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Comment Re:The Great Oops will eventually happen (Score 1) 69

I mean, this should be basic recovery scenario one in any continutity and disaster recovery plan.

And it doesn't have to be AWS that has the oops. It could be an undetected corruption that borks the database during the next major engine/schema upgrade. A disgruntled employee wipes the encryption keys. A ransomware gang infiltrates your accounts, exfiltrates your customer data, and then locks you out.

Having AWS be the god-tier admin layer just creates one additional source of heartache if this happens on a global scale... outside of your immediate control.

Comment Re:Kin Birman is an idiot. (Score 1) 69

Were your outages as an end-user or as a direct customer of AWS?

US-East-1 is normally the default region (and also historically the cheapest region) of all the alternatives.

https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Ftechnical.ly%2Fentrepren...

As a result, even if as a consumer you think you'd be better served by a more local region, whatever service you're using probably has a number of critical components predominantly or wholly served out of US-East-1, usually for cost reasons.

Comment Nvidia blog post (2022) (Score 1) 47

There was a comment earlier wondering if the original article was real or made up. Here's a reference to the deployment of the remotely supervised stocking robots in a 2022 Nvidia blog post.

https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fblogs.nvidia.com%2Fblog%2F...

"Tokyo-based startup Telexistence this week announced it will deploy NVIDIA AI-powered robots to restock shelves at hundreds of FamilyMart convenience stores in Japan.

There are 56,000 convenience stores in Japan â" the third-highest density worldwide. Around 16,000 of them are run by FamilyMart. Telexistence aims to save time for these stores by offloading repetitive tasks like refilling shelves of beverages to a robot, allowing retail staff to tackle more complex tasks like interacting with customers..."

"...In the rare cases that the robot misjudges the placement of the beverage or a drink topples over, thereâ(TM)s no need for the retail staff to drop their task to get the robot back up and running. Instead, Telexistence has remote operators on standby, who can quickly address the situation by taking manual control through a VR system that uses NVIDIA GPUs for video streaming."

Comment Re:Quoting Robert Crumb's Brother Charles (Score 1) 47

Maybe the perception of rampant crime is due to reported stories like this one (from Nov 15, 2023)?

https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcbs12.com%2Fnews%2Fnation-...

"They got an arrest warrant for Green that contained even more charges than Dâ(TM)Antuono faces: 30 counts of robbery, burglary, firearms violations, and more."

Or this one from Sept 21, 2024:

https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fktla.com%2Fnews%2Flocal-ne...

"Just hours after about 50 juveniles ransacked a 7-Eleven store in Pico-Robertson, another 7-Eleven was robbed at gunpoint in a different L.A. neighborhood.

According to the Los Angeles Police Department, a call regarding a robbery at the convenience store, located on Oxnard Street in Valley Glen, came in at 2:15 a.m. Saturday. "

I don't know about you, but stuff like this would make me think twice about working the register at a convenience store...

Comment Unannounced availability testing (Score 1) 69

Great real world test of services failing. I think this has less to do with AWS screwing up, and more with people putting all their eggs in US-East-1...

This was a temporary, resolvable issue. What happens if there is an irreversible issue that takes out a chunk of the servers sitting in US-East-1?

If you had warm standby systems synchronized and ready to go in a different region, this shouldn't have had much impact (other than maybe having to scale to handle a transfer of load from clients normally localized to US-East-1)... the fact that it did, is a giant red flag. If I was an insurer underwriting cyber loss policies, I'd be combing over the list of companies that had outages very carefully to see if any of them were my customers...

Comment Re:The internet is now all advertising (Score 1) 75

By this definition at least half of America (if not the world) is insane.

https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fold.reddit.com%2Fr%2Fmarke...

Also keep in mind that a lot of ads are now being served through sources other than web browsers, even if the backend is sending and receiving data over https. You'd have to implement DNS based filtering of ad traffic, if not outright MITM deep packet inspection to block traffic served via apps.

With that said, having recently fired up a browser that had not yet been configured with adblocking when provisioning a new machine... I don't know how people without adblocking can handle the ads.

Comment Profit Motive = Endless Low Effort (Score 1) 75

People cloning posts, videos, and sites, and claiming it as their own work in order to frontrun/hijack social recognition and monetization.

