But a much easier argument against sports betting is that it ruins the sports. Players throw. They get good at subtly cheating. The gambling apparatus latches itself to the sport, to the teams and players, the umpires and judges, the sporting organizations. With this much money on the line, it's not a matter of if but when games are thrown, cheated -- the bigger the game, the bigger the incentive. It's even easier now because of the amount of side/parlay betting that is available. It exhausts the spirit of competition.
Sports gambling is diametrically opposed to sport itself.
The gambling institutions have some regulation as well.
I do think that gambling ads should be banned just like cigarettes, and pharmaceuticals.
USA and New Zealand are the only places that allow pharma ads and the public is uninformed to make that decision but the Agency problem means MDs will prescribe those drugs.
I’ll buy a little later. I’ll buy a little later!
So frustrating.
Flying FPV (in acro mode) has a steep learning curve (but is, arguably, much more fun). The way to learn is to use a proper simulator. The most versatile and popular one is Liftoff and costs around $20, but there are many others, including free ones. You should also buy a dedicated controller since normal game controllers don't work well (the throttle joystick needs to stay where it is instead of returning to center). Dedicated drone controllers can be found around $40-50 used.
And then off you go! Be prepared to spend at least 20 hours on a sim before you can fly IRL (it took me around 100 hours to really be comfortable). It's surprising how well the learned skills transfer from the simulator to the real thing.
They have open races every week.
I can place in the top 300 sometimes.
You can see the FPV of any of the races. The fastest pilots fly so fast it's insane. It's hard for me to comprehend how they can even comprehend what they are seeing.
They will fly though a 3 gate ladder(aka corkscrew) in 1.5 seconds.
when the business starts out, it's high risk and low margin. Tons of capital investment. Labor intensive and hard to staff. If you are lucky you are pulling 15% margins
Besides some exceptions, if you are lucky you may get some growth for 5-10 years. Then your brand falls out of favor (trends) and you spiral into bankruptcy.
Who invests in this stuff?
Margins are good. Spoilage is a non-issue.
Orders are pickup or delivery.
I can bring 10 pizzas to every party.
Sometimes I wish I was programming during the RoR hay days. It just seems like a damn fine framework and it's got a real cult (in a good way) following.
Who cares if you can save 10 minutes coding a page if it takes you an hour to figure out what's happening on with that code.
Ideally, you put conduits in the wall then upgrading cables is easier.
Also I think the group of people who are shelling out $4k for the AVR are going to be heavily biased to justify the expense. I don't think there's a $3000 difference between the two devices. Maybe $500.
A lot of companies are going to buy it just to figure out what types of apps can be made for the platform.
I don’t understand why interviews in the software I industry are so different compared to other industries. I also get the impression that during many interviews what you’re about and what you’ve done matters very little. All that matters is if you can solve two Leetcode hards in an hour multiple times.
If you can't code, it's immediately obvious.
Being a good HR person or Inclusivity Officer is much more subjective.
Most people walked everywhere, especially in a city.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2019-08-29/the-commu...