- the insane frothing hype behind AI is showing me a new kind of market failure - where resources can be massively misallocated just because some small class of individuals THINK or HOPE it will result in massive returns. Even if it squeezes out every single other sector that happens to want to use SDRAM to do things OTHER than buffer memory before it's fed into a PCIE lane for a GPU.
- I'm really REALLY glad i decided to buy brand new gaming laptops for my wife and I just a couple months ago, after not having upgraded our gaming laptops for 7 and 9 years respectively. It seems like gamers are going to have this the worst - GPUs have been f'd for a long time due to crypto and AI, and now even DRAM isn't safe. Plus SSD prices are going up too. And unlike many other DRAM users where it's a business thing and they can to some degree just hike prices to cover - gamers are obviously not running businesses. It's just making the hobby more expensive.
How can an uncountably infinite set be used as an index? I was fine with natural numbers (countably infinite) being an index obv, but a real seems a stretch. I get the mathematical definition of a function, but again, this feels like we suddenly lose the plot…
Okay I suppose the axiom of choice is somewhat necessary to make it make sense. But only because otherwise such an indexed object may fail to exist.
Anyway arbitrary indexes are useful, you often end up doing stuff like covering a space by finding a covering set for each individual point. And then using compactness to show you only need finitely many to cover the whole space. It is doable without uncountable indices, but it makes it very difficult to write down.
> Maybe that's the core of this message. Face your fears. Put your service on the internet. Maybe it goes down, but at least not by yet another Cloudflare outage.
Well I'd rather have my website going down (along with half the internet) be the concern of a billion dollar corporation with thousands of engineers - than mine.
Still a bit weird to pretend we now have cyber weather that takes our webpages down.
Could MS create a new EU based company in which it just owns shares ?
Or is the US cloud act so wide that they can demand data from all the companies a us based company has equity in?
It is not a huge amount of protection though. I mean we've already established that selling to 'terrorists' can be sanctioned even when selling through an intermediary. So what's stopping the US from ordering Microsoft to stop selling licenses to the ICC?
And then we've not touched on who is in control of the closed source of the many proprietary applications.
How many different models of PCs get released? How hard is it to patch any of their OSs?