jphamlore
jphamlore t1_jecmeo8 wrote
Reply to In a post-scarcity utopia, is there a real necessity of human labor of any kind? by kvothekevin
There's going to be a huge need for full-time caretakers for the aging.
jphamlore t1_jbrp1ko wrote
Reply to comment by klaaptrap in With a universal income, will we stop working? by berlinparisexpress
The Athenian golden age only lasted about 18 years?
jphamlore t1_jbr1s4x wrote
There is so much work, UBI will instantly be transformed into a form of workfare, mandatory work.
Every person at risk for falling at home for example basically needs a 24/7 caretaker.
Curiously enough, the United States already has something like a UBI for people who can show they cannot work. Look up SSI and SSDI.
jphamlore t1_jaeauqf wrote
Gee I have no idea why Cambodia would possibly not want to ally with the United States.
jphamlore t1_j6ouyv6 wrote
Reply to Huge crowds march across France, raising pressure against Macron's pension reform by hockeyfan33333
Every French leader seems to try this, and previously, every one eventually was forced to back down?
jphamlore t1_j6bnq50 wrote
Reply to Tesla just had its best week since May 2013 by upyoars
It will be interesting if strategic buying and selling of just Tesla stock and bitcoin becomes a generation's mantra for investing, and just that focus out-performs other investments, or starting businesses.
jphamlore t1_j5pe5jc wrote
The BBC is fairly protective of all of their IP regardless of what it is? I'm not sure the Internet Archive can store for a long time BBC documentaries about anything even if they are made by Sir David Attenborough about nature.
jphamlore t1_j58wzfp wrote
Is Jupiter the limit for how far out a mission can go fueled by rocket fuel and solar panels?
https://www.esa.int/Science_Exploration/Space_Science/Juice_factsheet
> Spacecraft: Three-axis stabilised with 10 solar panels and a 2.5-metre-long High Gain Antenna, with a dry mass of approximately 2400 kg and a wet mass (including fuel) of approximately 6000 kg. Each solar panel measures about 2.5 m x 3.5 m; with five on each side of the spacecraft deployed as two distinctive cross-shaped arrays, these total an area of about 85 square metres>
jphamlore t1_j4xfa5n wrote
Reply to comment by BezugssystemCH1903 in Swiss researcher finds spectacular meteorite in Antarctica by BezugssystemCH1903
I have always wondered how the Norwegian team planned to announce to the world their excavation of a humongous extraterrestrial spacecraft, even if nothing had happened to them.
jphamlore t1_j3529l3 wrote
Amazon had doubled the number of people they employ from 2020 to now?
jphamlore t1_j230cs5 wrote
> Yet a recent study conducted by Resume.io shows the average tenure of a Google employee is only 1.3 years, making them one of the top 10 companies where employees apparently don't want to stay.
> Granted, that's not unusual for tech and software companies. The average tenure at Zoom is also 1.3 years. Reddit's average tenure is 1.2 years. The Meta (Facebook) average is 1.7 years. Work for a big name, even for a short period of time, and it's a lot easier to get a great job at a smaller firm or startup.
jphamlore t1_j20ghyl wrote
Reply to Russians did such a good job promoting renewable energy and electric vehicles this year. by darth_nadoma
Actually the Russians proved countries should keep their coal power plants ready to go.
https://www.dw.com/en/germany-reactivates-coal-fired-power-plant-to-save-gas/a-62893497
> The Heyden plant in Petershagen, near Hanover in northern Germany, is scheduled to return into service from August 29 until the end of April, operator Uniper said on Monday.
> With a capacity of 875 megawatts, Heyden is one of the most powerful coal-fired power plants in Germany. It started operation in 1987.
> Germany plans to phase out coal-fired power generation by 2038 at the latest. However, the war in Ukraine and the resulting disruptions to the energy market are causing some plants to be temporary reactivated.
