Readit News logoReadit News
tpm commented on The ROI of Exercise   herman.bearblog.dev/exerc... · Posted by u/ingve
113 · 4 days ago
I don't know who your friend is but you haven't addressed any of the points made in the posts you're replying to.
tpm · 4 days ago
We have a saying, something to the tune of: who wants to do something, seeks the ways, who does not want to do it, seeks the reasons why it can't be done. Those points don't need addressing.
tpm commented on Crimes with Python's Pattern Matching (2022)   hillelwayne.com/post/pyth... · Posted by u/agluszak
rand_r · 5 days ago
You can use “set()”. Introducing more weird special cases into the language is a bad direction for Python.
tpm · 5 days ago
No no no, it's a great direction towards becoming the new Perl.
tpm commented on What services or apps did you see abroad and wonder: why don't we have them?    · Posted by u/ekusiadadus
Nextgrid · 8 days ago
Can ACH not be reversed? My understanding is that the European systems are just as vulnerable, but what makes them "secure" is that they can be reversed no-questions-asked, making such an attack pointless unless you know the account holder isn't going to notice it for months.
tpm · 8 days ago
No, European systems are not vulnerable like this. You can't do anything given my IBAN etc., you would need access to my banking app or website plus whatever 2fa I have set up there to send money from my account. And SEPA transfers can't be reversed easily AFAIK.
tpm commented on What services or apps did you see abroad and wonder: why don't we have them?    · Posted by u/ekusiadadus
rkomorn · 8 days ago
It is shocking because ACH fraud in the US is shockingly easy to commit if you have the equivalent to someone's IBAN (ie routing + account number).
tpm · 8 days ago
Never mind individuals, but how are businesses sending money to each other then? Would it not be much cheaper to use a system like SEPA/IBAN too?
tpm commented on What services or apps did you see abroad and wonder: why don't we have them?    · Posted by u/ekusiadadus
octo888 · 8 days ago
There are many public transport systems that are not a subway. There are trains and buses that are wholly above ground, for example.
tpm · 8 days ago
Yes, but underground systems are a substantial part of many mass transit networks, and even for those that aren't underground, GPS connection can't be considered reliable. Anyway if you are scared of Orwellian nightmares you shouldn't use public transport anyway as there are CCTVs everywhere.
tpm commented on What services or apps did you see abroad and wonder: why don't we have them?    · Posted by u/ekusiadadus
tietjens · 8 days ago
Instant free bank transfers by IBAN.

In comparison with how tightly-guarded personal email addresses are protected (GDPR, etc.), it's shocking how common it is to freely give out your IBAN.

tpm · 8 days ago
Why is that shocking? You can't really do anything with my bank account's IBAN unless you want to send me some money.
tpm commented on What services or apps did you see abroad and wonder: why don't we have them?    · Posted by u/ekusiadadus
octo888 · 8 days ago
What an Orwellian nightmare. These systems require real-time GPS data.

Just as buying a ticket with cash is becoming increasingly hard in parts of Europe, I can see a near future where having a phone sending constant GPS updates becomes a requirement (a requirement in an strict sense, or the sense that the alternative is unreasonably cumbersome or more expensive)

tpm · 8 days ago
Sending GPS updates from the subway?
tpm commented on U.S. alcohol consumption drops to a 90-year low, new poll finds   sfchronicle.com/food/wine... · Posted by u/littlexsparkee
OkayPhysicist · 14 days ago
Since opium dens fell out of favor, the only psychoactive substances that have dedicated social spaces are booze (bars, nightclubs) and nicotine (hookah lounges, cigar clubs). This could change, but it hasn't yet. It sure seems like society's just swinging antisocial.
tpm · 13 days ago
There are also teahouses in some cities.
tpm commented on GPT-5 is a joke. Will it matter?   bloodinthemachine.com/p/g... · Posted by u/dbalatero
aurareturn · 14 days ago
How do you populate that list and verify the promises on the list?
tpm · 14 days ago
You can't verify anything with a LLM.
tpm commented on South Korea's military has shrunk by 20% in six years as male population drops   channelnewsasia.com/east-... · Posted by u/eagleislandsong
maxglute · 16 days ago
> long-term data we have?

My rough understanding is we have 20-50 years of efforts in the Nordics. Long enough to form "Nordic Paradox" for situation where pro-natal policies still lead to below replacement rates. There's also weird dual cultural shift - Nordic countries women labour participation rate stagnated or even decreased - more wanted to become full time moms/homemakers - so there is desire for family formation. But second culture shift is the desire is still sub replacement level, i.e. people want 1-2 kids. Not enough people want 2 kids to replace themselves. Not enough people want 2+ kids to make up the people that want 1.

> go on forever

Yeah it's more to illustrate the levels of abundance in terms of pro social policies that could sustain culturally acceptable >2 TFR. Be religious. Have UBI. Ensure people work little if they don't want to. Ensure they have access to cheap labour that does all the work for them. Then maybe TFR could settle between 2-3. Right now the few exception are a few million people sustained by disproportionate fossil exports. That model can't scale without another source of abundance.

tpm · 15 days ago
> Long enough to form "Nordic Paradox" for situation where pro-natal policies still lead to below replacement rates.

Having just read [0], this confirms my earlier suspicion the support is not generous enough there. (Also a huge political issue in probably all countries getting older - the political power skews to the older generation making increasing support for young families harder to finance with budget constraints. Welfare for grandparents and poverty for single parents.)

> That model can't scale without another source of abundance.

Yes of course it can't, it's the whole planet financing it for them. But maybe we don't need that level of abundance - previous generations certainly didn't, even some of them already liberal and educated. And I think we are still missing some fundamental cause here. Maybe modern life is not only too expensive, but also too complex and complicated to navigate into parenthood at the right time and place in life and then it's too late?

[0] https://ifstudies.org/blog/the-new-nordic-paradox-how-family...

u/tpm

KarmaCake day1032February 4, 2016View Original