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wklauss commented on Is Health Insurance Even Worth It Anymore?   church.substack.com/p/is-... · Posted by u/brandonb
exabrial · 2 months ago
Repeal Obamacare, go back to HSAs. Nobody should be taxed on health expenses, which was the whole point of HSAs in the first place. We literally had a budding system that was working and affordable, and it was "fixed".
wklauss · 2 months ago
Define "budding system that was working". Before the ACA, the number of uninsured Americans was around 50 million and insurance companies routinely denied coverage or charge higher premiums based on pre-existing health conditions. ACA is not perfect (due in no small part to the concessions that had to be made in congress to get enough votes) but i'd say it's been a net win.

Going back to a pre-ACA system won't lower premiums that much. Medical costs have risen in the last decade, same as any other goods or services, and the way US healthcare is structured, with hospital and doctors negotiating with a profit driven middleman (insurance companies) makes it almost impossible to change the rising premiums.

US healthcare will continue to be a mess until there's a universal healthcare system or single payer system similar to any other developed country on earth.

wklauss commented on Meta Ray-Ban Display   meta.com/blog/meta-ray-ba... · Posted by u/martpie
blackqueeriroh · 3 months ago
We all love to say this, but everyone forgets: Apple has never beaten competitors by being the first – they’ve beaten them by being the best.

Personal computers? Apple wasn’t first. Smartphones with screens? Apple wasn’t first. Tablets? Not first by a mile. True Wireless Earbuds? Nope, not at all first. Smartwatches? Hell no, not first.

And yet, Apple’s a category leader in every single one of these areas.

I don’t think it matters if Meta releases something first; Apple wins by doing it way better. Arguably, Vision Pro was way too early, even though it’s an incredible experience.

wklauss · 3 months ago
To be fair, Meta is also not the first company to launch smart glasses with a display.

But the reality of it is that it's probably still to early to say if these devices will have mainstream appeal. I see a lot of people saying "well, i no longer need to take the phone out my pocket", but that has been the case for a couple of years with smartwatches, for example, and it has not meaningfully changed our dependency from the smartphone or the smartphone market dynamics that much.

wklauss commented on The MacBook has a sensor that knows the exact angle of the screen hinge   twitter.com/samhenrigold/... · Posted by u/leephillips
simonbw · 4 months ago
It seems like it would be much quicker and easier to just have a piece of plastic or something cut at a 76 degree angle that they can place on the laptop and fold the screen up to.
wklauss · 4 months ago
I've heard employees use the measurements app in their iPhones sometimes to adjust in the mornings, but having a sensor in the laptop lid seems like a much easier way to do it and you don't need to carry anything with you.
wklauss commented on The MacBook has a sensor that knows the exact angle of the screen hinge   twitter.com/samhenrigold/... · Posted by u/leephillips
stevage · 4 months ago
76 degrees is just an aesthetic choice?
wklauss · 4 months ago
I'm assuming so. Apparently it's an angle that "invites" people to use the computers, but I don't think there's anything specific about 76 degrees that makes it better than, say, 73 or 82. As long as you can see the content from an average height, it should work. Most likely they just settle on that angle because it looked good to the store team that was staging the first store, measured it, turned out to be 76 and kept it the same across stores since then for consistency.
wklauss commented on The MacBook has a sensor that knows the exact angle of the screen hinge   twitter.com/samhenrigold/... · Posted by u/leephillips
Reason077 · 4 months ago
It can’t be exclusively for Desk View. Desk View only works on Macs with wide-angle cameras, which were introduced in 2024 and 2025 models.

But this sensor has been in MacBooks since the 2019 models.

wklauss · 4 months ago
At Apple Stores, laptops screens have to be opened exactly at 76 degrees. I wonder if they use this sensor and specific software for adjustment (I'm not implying this is the only reason it's there)
wklauss commented on Mario Vargas Llosa has died   nytimes.com/2025/04/13/bo... · Posted by u/funkaster
MaxHoppersGhost · 9 months ago
Are there any conservative leaders that the media doesn't call "far right"?
wklauss · 9 months ago
the majority of them.
wklauss commented on Apple M4 MacBook Air review: I have no notes   arstechnica.com/apple/202... · Posted by u/tosh
Gazoche · 9 months ago
Running modern games on Linux requires Vulkan, which has iffy support in MacOS at best (and MacOS isn’t officially supported by Valve’s compatibility tools).
wklauss · 9 months ago
It is iffy but serviceable. In this case, seems like Octopath Traveller 2 Windows version works well with GPTK. I haven't tried but Whisky, or Porting Kit should be able to handle it. Reddit has some people running it at good fps.
wklauss commented on Apple M4 MacBook Air review: I have no notes   arstechnica.com/apple/202... · Posted by u/tosh
kubb · 9 months ago
I just wish they could run Windows games. Many games could comfortably run on this hardware, they just don't for software nonsense reasons. For example Octopath Traveler 2 - a game which isn't graphics intensive at all. It runs on Windows and Linux via SteamOS, so why can't I have it on my MacBook.
wklauss · 9 months ago
If it runs on Linux, it should be fairly easy to run it on MacOS through the Game Porting Toolkit. Crossover (or Porting Kit if you don't want to pay for Crossover) should handle it.
wklauss commented on Grok3 Launch [video]   x.com/xai/status/18916997... · Posted by u/travelhead
cryptoegorophy · 10 months ago
Wouldn't Argentina be a good example of what is DOGE doing now? Financially it has been a good experiment for Argentina. What are the cons?
wklauss · 10 months ago
Argentina and US are very different countries, starting these cuts with very different economic realities. For example, 55% of all registered workers are employed by the government in Argentina. Although not a directly comparable metric (since in the US you also need to account for state and local civil workers), the US federal government employs around 3 million people. That's just 1.87% of the entire civilian workforce.

Again, DOGE operates from the premise that the federal government is bloated. Although this is a very popular message, I'd love to see some more objective data to support this and I doubt that CDC or USAID are the agencies where the bloat is. Like I said, their actions seem vindictive and careless. Also, likely to result in legal cases that will drag for years and end up costing taxpayer more than the supposed savings.

The main con is that once you fire the workers that you thought you didn't need (but that you did indeed need) hiring them back becomes more expensive and a lengthy process. Some of the firings are already causing chaos in vital teams among several agencies and have forced DOGE to try to reverse course (bird flu monitoring, nuclear response...).

And that's not to mention the dire situation you put the people you are firing in. Laying off people from their jobs is never "an experiment" unless you are willing to suspend every trace of empathy.

u/wklauss

KarmaCake day1378July 27, 2012View Original