Germany plans to keep coal as a backup for more than 15 years into the future.
jphamlore t1_j1aa8qi wrote
Reply to Google tells employees more of them will be at risk for low performance ratings next year by Sorin61
Stack ranking for eternal layoffs.
jphamlore t1_j15bbsf wrote
This sounds more like companies catching up to 2 years of the stack ranking firings they want to continuously do -- culling out a few percent of their workforce every year they deem to be lower performers.
jphamlore t1_iybepy2 wrote
Reply to comment by UncannyTarotSpread in Common treatment for joint pain may be linked to faster arthritis progression, research suggests by SunCloud-777
Indeed, I suspect the most common reason people get such corticosteroid shots is for short-term ability to continue working. From my very limited personal experience, there was never any understanding this was good for the long-term.
jphamlore t1_iy6ytzr wrote
Reply to 150-km Strike Weapon Weighed for Ukraine as Arms Makers Wrestle With Demand by Sendstorepatter
150km would cover the entirety of Ukrainian territory currently occupied by Russia?
jphamlore t1_iy6qayo wrote
> The debate went on for more than a decade, but in the end, the GOTO went extinct, and no one today would argue for its return.
Has this person ever looked at Linux kernel code written in plain old C?
goto is used all over the place for cleanup after errors, and also frequently for restarting loops.
jphamlore t1_ixl19f2 wrote
Reply to A panel of experts is calling for wide-ranging taxes to help pay for bolstering Japan’s defenses, including first-strike capability against enemy bases preparing to launch an attack against Japan by DoremusJessup
What can possibly go wrong if Japan launches a first strike against North Korea, Russia, or China?
jphamlore t1_iwt7344 wrote
Meanwhile is anyone noticing that Binance is basically carbon-copying everything FTX did, or maybe Binance was the original inspiration? They even have splashed a celebrity endorsement, Cristiano Ronaldo, on their frontpage now!
> Cristiano Ronaldo is Coming to Binance
> Gear up for Ronaldo’s first-ever NFT collection, available exclusively on Binance. Sign up with code RONALDO to get a special prize on launch day!
jphamlore t1_iwt4hqo wrote
Reply to comment by gardenpartytime in Idaho police say they have no suspect in the slaying of 4 college students by sea_5455
Sherlock Holmes story, The Adventure of the Copper Beeches:
> "They always fill me with a certain horror. It is my belief, Watson founded upon my experience, that the lowest and vilest alleys in London do not present a more dreadful record of sin than does the smiling and beautiful countryside."
> "You horrify me!"
> "But the reason is very obvious. The pressure of public opinion can do in the town what the law cannot accomplish. There is no lane so vile that the scream of a tortured child, or the thud of a drunkard's blow, does not beget sympathy and indignation among the neighbours, and then the whole machinery of justice is ever so close that a word of complaint can set it going, and there is but a step between the crime and the dock. But look at those lonely houses, each in its own fields, filled for the most part with poor ignorant folk who know little of the law. Think of the deeds of hellish cruelty, the hidden wickedness which may go on, year in, year out, in such places, and none the wiser."
jphamlore t1_iwj5ykt wrote
Reply to Apple will begin sourcing chips from a plant in Arizona and from Europe in a major supply chain shift away from China, CEO Tim Cook told employees by flyingdutchgirll
How does sourcing chips that were never made in China move the supply chain away from China?
jphamlore t1_iwaq0no wrote
Reply to The CEO of OpenAI had dropped hints that GPT-4, due in a few months, is such an upgrade from GPT-3 that it may seem to have passed The Turing Test by lughnasadh
Just have an AI trade crypto and then use the proceeds to buy itself improved hardware, networking bandwidth, and electricity.
That sort of AI in my opinion would be far more impressive than passing the Turing test, and would start to make an argument it is some sort of living being that deserves some legal protection.
jphamlore t1_iw90a16 wrote
Reply to comment by greenfuelunits in FTX Latest: Dim Picture for Customers; Criminal Probe Possible by greenfuelunits
At least one British tabloid claims he and his top lieutenants are plotting an escape to extradition-free Dubai.
jphamlore t1_iw42hv6 wrote
Reply to Rooftop Solar Is Becoming More Accessible to People with Lower Incomes, But Not Fast Enough - Inside Climate News by darth_nadoma
Who could have possibly guessed that low income people might not be able to afford the land, building, solar roof, home battery backup system, and Tesla to become essentially independent from the electrical grid?
jphamlore t1_jed6jka wrote
Reply to comment by robertjbrown in In a post-scarcity utopia, is there a real necessity of human labor of any kind? by kvothekevin
A robot can do many specialized tasks as good as if not better than a human.
I'm not convinced even with Singularity-type progress a robot can be developed that will do all of the tasks a caretaker does.