djdjddhdhdh
djdjddhdhdh t1_je6espu wrote
Smart idea, but guarantee gonna turn into a shit show cuz people will be too dumb to read that their thermostats will be remotely controlled
djdjddhdhdh t1_je632u8 wrote
Reply to comment by AnacharsisIV in NYC teachers union’s workshop on ‘harmful effects of whiteness’ canceled after influx of ‘hate’ by someone_whoisthat
That makes sense, ye the Latinx term I find people use to just describe any person from Latin America male/female or otherwise which just always sounded weird to me
djdjddhdhdh t1_je60tfs wrote
Well you can try to gift it, but don’t be surprised if they simply outlaw pets and then you have to move
djdjddhdhdh t1_je13ez7 wrote
Reply to comment by Neoliberalism2024 in New Yorkers overwhelmingly support bail changes ahead of state budget deadline: Poll by Grass8989
Ye so guess it’s work same way with equity grants since those are capital gains I guess
djdjddhdhdh t1_je10pr5 wrote
Reply to comment by Neoliberalism2024 in New Yorkers overwhelmingly support bail changes ahead of state budget deadline: Poll by Grass8989
Well partially, your income tax is still paid on time you work in NY, not sure how it work on equity grants or bonuses though for non resident, knowing Ny tho, they’ll claw it back
djdjddhdhdh t1_je0tkyc wrote
Reply to comment by PandaJ108 in NYC teachers union’s workshop on ‘harmful effects of whiteness’ canceled after influx of ‘hate’ by someone_whoisthat
What the hell is the e? Did they create a new term now?
djdjddhdhdh t1_jdn386x wrote
Reply to comment by Charming-Fig-2544 in This café in the West Village is now owned by its own employees by geoxol
Ye I guess that’s a good point using pure definition of socialism. But then that would mean that google and Facebook were socialist enterprises since the founders were the original workers and really continued working still, and for a while owned majority of shares. Theoretically every business starts as socialist enterprise then the original workers sell their stake in it, and incoming ones get none or tiny share
djdjddhdhdh t1_jdkhlqc wrote
Reply to comment by ksx25 in This café in the West Village is now owned by its own employees by geoxol
Ahh this makes more sense
Teamshares recruits a talented, mission-driven president to lead the company forward. They begin with an intensive training program and continue to learn through on-the-ground experience and support from the Teamshares network.
djdjddhdhdh t1_jdkh4rb wrote
Reply to comment by ksx25 in This café in the West Village is now owned by its own employees by geoxol
Haha ye me too, if it’s unanimous that’ll be a shit show. The holding co has to have some sort of board until they fully divest. Probably we’ll let you fuck up but not crater the business
djdjddhdhdh t1_jdkgxix wrote
Reply to comment by oceanblue966 in This café in the West Village is now owned by its own employees by geoxol
Actually this is pretty much prime example of capitalism, although I question how operations will work going forward. They have exchanged something previous owners wanted, money, for something they wanted ownership. How they obtained the money is irrevalent, and the state didn’t cease and transfer anything.
djdjddhdhdh t1_jdkgj28 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in This café in the West Village is now owned by its own employees by geoxol
But who makes decisions, does it have to be unanimous for all employees?
