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chub500 commented on Amazon Prime inflates prices, using the false promise of ‘free shipping’   mattstoller.substack.com/... · Posted by u/yarapavan
hedora · 5 years ago
The fact that Bose has to set their retail prices to include the Amazon surcharge makes it an even better example.

If you buy the headphones at a brick and mortar store, you’re still forced to pay the Amazon shipping surcharge, even if the money is not going to Amazon. This puts brick and mortar stores at an unfair disadvantage, and it is directly traceable to Amazon’s anticompetitive behavior.

chub500 · 5 years ago
Reading the article it wasn't clear to me why exactly they couldn't sell elsewhere cheaper. That seems to be an important detail. Is there some fine print stating if you're 'caught' selling cheaper elsewhere you lose the buy button? This wasn't clear to me from the article.
chub500 commented on A Recap of the Mars Terraforming Debate   nautil.us/issue/100/outsi... · Posted by u/rbanffy
OmicronCeti · 5 years ago
The person you're replying to stated elsewhere that they don't believe in the conservation of energy, so (ironically) save yourself the energy of arguing with them.
chub500 · 5 years ago
Not to detract from your sarcasm but the conservation of energy only holds true in flat spacetime. So I guess you don't 'believe' in curved spacetime? That makes you a flat spacetimer I guess...
chub500 commented on Launch Your App: Why We Don’t Use Docker (We Don’t Need It)   launchyourapp.meezeeworko... · Posted by u/wheresvic4
user3939382 · 5 years ago
Some context to my comment, last time I was doing app distribution I used the contemporary best practice which was SVN. I’ve read a dozen articles on the theory of Docker vs VM but still don’t get it. Apparently it saves resources by not replicating the whole OS. Do everyone’s apps really not rely on the specific kernel at all? Even in i.e. PHP apps I usually have binaries tied in that are compiled for the kernel I’ve developed on.

Containers are peripheral to my work so I don’t understand but I’m curious.

chub500 · 5 years ago
Docker takes advantage of various linux sandboxing features. On a linux bare metal host it's just a combination of namespaces and resource constraints (cgroups) whereas on other platforms it will have to be the above within a bonafide VM running a linux kernel. The general rule is that linux maintains backward compatability even in ABI so as long as the host kernel is the same or newer than the image requirements it should just work. Things wont work for example if your image requires iouring (a brand new syscall interface) but your host OS is running 4.x (doesn't map iouring syscalls to anything).
chub500 commented on Inflammation, but Not Telomere Length, Predicts Ageing at Extreme Old Age   pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/2... · Posted by u/evo_9
perl4ever · 5 years ago
>currently the most accurate way to measure aging

I don't understand what people mean by statements like this. Per the Wiki page, they found something that on average is highly correlated to chronological age.

But in individual cases, it may be off a little or a lot. What tells you this is meaningful information and not random noise? What is the reference point for the "real" age that is not chronological age?

chub500 · 5 years ago
I just watched an interesting Veritasium on this aspect of aging: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=QRt7LjqJ45k
chub500 commented on Scientists who say the lab-leak hypothesis for SARS-CoV-2 shouldn't be ruled out   technologyreview.com/2021... · Posted by u/todd8
inciampati · 5 years ago
No, it's impossible for them to categorically show that it wasn't. However, they could make an extremely strong case if they completely documented all ongoing research activities in the lab before the beginning of the pandemic. This would involve total disclosure of the activity of every researcher, open access to all materials and the sequencing of all viral samples and cultures.

It is not feasible to do this probably. The WIV even claims to have completely consumed all biosamples related to RaTG13, which is the most-closely-related known virus to SARS-CoV-2. Supporting such an investigation is completely counter to their interests (speaking both of the institute and the CCP).

