So, an entire regional idustry goes out of business and has to fire tens of thousands of workers and that's not a collapse? What the fuck does an industy collapse look like to you?
Nashville, for one. Denver, for another. There are plenty more. Those aren't even the fastest growing cities, economically.
Honestly, these people probably deserve what they got in Vegas. They tried to play the system and become homeowners in Vegas during the housing boom. Now that reality has set in, they are imprisoned by their mortgages and their own bad decisions. Home "owership", if you will, is dumb and prevents you from making sound financial decisions.
There are no examples because kitchen workers are a dime a dozen so automation isn't worth it. There's way more value tied up in solving the driving problem.
I don't know of any kitchen that's changing its layout every day like roads do with construction. You can build sensors right into the environment. Nothing needs to be moving in the kitchen but the robot.
I don't think you have a good grasp on the difficulties encountered by automobiles.
Most of them. I don't know anyone who doesn't get most of their music from a streaming service anymore.
I still buy tracks and download them. But I don't listen to shitty throwaway fad music that is only popular for a couple weeks. I still revisit tracks from decades ago. So the value I get from a $0.80 track is pretty good.
Bitcoin energy consumption is designed to decrease over time, but I've already spent too much of my life explaining this to people, so all I will say is you have no sense of scale.
There's a distinction to be drawn between "crowdfunding" (seeking capital to develop a product) and "patronage" supporting the ongoing expenses of an artist. There are niches where crowdfunding can be effective (boardgames, for example), but anyone who crowdfunds an electronic device is a moron.
Maybe if you pay someone to do it for you. Most people move their own shit for a couple hundred dollars U-Haul rental and a couple hundred dollars in gas.
Crowdfunding is like an ICO. It's a way to avoid the critical eye of sane financial investors, and instead attempts to get funding from the least qualified people.
Imagine if Sennheiser started selling claims to future headphones they haven't yet developed. Consumers would rightly laugh at them. A company is expected to figure the financials to deliver a product. If they can't do that without crowdfunding, it's a strong sign the idea is shit, and they can't get traditional funding.
Yeah, people who think money is everything in politics are always the ones confused when people like Trump get elected over the much better funded Clinton campaign. An order of magnitude more money might flip an election, but otherwise it's more to do with regional economics and wedge issues, and traditional values like good looks and charisma.
If you're homeless and need a way to get between the overpass where you sleep, the minimum wage job across town, and soup kitchen, then scooters or something else might be pretty well needed.
Opera's mail search was superior to Google's in almost every way. Predictive typing, live results, quickly create virtual folders from results, better UI...
So, an entire regional idustry goes out of business and has to fire tens of thousands of workers and that's not a collapse? What the fuck does an industy collapse look like to you?
Nashville, for one. Denver, for another. There are plenty more. Those aren't even the fastest growing cities, economically.
Honestly, these people probably deserve what they got in Vegas. They tried to play the system and become homeowners in Vegas during the housing boom. Now that reality has set in, they are imprisoned by their mortgages and their own bad decisions. Home "owership", if you will, is dumb and prevents you from making sound financial decisions.
There are no examples because kitchen workers are a dime a dozen so automation isn't worth it. There's way more value tied up in solving the driving problem.
I don't know of any kitchen that's changing its layout every day like roads do with construction. You can build sensors right into the environment. Nothing needs to be moving in the kitchen but the robot.
I don't think you have a good grasp on the difficulties encountered by automobiles.
No one gives a shit about your worthless foreign money.
Most of them. I don't know anyone who doesn't get most of their music from a streaming service anymore.
I still buy tracks and download them. But I don't listen to shitty throwaway fad music that is only popular for a couple weeks. I still revisit tracks from decades ago. So the value I get from a $0.80 track is pretty good.
Americans haven't bought muscle cars since the 70s.
Bitcoin energy consumption is designed to decrease over time, but I've already spent too much of my life explaining this to people, so all I will say is you have no sense of scale.
There's a distinction to be drawn between "crowdfunding" (seeking capital to develop a product) and "patronage" supporting the ongoing expenses of an artist. There are niches where crowdfunding can be effective (boardgames, for example), but anyone who crowdfunds an electronic device is a moron.
Maybe if you pay someone to do it for you. Most people move their own shit for a couple hundred dollars U-Haul rental and a couple hundred dollars in gas.
A kitchen is a much more well-defined and static environment than an open road. Much easier to automate.
Smaller unions are less powerful unions. In order to keep protecting their laborers, unions need to stay in power.
American workers have a few more places than Las Vegas to look for work.
No, output keeps growing because the aquifers are being drained. When they are fully drained, there's going to be a hard agricultural collapse.
Apple a monopoly? They're like 13% of the market...
Sideload with XCode? So you have to buy a Macbook to load open source software onto the phone? Yeah, that's not a closed ecosystem at all...
Crowdfunding is like an ICO. It's a way to avoid the critical eye of sane financial investors, and instead attempts to get funding from the least qualified people.
Imagine if Sennheiser started selling claims to future headphones they haven't yet developed. Consumers would rightly laugh at them. A company is expected to figure the financials to deliver a product. If they can't do that without crowdfunding, it's a strong sign the idea is shit, and they can't get traditional funding.
People are dumb and deserve to be laughed at.
Yeah, people who think money is everything in politics are always the ones confused when people like Trump get elected over the much better funded Clinton campaign. An order of magnitude more money might flip an election, but otherwise it's more to do with regional economics and wedge issues, and traditional values like good looks and charisma.
I think it's fair to say at least one of those wars was started by Saudi-backed terrorists with material support from Pakistani intelligence services.
I've never seen an Android app require full permissions in my decade of using the platform.
If you're homeless and need a way to get between the overpass where you sleep, the minimum wage job across town, and soup kitchen, then scooters or something else might be pretty well needed.
Maybe during the Arpanet days, but since the web was introduced, ISP plans have generally hovered around the $10-40 range. Not all that expensive.
Encryption much?
Opera's mail search was superior to Google's in almost every way. Predictive typing, live results, quickly create virtual folders from results, better UI...
Is exporting encryption still regulated? I thought that went away sometime after triple DES.
It's a bit more like visiting the third world than it is camping.