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The funny thing is pretty much all Americans would agree with that statement.
The problem is that they simply can't get it through their heads that these things rely on cheap labor to be economically sustainable endeavors. Does a simple small farm include an office and a bookkeeper so the farmers can have a 401k and health coverage? Does the chemical plant give their employees enough paid vacation to satisfy the voters that don't work there?
Oh, you don't need all these benefits? You're just looking to gain skills in exchange for wage? You aren't welcome in the US workforce, sorry.
They've made it quite clear through their business strategies that they understand what it means for a business to persist for 100 years. There aren't any other tech companies that seem up to that challenge, if you ask me.
I think it's not that they have to create rival AI products, it's that they have to keep up with a market that's giving less of a shit about luxury hardware as time goes on. That demand is being replaced by demand for performance and interoperability, and other companies are far more accustomed to serving those.
I agree that parents have separated public schools into rich ones and poor ones; that's part of the problem I'm trying to describe. Wealthy parents want their kids around other wealthy families, not because it's a good idea, but because they don't understand social development.
But you're overgeneralizing. There are plenty of places in America where even the rich schools have some poor families.
If you put your kid in public school, it's going to interact with poor families. If you homeschool it, it's not. I'm sorry but that's just really obvious to me, given my experience. I guess that's where we'll agree to disagree.
My main point is wealthy parents don't understand the value of their children interacting with poor people.
Sure, but parents don't select a random subset of peers like school does. Do you think the presumably wealthy parents of homeschooled children will make sure their kids are interacting with poor families? Because those aren't going to be at the private extracurricular clubs.
"My child won't experience running around at recess with its peers, because I'm too afraid of it becoming indoctrinated inside the classroom if I'm not there."
"My child will get bullied if I'm not there."
I think it comes from narcissistic parenting, specifically the inability to value the child's independence.
I can already do this with antigravity. Just give it a workspace and tell it what to do; it will make its own python scripts. I've never tried asking it to analyze an image, though.
Yes, this makes me think of ERP software. Each of the things it does is trivial, and most job shops think they can do those things themselves; the real product you're paying for is a team of people who have communicated with shops and have made the thing cohesive.
It's not the property that gets taxed; it's the gain in value that does
If they print 10% of the dollars while your asset goes up 10%, it gained no value, and you are taxed.
When I first used Bitcoin, I remember thinking it felt Japanese. Maybe from the satoshi name though.
I "need" windows at work to run mastercam. That is the last bastion of windows for me. I have Linux on my computers at home and have been able to play any game I want, all my mouse keyboard and speakers I just plugged in and they work, and everything just goes faster like start up, opening apps etc.
I think if we're going to execute civilians, we should do it in front of children, so that they understand the type of government they are living under. Every execution could also be a field trip for the nearby schools. They would learn a lot on those days.