logicOnly | 5 years ago | on: We Hacked Apple for 3 Months
logicOnly's comments
logicOnly | 5 years ago | on: We Hacked Apple for 3 Months
I don't watch TV much, but they seemed to have pivoted to the word "privacy"
logicOnly | 5 years ago | on: We Hacked Apple for 3 Months
And I'm a P----Error"-Apple ad year 200x
And as you mentioned, like politics, you can deny it and fanatics will believe you..
logicOnly | 5 years ago | on: We Hacked Apple for 3 Months
"Privacy" claims are just as nonsensical as we've seen Apple bend to multiple governments (PRISM). You bet Apple will sell your privacy if the deal is good enough.
That being said, I don't think anything can be secure, we must treat everything as potentially compromised and act accordingly. I diversify my emails/bank/HDD/etc... So if one gets hacked, I didn't lose everything. Edit- Also those Superstars may be known, but you bet there are experts that would take the money rather than prestige.
logicOnly | 5 years ago | on: Roof blows off new Tesla Model Y
And yes Tesla is unreliable, there's no debate here. A new car company is going to be unreliable. And why are you using Absolute numbers? 1 roof, 7 million Ford cars. You made a statistical error here.
And what is this about combustion engines? It's 2020, everyone sells an EV. Only Tesla sells a low quality EV.
logicOnly | 5 years ago | on: Chrome is deploying HTTP/3 and IETF QUIC
Grandma might be able to edit HTML, but "what's sudo? What's ssh? This one website says I need to pay for certs?"
logicOnly | 5 years ago | on: Chrome is deploying HTTP/3 and IETF QUIC
What danger could possibly happen if I'm reading about a Physical Therapy clinic?
They don't take credit cards, there's no information for me to enter on the website.
But unless the Physical Therapist knows how to manage the server, they get this scary warning.
Maybe it isn't a big deal to US healthcare because they make lots of money. But I imagine there are others that don't have the technical abilities to upgrade to https. Could your grandma do it for her sewing store?
logicOnly | 5 years ago | on: Roof blows off new Tesla Model Y
This same experience with a Ford logo would end in a negative review.
logicOnly | 5 years ago | on: Roof blows off new Tesla Model Y
But I designed interior parts, so it's my own Engineering take. Tesla's were not competitive at all. The gaps between panels were so bad, you could stick your finger in it. That's not just an appearance issue, kids and adults will mess around with large gaps and put stuff inside.
And features in the interior were non existent. (Especially for a luxury car)
logicOnly | 5 years ago | on: Roof blows off new Tesla Model Y
Since Tesla has less than 1 million cars built IIRC, it's actually much worse of a problem. Other automakers have hundreds of millions of cars on the road with different designs, each with potential problems.
Yet something safety critical like a roof falling off happens rarely, but get recalled.
Has there been any Tesla recalls?
logicOnly | 5 years ago | on: Roof blows off new Tesla Model Y
It's a low cost design, not a great design.
logicOnly | 5 years ago | on: Roof blows off new Tesla Model Y
No other automaker gets this pass(except maybe Jeep vehicles).
Anyway, as bad as Tesla quality is, customers getting new cars from new companies should have little expectation of quality. (Although Tesla made it's first car in 2006, at when do they stop getting such sympathy?)
logicOnly | 5 years ago | on: Crouching T2, Hidden Danger
Maybe today things seem fine, but with declining sales, desperate companies are likely to do whatever it takes to make money. Doing something Anti-consumer is not new to Apple's core philosophy.
logicOnly | 5 years ago | on: Crouching T2, Hidden Danger
How difficult would it be to steal someone's phone, but illegal stuff on it, and call the police? Could you figure it out for 10k USD?
logicOnly | 5 years ago | on: Google and Oracle's decade-long copyright battle reaches Supreme Court
IP disproportionately helps organizations rather than individuals. And the major owners of those organizations are the 0.01% class
logicOnly | 5 years ago | on: Google and Oracle's decade-long copyright battle reaches Supreme Court
logicOnly | 5 years ago | on: Into the looking glass: Post-viral syndrome post COVID-19
The bigger takeaways were our options for how to handle the pandemic and expected outcomes.
logicOnly | 5 years ago | on: Ask HN: Essential skill needed to be a programmer?
You can either develop both options and pick the best, or you can use "best practices", which is non scientific. Authority and tradition make best practices.
Also "don't @ me" about basic logic like nested loops and bigO. That's not what I'm talking about here.
logicOnly | 5 years ago | on: Into the looking glass: Post-viral syndrome post COVID-19
From the US standpoint, the shutdown should have happened in January. After the first US case, there was no purpose in locking down the boarder. Politician fail.
Physicians stressed harsh lockdowns and played into the fear. This wasn't science or statistics, this was fear. Physician fail.
After hundreds of coronavirus cases in the US, governors created their own lockdowns, but had no control over traveling between state lines. This created no benefit but created poor economic conditions. Politician fail.
You know who has been correct but seemingly unheard during all of this? Scientists/epidemiologists.
They predicted the spread perfectly but Politicians, citizens, and Physicians did not listen.
logicOnly | 5 years ago | on: 'Long Covid': Why are some people not recovering?
"Plenty" is not statistics.
And "healthy" is difficult at best. Is an overweight person healthy? Is a normal weight person that doesn't exercise healthy?
And "healthcare system would rapidly collapse." Makes no sense. You mean our hospitals would be full for a few months. It's not like the healthcare industry would be destroyed.
Some companies are horrible to their customers, is there something wrong about posting literal facts and comparing to marketing lies?