SEO optimization which started out as hiring english majors to ghostwrite "articles" on topics in order to boost your business site (plumbing, roofing, auto repair) in the rankings, which now replaces the first two pages of search results on anything DIY.

Big corporations monetizing and then later discarding communities, and all of the information and relationships in them, when the new model of walled garden replaced the open internet. What happened to Yahoo Groups: https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fen.wikipedia.org%2Fwiki%2F...

Also, remember all the free work people did for the CD Database before it was hijacked and turned into a closed commercial project? https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.eff.org%2Fdeeplinks%2F...

Yes, the internet was much better 20 years ago when you shared information online because it was a hobby you wanted to share with people. Not something you did in order to further a career as an "influencer". People largely shared stuff without fear of getting ripped off, because why would someone do extra work of copying your stuff without a benefit? People volunteered their time and effort because everybody was able to benefit.

Now a lot of that stuff happens in much smaller niche communities, or gated behind walled gardens, and the wider internet - the internet that we're able to access using search engines? A lot of it is just noise, and the remaining bits that aren't are really hard to find.

Comment Where'd they get the smartphones? (Score 1) 36

Aren't the smartphones the conduit to these addictive, mind-altering services? You could easily sue Apple and Google for developing the operating systems and UIs/app stores that enable predatory applications and ecosystems to thrive.

However, to my knowledge, with the exception of people on public assistance... you don't just get given a smartphone. Someone with disposable income has to buy it... then give it to the vulnerable youth in question.

This sounds very much like more posturing by politicians and lawyers if not an outright cash grab than an honest move to protect developing brains from manipulation...

Comment Re:Cooling (Score 5, Interesting) 64

Yes and yes.

https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fhackaday.com%2F2025%2F06%2F1...

"This is where skepticism creeps in. After all, cooling is the greatest challenge with high performance computing hardware here on earth, and heat rejection is the great constraint of space operations. The âoeicy blackness of spaceâ you see in popular culture is as realistic as warp drive; space is a thermos, and shedding heat is no trivial issue. It is also, from an engineering perspective, not a complex issue. Weâ(TM)ve been cooling spacecraft and satellites using radiators to shed heat via infrared emission for decades now. Itâ(TM)s pretty easy to calculate that if you have X watts of heat to reject at Y degrees, you will need a radiator of area Z. The Stephan-Boltzmann Law isnâ(TM)t exactly rocket science."

Devil will be in the details for how much cooling capacity is needed to reject the heat generated by the GPUs, how long the satellites are designed to last, stationkeeping, etc.

The current trend is toward smaller, disposable satellites, so I don't know if what Bezos is envisioning is a massive distributed cluster of smaller satellites, or a return to larger satellites that are docked to a compute pod payload...

I mean, this could be one possible proposal for keeping the ISS - jettison most everything but the solar panels and radiators, and add station keeping and a compute payload module. Keep the cupola, canada arm, docking capability for tourist and maintenance visits.

Comment Re:Less is more (Score 1) 125

The way I read it, the 100k fee is an "investment" in bringing someone over.

You pay it when you get someone in, and it gets recovered over the 3 years that the H-1B is active. Don't know if you have to then fork over another 100k, or if the +3 rollover is covered under the original 100k. After 6 years, presumably the applicant is well on their way to applying for permanent residency, or they've had enough of living in the US and want to go home.

If amortized over 3 years, that's 34k/yr, if over 6 years, that's 17k/yr. Not peanuts, but not an obscene amount of money either.

This would basically be a tariff on foreign workers, I guess? And to your point, yes, it should be indexed to something that doesn't require endless political wrangling to keep at a reasonable market value. At least tie it to inflation, or maybe to a number reflective of the number of US workers attempting to find jobs in the given field...

https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.theregister.com%2F20...

"The H-1B program was created in 1990, and presently allocates 85,000 spots annually for temporary non-immigrant workers to come to the US â" ostensibly to fill gaps in the American labor force. Counting other exemptions like those afforded academic institutions, the program awards about 130,000 visas per year to foreign workers, and renews about 300,000 previously awarded visas â" which typically last for three years and can be extended for another three.

