People elected to government often seem to seek power for powers sake and I have less faith that they'll not harm us.
People elected to government often seem to seek power for powers sake and I have less faith that they'll not harm us.
(1) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Micro_black_hole#Expected_obse...
If an LHC collision were to form a blackhole,
1. How long would it last
2. Could we detect it
3. How much mass would need to be collided to suck in Earth?
Even a "large"ish primordial black hole would probably just pass straight through the Earth without anyone noticing.
Strange matter on the other hand...
https://qz.com/theranos-sunny-balwani-jail-time-elizabeth-ho...
Imagine replacing middle managers with basically dictation and tracking personnel and delegatingdecisions and report to chatgpt.
It's unclear which jobs with be enabled with more productivity vs replaced completely.
The coastal regions are already over-crowded at current prices. The overall cost is just too high. It's wasteful compared to building in other regions. And, it's unnecessary because so much of modern work can be done remotely.
Instead of allowing 80% of housing at market rate to subsidize 20% low-income housing in an unsustainable growth pattern, California should mandate that large employers offer at least 20% of their office employees the opportunity to work remotely. Creating an escape valve for local demand would slow the growth of housing costs without adding new infrastructure requirements.
It's in CA best long term interest to support as many people as possible. Remote work isn't going to solve the problem that someone who works at Walgreens cannot afford to live within 20 mi of the city.
Well, plain text representation would just be too dangerous. Companies could mine your consciousness, duplicate it at will or whatever else they wanted. It's a scary thought. FHE provides the solution.
So if Alice wants to send Bob an NFT, Bob creates a new address (recoverable with the same seed phrase) and Alice sends it there. Bob can then fund the wallet with tornado cash to use the NFT.
It's a stupidly complex way to achieve privacy and Tornado Cash is illegal. That's why we need private by default chains like Aztec & Aleo
The main[1] answer to your riddle is that the economy grew about ~6x faster than we have been mining gold. The dollar is closer to being worth 7x less than 45x less.
> When we look at prices of things like education, housing, and healthcare, the 45x number makes a lot more sense. Education has 30x in price over the same time period (2).
The same amount of education isn't actually 30x more expensive.
Because you're not getting the same services in exchange for your money today, as you were 50 years ago.
If you drop the money-pit sports programs, the entirety of the administrative sector, the nice new dorm buildings, and account for reduction in public funding, you'll find that the growth in the cost of education is much closer to the cost of inflation.
It's not all that expensive, even in 2022, to stuff a group of young adults into a lecture hall and have an underpaid adjunct who doesn't even get health insurance read off Powerpoint slides to them for 15 hours a week. It's the everything else, most of which has nothing to do with education that costs money.
[1] The secondary answer to your riddle is that late-night-infomercial-manufactured demand from goldbugs and other morons can easily raise the price of gold significantly above where it 'ought' to be. Beanie babies, baseball cards, NFTs, shitcoins, etc.
> The main[1] answer to your riddle is that the economy grew about ~6x faster than we have been mining gold. The dollar is closer to being worth 7x less than 45x less.
How are you measuring it? It's a circular argument if you measure it in dollars. If it measure it in anything that can't be made more efficient due to automation & offshoring, it's no where near a 7x decrease.
> [1] The secondary answer to your riddle is that late-night-infomercial-manufactured demand from goldbugs and other morons can easily raise the price of gold significantly above where it 'ought' to be. Beanie babies, baseball cards, etc.
Gold is simply a good that's impossible to mass produce with technology. Use land, housing, healthcare, education or whatever you feel is most representative. Using toothpaste and tv's for CPI is a bad measurement in the last 50 years, our technology for mass producing them has lowered the true cost.
(1) https://educationdata.org/average-cost-of-college-by-year
(2) https://www.in2013dollars.com/Medical-care/price-inflation
(3) https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/ASPUS
(4) https://www.statista.com/statistics/196400/average-value-of-...
I've done this successfully on multiple projects in the 10-20k LOC, ~100 file area - fully LLM generated w/ tons of my personal feedback - and it works just fine. 4/5 features I implement it gets pretty close to nailing from the spec I provide and the work is largely refactoring. But the times it doesn't get it right, it is a slog that could eat the better part of a day. On the whole though it probably is a 3-5x speedup.
I'm a little less confident about doing this on projects that are much bigger... then breaking things up into modules begins to look more attractive.