7/gal is just stupid. It is about actually sacrificing and doing something instead of whining others should pay more.
Every time you fill your gas, please write a check for twice as much and make it payable to the U.S. Treasury. Until you are willing to put your money where your mouth is, shut up.
Now it's, "give the people who vote for me free stuff so I can stay in office so I can be wine and dined by lobbyists."
For the CDC to get it's shit in order.
The title says it's not because of increasing labor costs, but then points out that places like Walmart and banks are already using automation. Perhaps they found it cheaper than what ever they paid an employee at the time they automated?
It's just the cost of McD's to automate is higher than grocery stores and banks.
I'm going to auction off my stinky pantry on eBay.
No.
and, if you've seen any YouTube video of Common Core math, know it absolutely sucks. Recently, there was a study that showed that rote memorization of simple math starts the process of higher though processes. I think Slashdot had a post on it.
Common Core is such a big carp at such a basic level that anyone who was a part of promoting or creating it should never doing anything with education again.
True, but this is at least partially developed and Facebook isn't creating something completely new, although integrating the technology into FB might be the "developing". This might be more like the 10 store strip mall being turned into the Mall of America. FB is paying the full price for Mall of America just to get the revenue of a family run property.
I don't see how they can increase the revenue 100x or more (using the real estate metaphor) as I'm guessing the data mining from that would overlap their current business. My current ability is only getting 10-20x on CD, DVD, and toys; and that's why they're the media empire billionaires.
In residential rental real estate, the rule of thumb is monthly revenue of 1% of the property or annually, 1 eighth of the property's value. The biggest companies like Exxon, Walmart, and Apple have a revenue to value ratio close to 1:1. Their last year's revenue is one thousandths of the purchase price.
Hey, Facebook, give me a million bucks and I'll give you 1,000 each year. Heck, I'll double it, $2,000 next year.
Why not just buy the batteries and charger and skip the cost of the car?
Depending on source, Japan's electricity cost is 50-100% higher than the U.S. At $20k per car and the above $800/yr per car saved (In U.S.$400-530), what is the return on investment per year (this question doesn't include upkeep like maintenance cost of the car)?
How fast do you wear out the batteries due to the increase of charge/discharge cycle?
Comparing the savings of time shifting usage with approx $120,000 cost of the cars, what could the same company do to reduce consumption using $120,000 to reduce energy consumption (therefore reduce amount of the evil CO2 created)?
How many mile will you loose if if the cars are used for commuting?
Would have posted on the original site, but my login cookie gets blocked.
Regular DVD to 1080 is amazing different. When I first bought the Xbox HD-DVD add-on (Yeah, that was stupid), I played The Matrix DVD and HD-DVD side by side.
Holy shit, Laurence Fishborne's pock marks are scary in 1080.
No points. Participation awards for all!
Cell phones were cheaper with many millions of land lines not laid. The fiber or copper for the cell towers would have been used anyways as part of the land lines so were fixed cost anyways. Oh and other countries/charities also gave them money. Now we tell them to place millions more solar panels and windmills and hundreds of natural gas plants as low supply backups.
Yeah, you can jump to 100% clean energy too! Just pay triple on your electric bill. You even can jump to an electric car for only another 6k above the gas model. So, money on green power or money on a Obamacare plan cause Ocare law let the your insurer drop the plan you wanted to keep? They get the choice of clean energy or food.
And more in 10 other Asian countries. This is a twofer: Let's loose money by not making loans on a nearly fool proof business model and let those countries become ignore the U.S more for their new friends who will do what they want and we don't!
http://nextbigfuture.com/2013/10/will-china-build-hundreds-of-new-coal.html
The Bloomberg link is broken. Here's a another, with misleading headline:
http://about.bnef.com/press-releases/chinas-power-sector-heads-towards-a-cleaner-future/
http://slashdot.org/topic/cloud/oakland-crowdfunding-private-cops/
WTF!
This type of thing is why Tea Party.
Since it's based on the Kinnect software, will it recognize when it's being flipped off?
Duh,
But the phrase sounded so goo in my head.
The problem of more tech is that the new "jobs" are further and further from the source of value/product creation. Each of these new jobs give diminishing returns on useful output and therefore pay less. It's like a private sector "jobs" program, but one that requires more and more irrelivant $100k degrees.
I'm one of those right wing nuts that yell, "Get a job, slacker." but there's less to be had and we will need some kind of mandatory, permanent payments for those who do not work.
Launch issues are temporary. Their QA sucks.
"Let's not fix this pathing agent that ruins every service and traffic. But there is good news, I just saved a bunch of money on my car insurance switching to GEICO."
The only thing that worked was the "Quit" button.
We always think Doomsday is always around the corner: http://www.climatedepot.com/2013/05/10/1952-shock-news-polar-icecaps-melting-at-an-astonishing-rate-earth-to-drown-18-feb-1952-melting-polar-icecaps-raise-ocean-levels/
And we ran out of oil. The ozone's gone. We're in a nuclear winter. " ... In the 1970s hundreds of millions of people will starve to death ...". I guess Paul Ehrlich was right. The sky fell.
I'll keep my "end is upon us" sign in my closet for now.
You have to wonder if there are the same people who said the 50 workers that went back in would be dead by now.
The arms race happened. It wasn't deadly. There was no nuclear catastrophe.
Carbon's increasing. We're still here. The polar ice caps are still here.
Good comparison.
In industry, they're using it to transfer all of the energy they payed for through compressed air. It's the primary source. Excess waste energy cost the exact same if you use it or not, but you get more energy out of it if you can store it for later in stead of no energy at all.
With a giant "free" salt mine tank and with a small power requirement (10's MW) , the cost of storing the energy might be cheaper even with all of its inefficiencies than the cost of using batteries or buying it off the grid. The "wind mine" isn't wasting 85% of all your energy, but 85% of "free" excess energy.
My gut says that it would be cheaper to buy the power, though.
There's this thing called money?
There might even be some in your wallet, but ...since you had to ask, maybe not.