Jtype | 3 years ago | on: FBI Raids Star ABC News Producer’s Home
Jtype's comments
Jtype | 3 years ago
Jtype | 3 years ago | on: Researchers’ tests of lab-made version of Covid virus draw scrutiny
Jtype | 3 years ago | on: We should link student loan forgiveness to national service
Jtype | 3 years ago | on: The modern OS desktop is a crime against humanity
Most people may move to iOS and Android, but that's a moot point since those aren't the people or the OSes that the article is about.
Jtype | 3 years ago | on: The modern OS desktop is a crime against humanity
The article is focused on how the limitations and changes made for consumption computing has affected the OS design and negatively impacted the users who actually need a desktop or laptop, either to produce or as hobby machines. If the OS is constantly changing and degrading, it may not matter that much to those who only really need a smartphone or tablet, but it has a huge impact on the rest.
Desktop and laptop sales have been dropping for years as more consumers realize that their needs can be met by a mobile device, tablet, or chromebook. Sure the changes probably don't mean much to that market, but that market is fading. Making unnecessary changes which interfere with the UI impact the hardcore users, who will be the base of desktop/laptop users in the near future.
Your argument is essentially that since the changes have little impact to those who don't care, that it shouldn't matter to the rest of us. That's pretty dismissive of a large group of users, and a rather useless observation.
Jtype | 3 years ago | on: California votes to ban new gas car sales by 2035
EV cars use more rare elements that require more mining is true. So one would assume that the initial CO2 generated in the productions to be higher.
The grid isn't 100% renewable so there is plenty of co2 produced in running an EV.
EV batteries wear out around 100000 miles, requiring a costly(both $$ and CO2 production) replacement. Meanwhile ICE cars today can regularly approach 200000 miles before replacement.
With those three things considered, I highly doubt that CO2 production is impacted all that strongly by switching to an EV.
Jtype | 3 years ago | on: We're improving search results when you use quotes
Jtype | 3 years ago | on: The case for expanding rather than eliminating gifted education programs (2021)
Jtype | 3 years ago | on: The case for expanding rather than eliminating gifted education programs (2021)
You assert that the programs exist to segregate the school, with no evidence.
You assert that more resources are spent on gifted programs without any evidence.
You assert that gifted program both do and do not provide better outcomes. Evidence is not needed here since these statements oppose each other.
The only "evidence" you present is your opinion, anecdotal evidence of what you believe you saw in attending a NYC school.
Jtype | 3 years ago | on: Coffee drinking linked to lower mortality risk, new study finds
Jtype | 3 years ago
Jtype | 3 years ago | on: How the U.S. got into an infant formula mess
Jtype | 3 years ago | on: How the U.S. got into an infant formula mess
Jtype | 3 years ago | on: Why Google is so unbearable, and how to fix it
Jtype | 3 years ago
>if removing central planing makes communism not communism anymore, then adding those "minor tweaks" make capitalism not capitalism anymore.
The minor tweaks to make capitalism work still allow private ownership, free exchange of goods, and a system based on the movement of capital.
The changes to make communism work, make it not communism by definition. If you don't have central planning then how are goods and services created and allocated? By a free market? That's capitalism!
Jtype | 3 years ago
Jtype | 3 years ago
I assume that you're conflating equal opportunity( via rights and treatment under the law) with equal starting points, but they are far from the same things. Equal starting points are going to be impossible, literally a pipe dream without creating some form of dystopian nightmare that prevents people from having children, and instead farms genetically equal embryos who are then raised by the state. Which will also necessitate monoculture and risk humanity due to the lack in individual variation.
Jtype | 3 years ago
Jtype | 3 years ago