djdjddhdhdh t1_jdkg9i2 wrote
Reply to comment by Bradaigh in This café in the West Village is now owned by its own employees by geoxol
Well that depends as most business owners in the beginning at least usually have to personally guarantee loans and credit lines. Although cafe has equipment they can use as collateral for the first loan maybe
djdjddhdhdh t1_jdhtrm8 wrote
Reply to comment by djdjddhdhdh in NYC’s Museum of Failure opens to make us feel better about our lives by NYY657545
Actually it does say it has google glass and coke 2, I definitely remember the coke story back in the day. Google glass is fascinating actually, in Atlanta they had a wearable exhibit at the design museum that showcased all the prior art leading up to google glass, apparently people have been trying to do that since like the 90s, interesting stuff
djdjddhdhdh t1_jdht55a wrote
Reply to comment by sonofaresiii in NYC’s Museum of Failure opens to make us feel better about our lives by NYY657545
Ye typical news lol
djdjddhdhdh t1_jdhsycm wrote
Reply to comment by whateverisok in NYC’s Museum of Failure opens to make us feel better about our lives by NYY657545
Oh awesome, thanks, I’ll have to check it out, always good to have someone else subsidize my device addiction lol
djdjddhdhdh t1_jdhe1pk wrote
Reply to comment by whateverisok in NYC’s Museum of Failure opens to make us feel better about our lives by NYY657545
Haha I was one one of the people that bashed AirPods and iPad when they came out, but now it’s a part of daily life for me lol
Ye perception is definitely a big one. A lot of time you create something expecting it to ‘fail’ because you want to learn/test from it. Creating something that doesn’t exist or improving on an existing design is such a fascinating process
djdjddhdhdh t1_jdhdaof wrote
Reply to comment by paulwhitedotnyc in NYC’s Museum of Failure opens to make us feel better about our lives by NYY657545
Wow so I googled the guy, definitely interesting inventions lol and a perfect example. Like I like at his 2 inventions barbecue king and the bed light switcher. Rudimentary leads to infrared oven and hue light bulbs if you think about it
Not gonna lie I kinda want the spaghetti winder lol
djdjddhdhdh t1_jdg6w6y wrote
Reply to comment by paulwhitedotnyc in NYC’s Museum of Failure opens to make us feel better about our lives by NYY657545
Precisely!! Almost everything we have would’ve never happened if someone sat there and said ehhh I’m not gonna try this cuz I might not succeed
Who was your favorite inventor/story from that campaign?
djdjddhdhdh t1_jdg5ex6 wrote
This is amazing actually, people don’t realize how many times people/things had to fail before becoming world changing and that failure is a normal part of the process
djdjddhdhdh t1_jcfntze wrote
Reply to comment by DoritosDewItRight in Nearly 1,500 buildings ban Airbnb and other short-term rentals by fluffykintail
Oh no I don’t doubt, I was talking if you’re running Airbnb full time
djdjddhdhdh t1_jcfdbhg wrote
Reply to comment by akmalhot in Nearly 1,500 buildings ban Airbnb and other short-term rentals by fluffykintail
Ye I dunno about zoning, but tax wise having an Airbnb doesn’t subject you to any tax exceptions, it’s a business like any other. If you make more than you spend you have to pay income taxes on it
djdjddhdhdh t1_jbqzvus wrote
Reply to comment by sumgye in Cost of 2nd Avenue Subway extension to East Harlem balloons to $7.7B by Grass8989
It’s not the closures as much as all the other shit that’s underground
djdjddhdhdh t1_jb3f0wm wrote
Reply to comment by MemoLePewPew5 in Hateful trio beats man and woman on NYC street after yelling anti-Asian slurs by someone_whoisthat
Let me introduce to YouTube Lol
Oh wait you said right mind! Totally agree there
djdjddhdhdh t1_jb3es7p wrote
Reply to comment by thisMatrix_isReal in NYC official says city is spending an estimated $10M a day on housing, feeding migrants by NYY657545
Just saw the last 2, crazy stuff. Although really interesting about the lettuce farmers, I’ve often wondered why in the last few years they’ve been all these infection outbreaks from lettuce. Quite literally I haven’t eaten romaine in like 2 years, which isn’t a big deal cuz I like arugula more lol
djdjddhdhdh t1_je9j20t wrote
Reply to comment by notreallyswiss in Inside a $110M plan to turn NYC apartments into virtual power plants by captainquirk
I had a nest a few years ago that coned paid for but I only had it for like a year, I do remember a couple times it was adjusted, but it probably changed since then