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There is an old parable about a frog and a scorpion:

>A scorpion wants to cross a river but cannot swim, so it asks a frog to carry it across. The frog hesitates, afraid that the scorpion might sting it, but the scorpion promises not to, pointing out that it would drown if it killed the frog in the middle of the river. The frog considers this argument sensible and agrees to transport the scorpion. Midway across the river, the scorpion stings the frog anyway, dooming them both. The dying frog asks the scorpion why it stung despite knowing the consequence, to which the scorpion replies: "I am sorry, but it is my nature".

Should we accept that the scorpion will always sting its associates, and continue to allow them to hitch rides on frogs? Or should we prevent the scorpions from getting into a position where they can sting others once their nature is readily apparent?


> Though also he should still be raked over the coals.

I think GP's position on that question is abundantly clear



I feel like I've seen it referenced a lot more in the past year. Did it get referenced on a podcast or something?


can we educate frogs, warn scorpions, still allow frogs to give rides, and hold scorpions accountable?


We should ask, given the risk, what was the pay off for the frog?

This applies to FSD. Why risk your life testing software for the benefit of Tesla? Either FSD frogs are irrationally altruistic given that Tesla is a corporation, with wealthy shareholders, they are unable to judge the risk, or they are being mislead.

Given the large number of FSD frogs enforcement seems inevitable.


Are you trying to say that the legal system should only focus on your individual problems?

Here's a tip: "the world" is not the same thing as "your world"


My problems are the same ones that the entire middle class in the Bay Area faces.

I'm saying they should at list take a shit about something that's affecting the largest chunk of the population, instead of just dropping cases and not even going out to catch the serial thieves. Even more so, the people running around punching elderly Asian women. In fact, go after those first. My problem is a distant second.

Instead, they focus on the world of a few individuals who didn't really need their money anyway.


Sergey Brin too, with company massage rooms at early Google.

As others have pointed out, it's also how Facebook was started.

Sometimes I look back at my youth, and think about how I used to view technology: as a democratizing force which could tear down artificial barriers. Then I look around today and wonder what happened.

It makes sense, though, if you look closely at the founding fathers of big tech.



And it's still a thing at SpaceX, seemingly.


This may be controversial, but I think software is suffering from shrinkflation.

We complain when tools like Photoshop or MS Word move to a subscription cloud model, but maybe they're just getting realistic about pricing.

You used to be able to buy these tools for a 3-figure range, maybe low 4 figures with all the bells and whistles. Today, creative cloud starts at $55/mo, Photoshop $21/, MS office ~$6/.

If you use a 10x annual revenue to price these, it'd be something like $6600, $2520, $720 respectively. Would you pay those sums for those tools? Would a starving student?

Software is still hard, and good software is still expensive. Calling it "undervalued" is probably accurate; if it weren't for the downward pressure of piracy and open-source, you have to wonder if we'd have software dealerships selling packages as expensive as today's cars.


This sounds fun, I have a good one.

How about your employer has to cover the rent or mortgage of an average single-family unit within a 30-minute rush hour commute of the office if they require you to come in?


Probably cookies and javascript.

Lots of sites would like to make the paywalls immediate, but they won't get ranked highly on search engines if they don't show the article's content to a web crawler.

So the usual approach is to load the content, then hide it as quickly as possible if an unauthorized human is viewing the page.


Exactly, which is why extensions like Bypass Paywalls Clean can easily bypass these paywalls just by changing some Javascript.


They can also be a canary for other issues, like mold accumulation.


+1 to offline computer labs. Our primary school had one in the '90s, but they only let us in for an hour or two each week.

The teachers didn't know how to use the computers, and the parents mostly felt that it was a waste of time which would rot our child brains. Still, the school had paid a bunch of money for it as part of an initiative to get rid of the library's card catalog system, so it had to be used.

The teachers tried to convince everyone to play math and typing games, but most kids played with a sort of photoshop-lite program, stuck magnets onto the CRT screens, or played Oregon Trail.

It wasn't an efficient process, but just about everybody in our district was a proficient typist by middle school. When I got to college, I was surprised by how many people typed on their laptops like they type on their phones, with rapid index finger pecks.


We figured out pretty quick how to use Windows' internal network messenger, and that was pretty cool (in terms of being able to chat with peers without the teachers knowing).

It still blows my mind that kids are using Chromebooks and Ipads daily on an elementary level.


> It still blows my mind that kids are using Chromebooks and Ipads daily on an elementary level.

I saw this recently on an equipment list for first graders. “One iPad and Macbook with specifications in line required by the school”.

Wtf is my first grader going to do with an iPad other than watch Youtube?


> , I was surprised by how many people typed on their laptops like they type on their phones, with rapid index finger pecks.

What kind of people do you hang around. I don’t know anyone who commonly uses their index fingers to type on their phone. It’s mostly thumbs.


Good question - I'm even typing this with thumbs now!

Thinking back, it was during a time when most phones were small enough to fit comfortably in one small hand. People would hold it with one hand, and use the other to tap.

Modern phones are too heavy and bulky for that, so I think we use both hands to hold and use them. Or maybe the finger-pecking was unrelated to phone use, who knows.


Of course solar panels cannot provide enough power to drive a car for any significant distance, but that doesn't make them useless.

I know, because I put solar panels on an ICE car's roof several years ago. They charged a recreation battery in the boot, which I used to charge my phone, headlamp, camp lights, laptop, radio, smaller power bricks...

Fantastic for camping, and it lets you jump-start your own car.

The article's prices are for first-party solutions; I paid $2/W and it's been zero maintenance over highways, bumpy tracks, heat, car washes, and frost. Using amorphous cells instead of monocrystalline can net you a bit of energy on cloud/rainy days too, even if they are less efficient in bright sunlight.

If you have roof rails or a pickup canopy, give it a try. The hardest part is finding a way to get the wires into the interior. Don't forget some soft cushioning washers in the mounting nuts and bolts.


I have two 100W panels on top of the Jeep I drove around Africa for three years. They charge a secondary battery and run the fridge, the water pump and UV Filter, camping / interior lights, all my chargers and laptop charging. [1]

I also had a 100W Panel on the vehicle I just drove around Australia for 18 months.

In both cases, I'd say they were essential

[1] theroadchoseme.com/the-jeep


Sounds like they should label it more clearly, but this story looks like a funny hack to me.

Some states only allow the sale of beer and wine in places like gas stations and grocery stores. You can't sell whiskey there, but you can sell spiced malt beverages.

Unrelated, I really like that NPR has a script-free "text.npr.org" subdomain.


I saw Fireball on the counter of a convenience store the other day and was somewhat confused.

The state doesn't allow liquor sales in convenience stores, but does allow the sale of beer and malt liquor.

That explains what was going on.


Yea, that's what I was thinking. Should have just added the word flavour or similar.


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