I reinstall just-infrequently-enough that I don't maintain an image w/ all the updates slipstreamed in, so it invariably takes 20mins for the initial install, and then hours and hours for all the updates to get it current.
It'd be really nice if MS would be kind enough to provide up-to-date.ISO builds like they've been doing w/ the Win10 insider program
The biggest hurdle holding back nuclear power is the enormous upfront costs required to actually bring a plant online. They require a staggering amount of concrete and other materials to construct and it's extremely difficult to get all the cash together to do it. These are very high-risk investments with very long payback periods and a relatively small shift in commodity prices between the drawing board stage and actual construction can scuttle the whole deal.
What if I want to consume it despite there not being a consensus that it is safe to consume
Technically, you could make your own and keep consuming it to your heart's content, you're just not allowed to sell it to others.
Although there's the small issue that hydrogenating oil is an industrial process using pressure, high temperatures, and hydrogen gas. It's not out of reach to an adventurous home cook, but it sounds like a lot of work and a non-zero chance of accidental self-immolation for original recipe Crisco.
Take away the student loan subsidies & redirect that money to merit-based scholarships. If we stop papering over the real price a university charges with "anybody can qualify" student loans, the universities will be forced to compete on costs ultimately lowering prices and reducing the scholarship dollars needed.
In a vacuum, yes, but Mars's atmosphere is too thick to ignore, but too thin to be really useful for landing large objects with chutes and aerobreaking. The smaller rovers got away with chutes and impacting with big bouncy airbags, but Curiosity would've hit too hard to survive, which is why it went with the propulsive "sky crane" scheme.
Anything larger, and there's little choice but using rockets to touch down in one piece. Lighting an engine in an atmosphere while the craft is supersonic introduces all sorts of tricky engineering challenges. It's not unsolveable (SpaceX thinks they can do it), but it's not easy.
If there's consumer cash sitting on the sidelines, waiting to be invested, where is it hiding? I'm not sure it's really there, having evaporated on gone to debt payments. There was a massive wealth transfer from the "consumer" class to the "investor" class during the last crash and the upcoming consumer generation has record levels of student debt. Wage growth has also been flat to negative.
I can imagine a situation where I call 911 with my phone (with current paid-for service) and help can't get to me because they're too busy checking out 100 prank phone calls from unregistered phones
This isn't about cost-effectiveness, it's about keeping our finite number emergency responders going after real emergencies.
Just because you paid for the class doesn't mean that anybody owes you a passing grade.
No, but it should at least be possible to earn a passing grade and learn something in the class, if a student is willing to work for it. Failing the entire class robs them of that chance, regardless of how they actually behaved.
Some kind of client-server architecture has pretty much always been around, and it always will (barring societal collapse). It's just been a matter of how widespread it was.
Today's computing model is continuing to shift towards mobile devices with finite power supplies, thermal envelopes and limited/fragile storage. The batteries, storage density and mobile processors will continue to improve,but it's always going to be attractive to offload storage & compute to a datacenter with ample power, cooling & storage headroom. Datacenters are also considerably more difficult to drop in the toilet or misplace.
And I'm pretty far left, and have heard the same idea from other "lefties." Go ahead and cut the corporate tax to zero. The largest and most powerful corporations will bribe governments and set up special loopholes that work for them (but not smaller competitors) anyway. Level the playing field, as you say.
...and do away with special tax treatment of dividends and capital gains. Tax the owners of the corporations rather than the corporations themselves. This has a side benefit of no longer taxing investment income at a lower rate than actual earned income from working.
I think we'll see renewed calls for a remote override capability built into airliners, so the ground can take over the plane when pilots become non-responsive or the plane begins to rapidly descend.
A common practice is for a flight attendant to trade places when a pilot needs to leave the cockpit, ensuring at least 2 people in the cockpit at all times.
Granted, a co-pilot determined to crash the plane and kill everyone aboard is probably perfectly willing to kill or incapacitate a flight attendant watching them, but there's at least some chance of the flight attendant winning the fight or managing to unlock the door and better odds of the co-pilot deciding not trying to crash the plane in the first place.
A consumption tax is inherently regressive. Those with smaller incomes must use a larger proportion of it on consumption. The wealthy will spend a comparatively tiny fraction of their income on tax and continue to amass vast piles of money.
I'd prefer to see an approach where the corporate income tax is abolished and replaced by higher capital-gains and dividend taxes on the owners
Oh, I don't doubt we can still read them, I'm only saying it's a fairly tedious effort and some care needs to be taken in storing the cards so they last long enough. With punch cards, a camera or a scanner can be a makeshift "punch card reader."
