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Comment Re:Honest answers from fans? (Score 1) 10

I've been an android user since the Galaxy S3 days, and I've been a pixel user for the past 6 years. Two things that are about to make me give up on android: shitty bluetooth compatibility (I've never been in a car that didn't have issues connecting to android phones - factory and aftermarket car stereos included) and messages. I don't think there's any hope that android will ever have messaging that is good enough to share media with my iphone-using friends (and probably 95% of my friends use iphones). Not to mention the way group messages are hit-or-miss - sometimes messages (usually with photos) get sent to only some members of the group. And of course, you can't correct typos, so you're using an asterisk like a caveman.

Other than that, I love the quality of the phones. I love the reasonable price point of pixel A phones. I love the fact that I can install my own software, some of which I have written (of course, it sounds like that might be going away soon).

I'm super close to switching. If iphones weren't so ridiculously expensive, I might think about it. But I'm a cheap bastard when it comes to tech. I buy cheap and run it into the ground.

Comment Re: Expect major IT incidents in their future then (Score 1) 66

I agree about AI generated code requiring competent review. I disagree that in the hands of a competent reviewer, AI generated code is slower. It's incredibly fast to build out a well-speced function.

And reviewing one function should be pretty easy for a skilled coder. Especially if you wrote the specs.

So I would never unleash an AI to build an entire application from top to bottom (although I've heard of some promising techniques that involve generating requirement documents, running them through multiple AIs, refining those, and then turning over the fully fleshed out specifications to an AI for generation; I'm still skeptical on this, and need to see it to believe it).

But if I can spec out one function at a time and have AI generate each one in seconds with a minute or two of review by me, I will do that over and over again all day long.

Comment Re: It's almost like... (Score 1) 75

Or their algorithm just sucks.

Discover Weekly was a good way to expand your palette, then about 12-18 months ago, it went of the rails for me, recommending old classic rock that I can't stand. I think recent changes may have improved it, so I'm giving it another chance.

I have found hundreds of individual songs via DW over the past 10 years. In many cases I explored the bands' catalogs and found new favorite artists

Comment Re: So what? (Score 1) 289

I consider myself a liberal, and I think you have a lot of good points. Dems should definitely lean into the working class, and the trans situation is very hard for me to wrap my brain around. While I don't think that anybody should be wasting their time worrying about what is going on in other people's sex lives (something that Reps are wont to do), I can't help but feel that nefarious elements online have convinced impressionable young people that their natural confusion about their emerging sexuality means they are trapped in the body of the wrong gender.

Where you lost me is the bit about young men being told they are the enemy and that is why they are in their mom's basement. They're in their basement because they are stunted socially, thinking they are going to be able to do all their communication electronically and somehow still get laid (or maybe more politely, find a partner). And worse are the ones that speak and act like this sexual/romantic action they aren't getting is somehow something they are entitled to. It's pathetic and disgusting.

No one is calling them the enemy. Just insisting that they don't rape women or use their positions of workplace authority to coerce or intimidate women.

Why is it so much to ask that men get consent before they take advantage of the gender that you yourself said is not strong enough to defend themselves against males (on average).

Also, could we stop with the white male victimhood? If the fact that companies are taking diversity into account is really is hampering your career, you probably aren't the rock star you think you are.

Comment Re:This is negligence (Score 1) 259

I don't remember drives being that big in 1999; I thought they were more like 10GB at the time, but I could be wrong. And certainly high-end drives were probably much larger than the ones I was looking at as a poor new college grad.

But what's interesting is this - in 10 years, typical hard drive storage went up 1000-fold.

If that trend had continued, we would have 40+ PETABYTE drives today. The jump from the 80s to the 90s was phenomenal.

Comment Re:thanks to M$ and crApple (Score 1) 160

This is entirely true. And most of the time, you've got the menu bar up, so that camera notch is sitting over top of the center of your menu bar, which is almost always empty anyway. I guess it would be an issue if you wanted to use every pixel of the screen for full screen video. I have only seen photos of the new design, so I don't know how it handles full-screen applications, but I would bet that it blacks out the menu bar area, so the notch doesn't affect the video frame area.

Comment Re:Yeah, so? (Score 1) 62

This is probably beyond "casual thief", but I think it's interesting. My wife was traveling in Spain once, and a guy broke into her room, removed the safe from the wall, wrapped it up in gift wrap and walked out of the hotel carrying what looked like a present (there were scraps of gift wrap on the floor when she returned to find the gaping hole in the wall).

She had made the mistake of traveling with a couple of sentimentally important rings that she had kept in the safe. Not sure if a staffer might have seen the inside of the safe with the rings. The rings weren't worth a lot, but might have looked valuable. But to her, the loss of her grandmother's ring was very painful. She never travels with nice jewelry anymore.

Comment Re:Years of lost styrofoam coolers (Score 1) 54

My experience has been the opposite. Camping at Jordan Lake in North Carolina, I was apalled at the amount of styrofoam on the banks of the lake. It was all tiny chopped-up pieces - four of us spent about an hour trying to clean up what we could, but we didn't even make a noticeable dent in the 400 square feet of bank we tried to clean. Styrofoam is a scourge.

Comment Re:Ok so this sounds like the best place on earth. (Score 1) 347

I wish I lived in your world. In mine, there's a leaf blower on my block daily, 12 months a year. I guess nobody owns brooms.

And inevitably, on a nice spring evening, somebody will fire one up at 7pm when we're trying to eat dinner on the porch.

Those things are scourges. I own an electric, but I prefer raking. I only use my blower to clean off a gravel driveway, and I only do that once at the end of leaf season (which for us ends in late December, early January). I'm usually all for civil liberties, but I'm generally much more supportive of freedoms that don't step on other people's liberties. Noise pollution is real. Some of it is necessary (the sound of traffic, construction, and other productive activities). But there are real alternatives to blowers, especially gasoline blowers, so they're not strictly necessary. And they're certainly not necessary for the ticky-tack shit people use them for.

Comment Re:There are not enough social workers (Score 1) 400

The argument that religion is the only thing preventing us from immorality is completely flawed. The behavior you're describing has nothing to do with atheism or belief in a god. Humans of all stripes act that way. Fuck you and your semi-holier-than-thou-religiosity.

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