The overwhelming evidence is that SARS-CoV-2 emerged completely adapted to humans. This has been confirmed by the amazing lack of initial adaptation to the new human host. We only saw major changes in the spike resulting in a change in phenotype later in 2020. The proximal origins of the spike protein suggest a primate or human host. For this to happen, a natural origin in another species is astronomically improbable. It's the strongest evidence that we'll ever have as to the origins of the virus, and to this biologist it is completely indicative of what happened. We will only know the full truth if people speak out.

chub500 · 5 years ago
I had never heard this before. Do you have a source? It seems to me the more informed in virology people are the more they seem to think the 'leak' is the most likely scenario.
chub500 commented on Dolt is Git for Data: a SQL database that you can fork, clone, branch, merge   github.com/dolthub/dolt#d... · Posted by u/crazypython
justincormack · 5 years ago
I collected all the git for data open source projects I could find a few months back, there have been a bunch of interesting approaches https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1jGQY_wjj7dYVne6toyzm...
chub500 · 5 years ago
I've had a fairly long-term side project working on git for chronological data (data is a cause and effect DAG), know of anybody doing that?
chub500 commented on The Global Population Crisis That Never Was   rogerpielkejr.substack.co... · Posted by u/mellowhype
greenwich26 · 5 years ago
There's almost nowhere in Asia with high fertility anymore. All 21st century population growth will be African, specifically sub-Saharan Africa, where fertility rates are stubbornly holding around 4 to 4.5 births per woman. And the worst countries, like Somalia and Niger, are still well above 6 births per woman, declining by much less than 1 birth per woman per decade.
chub500 · 5 years ago
Worst? You mean _highest_? These people will be caring for your kids in their nursing home.
chub500 commented on The Victims of the Eviction Moratorium   reason.com/video/2021/02/... · Posted by u/jseliger
chub500 · 5 years ago
Abraham buys land in Genesis: "For the full price let him give it to me in your presence as property for a burying place." Gen 23:9. Private property contract law is nothing new. My thought is how many of these landlords will end up turning to more nefarious means to make ends meet? It seems when the legal system fails people inevitably turn to vigilantism.
chub500 commented on The Hermeneutical Imperative   theconvivialsociety.subst... · Posted by u/panic
pacbard · 5 years ago
Prefacing that I am not a philosopher, but I think that hermeneutics would reject the idea that "real" and "reality" can exist outside of the interpretation that people have of something that has happened. To an extent, real and reality is the same and one with its interpretation. You get into these weird spots where two people could experience the same event, interpret it in different ways, leading up to two different "realities" of the event. I don't know enough to know how this would be reconciled within hermeneutic epistemology, but that's something interesting to keep in mind.
chub500 · 5 years ago
I have to say, hermeneutics is something our western culture has become catastrophically bad at. When the failure of postmodernism became apparent (truths unfortunately must be shared to take any corporate action in society), we seem to have reverted directly back into a Nietzschian nihilism, every group only exists as a means to power. This has begun to erode traditional modernist western ideals which the postmodernists seemed to allow: offensive speech isn't necessarily wrong, interpretation and truth are two sides to the same coin, etc.
chub500 commented on Facebook Says It Is Removing All Content Mentioning 'Stop the Steal'   wsj.com/articles/facebook... · Posted by u/admiralspoo
crooked-v · 5 years ago
They want the government to replaced by the free market for other people. For them, it's government benefits all the way.

The political scientist and author Frank Wilhoit talked about it in his works:

> Conservatism consists of exactly one proposition, to wit: there must be in-groups whom the law protects but does not bind, alongside out-groups whom the law binds but does not protect.

chub500 · 5 years ago
My perspective as a conservative:

1. These companies have every right to legally censor those they disagree with.

2. By exercising that right they put themselves at risk of being regulated more stringently (as utilities for example) when they demonstrate inelasticity in consumer choice.

3. I'd rather them not be treated as utilities because that hampers competition and thus impedes efficiency.

4. Your statement above is a farcical caricature of conservative ideology. Every product/service deserves a debate on what regulation is appropriate but as a society regulation only exists because bad actors necessitated its creation. No one wants car seats for their 8 year olds - we'd much rather be trusted to do the right thing.

u/chub500

KarmaCake day70November 22, 2019View Original