How will someone 50-100 years in the future read one of today's optical discs without a working compatible drive? Microscopes and a lot of time?
50 years ago digital information was typically stored on punch cards and paper tape. Those might still be readable with great care and tedious effort but would almost certainly be in no condition to be fed into vintage equipment. Someone would probably need to transcribe them optically and run them into some sort of interpreter.
100 years ago there were no computers as we know them today.
Original film from those eras still exists and is readable. While somebody might be able to dig up an ancient optical drive, USB interface and common codec specs in 50-100 years, the film is still film and can be read with good eyes or a magnifying glass. Pressed CDs & DVDs might last that long and probably stand the best chance of working equipment still existing that far into the future, but I wouldn't count on hard drives, flash memory or burnable CDs & DVDs lasting.
You're assuming companies must operate at a fixed profit level and have price setting powers--most do not.
Consider the opposite scenario--if we suddenly lowered corporate taxes to zero. Would corporations pass these savings along to consumers by lowering prices and increasing wages? Perhaps to some degree, but in a non-monopolistic market, prices are dictated more by supply, demand and competitive pressures. Companies may use the extra money to pay down long term debt, invest in property, plant & equipment or pay larger dividends. The interest rate and credit environment will have a large effect on what they decide to do.
The larger driver of wages is competition in the labor market. Companies will pay as little in wages as they are legally able to while still finding suitably skilled employees. Simply having more cash on hand is not an incentive for a company to raise its wages across the board.
Raising taxes on a profitable competitive corporation doesn't directly affect wages, it reduces their profits.
Stephen Baxter's (and Arthur C. Clarke, but he barely wrote a word of it) "The Light of Other Days" explores something along those lines. It's a good read.
You can pasteurize eggs and meat at home using any of the precision temperature cookers on the market for Sous Vide cooking. (Immersion circulators, water ovens, crockpot + PID, etc.)
New channels will probably have to be free initially, or I imagine we won't see completely granular ala carte pricing, just smaller and more specific bundles.
I don't understand why "patches" are hundreds of megabytes and often multiple gigabytes to download. Isn't the vast majority of a modern game's data the assets? (Textures, images, sound, video,etc.). Actual code should be a tiny fraction... How do mere bug fixes weigh so much?
I reinstall just-infrequently-enough that I don't maintain an image w/ all the updates slipstreamed in, so it invariably takes 20mins for the initial install, and then hours and hours for all the updates to get it current.
It'd be really nice if MS would be kind enough to provide up-to-date .ISO builds like they've been doing w/ the Win10 insider program
More importantly, they think it' s"their" government and they forget who it is they're supposed to be working for.
The biggest hurdle holding back nuclear power is the enormous upfront costs required to actually bring a plant online. They require a staggering amount of concrete and other materials to construct and it's extremely difficult to get all the cash together to do it. These are very high-risk investments with very long payback periods and a relatively small shift in commodity prices between the drawing board stage and actual construction can scuttle the whole deal.
Technically, you could make your own and keep consuming it to your heart's content, you're just not allowed to sell it to others.
Although there's the small issue that hydrogenating oil is an industrial process using pressure, high temperatures, and hydrogen gas. It's not out of reach to an adventurous home cook, but it sounds like a lot of work and a non-zero chance of accidental self-immolation for original recipe Crisco.
I'd just use lard.
Take away the student loan subsidies & redirect that money to merit-based scholarships. If we stop papering over the real price a university charges with "anybody can qualify" student loans, the universities will be forced to compete on costs ultimately lowering prices and reducing the scholarship dollars needed.
In a vacuum, yes, but Mars's atmosphere is too thick to ignore, but too thin to be really useful for landing large objects with chutes and aerobreaking. The smaller rovers got away with chutes and impacting with big bouncy airbags, but Curiosity would've hit too hard to survive, which is why it went with the propulsive "sky crane" scheme.
Anything larger, and there's little choice but using rockets to touch down in one piece. Lighting an engine in an atmosphere while the craft is supersonic introduces all sorts of tricky engineering challenges. It's not unsolveable (SpaceX thinks they can do it), but it's not easy.
If there's consumer cash sitting on the sidelines, waiting to be invested, where is it hiding? I'm not sure it's really there, having evaporated on gone to debt payments. There was a massive wealth transfer from the "consumer" class to the "investor" class during the last crash and the upcoming consumer generation has record levels of student debt. Wage growth has also been flat to negative.
I can imagine a situation where I call 911 with my phone (with current paid-for service) and help can't get to me because they're too busy checking out 100 prank phone calls from unregistered phones
This isn't about cost-effectiveness, it's about keeping our finite number emergency responders going after real emergencies.
