menemenetekelufarsin
menemenetekelufarsin t1_iw88fvx wrote
Reply to comment by ironicf8 in COP27: Israel harnessing DNA of bygone wild crops to enhance food supply by Sariel007
Specific adaptations were cultivated for specific changes. But really in nature, what keeps things alive (evolutionary speaking) is variety. Example: if you have corn seed engineered for highest yields at ClimateX (let's say temperate) and SoilconditionsY, etc. and those change, then the yields may be drastically lower, or the seed may not yield at all. So you need variety to ensure survival.
menemenetekelufarsin t1_itw17pk wrote
Reply to comment by dubBAU5 in Alphabet is ramping up scrutiny of all its projects and cutting hiring in half as it tries to curb costs by chrisdh79
This is what all tech money has been doing - converting from "fake money" (esp. highly overvalued stocks, etc) to real money. Same same with crypto. They are all following the McDonald's strategy. They can offset the leveraged-purchases on their balance sheet for tax reductions, and then end up owning all assets. This is kind of how we got where we are.
menemenetekelufarsin t1_itrhzdz wrote
Reply to comment by InferiousX in Software biz accused of colluding with 'cartel' of landlords by marketrent
Well, when the US government stops using consultants from Bain and McKinsey to help them with research, you will find out. I wouldn't hold my breath though.
menemenetekelufarsin t1_itrh6ll wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Software biz accused of colluding with 'cartel' of landlords by marketrent
Oh it does more than that. How about AI that pattern detect retail trading and makes bets against predictable behavior?
menemenetekelufarsin t1_itrh17h wrote
Reply to comment by InferiousX in Software biz accused of colluding with 'cartel' of landlords by marketrent
Seems to me like you know what the answer is - regulation.
menemenetekelufarsin t1_iw8ayl9 wrote
Reply to comment by ironicf8 in COP27: Israel harnessing DNA of bygone wild crops to enhance food supply by Sariel007
My understanding is that they are "hunting for variety" in seeds before they disappear. There may be additional advantages for having older seeds too. This is pretty standard practice, and the raison d'etre of seed banks. But I'm not an expert at all. Just general knowledge stuff for me