The process works as follows: Eligible H-1B applicants, or companies representing them, register to enter the H-1B cap lottery. Some 20,000 advanced degree petitions and 65,000 general petitions get selected. For selected registrants, employers can submit H-1B petitions on behalf of prospective employees. USCIS then processes the selected petitions and those approved can then come and work in the US.

Previously, employers submitted completed H-1B petitions in March and USCIS conducted its H1-B cap lottery at the end of that month to determine which petitions would be processed for the 85,000 slots."

Comment Re:Documentation is a tech skill (Score 4, Informative) 82

While I understand that sometimes it's a communication skill, or a habit thing, I wonder if sometimes the lack of an explanation is itself a red flag that whoever opened the PR or made the commit lacks understanding of what they were supposed to do, and what they actually did...

On the other hand, ticking off a checkbox item so that the linter passes by putting in useless information is the same as a garbage test written to make sure there's sufficient code coverage to make a linter pass. A waste of time and further muddying the waters by forcing someone to read through both the code, the documentation, and the test, to determine that there's no additional value to the documentation or the test over the code.

I guess this would be the point in time to discuss how aggressive to be in terms of adopting forced syntax reformatting, pre-commit and commit linters, and tests? And god forbid, checklists for each commit?

Comment Re:Best argument against remote (Score 3, Informative) 34

Pretty sure there are US collaborators that are helping to facilitate these types of setups in order to get their candidates to pass.

Otherwise, there would be a lot of demonstrably lax HR departments that are letting these phony employees in.

https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fedition.cnn.com%2Fintera...

"One American woman, Christina Marie Chapman, was last month sentenced to eight-and-a-half years in prison for helping these operatives land jobs at more than 300 companies, generating over $17 million for Kim’s heavily sanctioned regime.

A prolific TikToker, Chapman charted her remarkable rise in public videos from poverty to international travel, courtesy of a new job in “a computer business,” that US investigators used to build their case.

Chapman is not the only US resident to have participated in the scheme.

Recently unsealed federal indictments show other US-based facilitators played a crucial role in the operation – laundering paychecks, stealing identities and running “laptop farms” that allowed North Korean workers to appear as if they were physically present inside the country. "

Comment Traffic Signals (Score 1) 74

Can it manage reduce gridlock and improve traffic flow by improving signal coordination during rush hour?

https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fladot.lacity.gov%2Fproje...

City of LA is already equipped with sensors and remote signal synchronization. Next logical step would be to couple it with slightly better adaptive prediction to squeeze a few more percentage points out of the existing traffic patterns...

Comment Re:Has anybody else? (Score 1) 75

I've seen what is clearly automated scraping of other channel content being used to generate "highlight reels" with AI created thumbnails. Basically they're hijacking content with views, repackaging it in order to present it as new, and then spamming YouTube with variations on it to see what sticks. The algorithms will help trend anything that gets traction - if you scrape enough interesting content and then throw it at the wall, you can get some instances to trend.

The one instance I can say was probably AI generated video was one of those fake livestreams that pop up claiming to be associated with Elon Musk and SpaceX, that push cryptocoins. This is a particularly good area to exploit because the official stream is only on X, so there are no official streams on YouTube.

https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.popsci.com%2Ftechnol...

https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fmashable.com%2Farticle%2Ff...

Mind you, this was old-school fake-ai where some human probably had to do the work to stitch it all together. I haven't seen any of the "new" 100% ai generated video yet... as far as I know.

Comment Re: Wrong approach (Score 4, Informative) 77

It arguably accomplished its goals of bailing out the major auto makers by forcing people to buy new cars (the "cash" was actually just a trade in credit - you couldn't get rid of an old car without buying a new one.)

https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.investopedia.com%2Ft...

"The formal name for the program was the Car Allowance Rebate System (CARS). The CARS program gave people who qualified a credit of up to $4,500, depending on the vehicle purchased and its improvement in fuel economy over the traded-in vehicle."

Yes it punished poor people by destroying the traded in cars (not to mention saddling them with the debt of buying a new one if they couldn't otherwise afford it.) This robbed the market not only of used cars for resale, but the parts to keep cars that weren't traded in working (since the traded in cars had to be crushed, and the engines destroyed by deliberately seizing the engines.)

https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.cnet.com%2Froadshow%2F...

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