No, but it should at least be possible to earn a passing grade and learn something in the class, if a student is willing to work for it. Failing the entire class robs them of that chance, regardless of how they actually behaved.
Some kind of client-server architecture has pretty much always been around, and it always will (barring societal collapse). It's just been a matter of how widespread it was.
Today's computing model is continuing to shift towards mobile devices with finite power supplies, thermal envelopes and limited/fragile storage. The batteries, storage density and mobile processors will continue to improve,but it's always going to be attractive to offload storage & compute to a datacenter with ample power, cooling & storage headroom. Datacenters are also considerably more difficult to drop in the toilet or misplace.
And I'm pretty far left, and have heard the same idea from other "lefties." Go ahead and cut the corporate tax to zero. The largest and most powerful corporations will bribe governments and set up special loopholes that work for them (but not smaller competitors) anyway. Level the playing field, as you say.
...and do away with special tax treatment of dividends and capital gains. Tax the owners of the corporations rather than the corporations themselves. This has a side benefit of no longer taxing investment income at a lower rate than actual earned income from working.
Or he chose the remote location to ensure anyone who survived the crash would be dead before help could arrive.
I think we'll see renewed calls for a remote override capability built into airliners, so the ground can take over the plane when pilots become non-responsive or the plane begins to rapidly descend.
A common practice is for a flight attendant to trade places when a pilot needs to leave the cockpit, ensuring at least 2 people in the cockpit at all times.
Granted, a co-pilot determined to crash the plane and kill everyone aboard is probably perfectly willing to kill or incapacitate a flight attendant watching them, but there's at least some chance of the flight attendant winning the fight or managing to unlock the door and better odds of the co-pilot deciding not trying to crash the plane in the first place.
A consumption tax is inherently regressive. Those with smaller incomes must use a larger proportion of it on consumption. The wealthy will spend a comparatively tiny fraction of their income on tax and continue to amass vast piles of money.
I'd prefer to see an approach where the corporate income tax is abolished and replaced by higher capital-gains and dividend taxes on the owners
Oh, I don't doubt we can still read them, I'm only saying it's a fairly tedious effort and some care needs to be taken in storing the cards so they last long enough. With punch cards, a camera or a scanner can be a makeshift "punch card reader."
How will someone 50-100 years in the future read one of today's optical discs without a working compatible drive? Microscopes and a lot of time?
50 years ago digital information was typically stored on punch cards and paper tape. Those might still be readable with great care and tedious effort but would almost certainly be in no condition to be fed into vintage equipment. Someone would probably need to transcribe them optically and run them into some sort of interpreter.
100 years ago there were no computers as we know them today.
Original film from those eras still exists and is readable. While somebody might be able to dig up an ancient optical drive, USB interface and common codec specs in 50-100 years, the film is still film and can be read with good eyes or a magnifying glass. Pressed CDs & DVDs might last that long and probably stand the best chance of working equipment still existing that far into the future, but I wouldn't count on hard drives, flash memory or burnable CDs & DVDs lasting.
Insurance. Sell the phone, then report it stolen & claim the insurance.
You're assuming companies must operate at a fixed profit level and have price setting powers--most do not.
Consider the opposite scenario--if we suddenly lowered corporate taxes to zero. Would corporations pass these savings along to consumers by lowering prices and increasing wages? Perhaps to some degree, but in a non-monopolistic market, prices are dictated more by supply, demand and competitive pressures. Companies may use the extra money to pay down long term debt, invest in property, plant & equipment or pay larger dividends. The interest rate and credit environment will have a large effect on what they decide to do.
The larger driver of wages is competition in the labor market. Companies will pay as little in wages as they are legally able to while still finding suitably skilled employees. Simply having more cash on hand is not an incentive for a company to raise its wages across the board.
Raising taxes on a profitable competitive corporation doesn't directly affect wages, it reduces their profits.
Stephen Baxter's (and Arthur C. Clarke, but he barely wrote a word of it) "The Light of Other Days" explores something along those lines. It's a good read.
You can pasteurize eggs and meat at home using any of the precision temperature cookers on the market for Sous Vide cooking. (Immersion circulators, water ovens, crockpot + PID, etc.)
New channels will probably have to be free initially, or I imagine we won't see completely granular ala carte pricing, just smaller and more specific bundles.
"No true Scotsman..."
Or they could've just given about $120 to every man woman and child in the state of Mississippi.
I don't understand why "patches" are hundreds of megabytes and often multiple gigabytes to download. Isn't the vast majority of a modern game's data the assets? (Textures, images, sound, video,etc.). Actual code should be a tiny fraction... How do mere bug fixes weigh so much?