JSMinPA

4.9K posts

JSMinPA

JSMinPA

@JSMinPA1

Katılım Mart 2021
322 Takip Edilen101 Takipçiler
JSMinPA
JSMinPA@JSMinPA1·
@drgurner @DrClaytonForre1 The latest green card requirements will greatly diminish the number of talented people coming to the US.
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Dr. Clayton Forrester
Dr. Clayton Forrester@DrClaytonForre1·
Capital and talent always flow to where it is treated best. Where will it go if the U.S. melts down? Maybe China, except China isn't pro-immigration.
Balaji@balajis

Unfortunately, I completely agree that the United States of America is rapidly descending into all-out conflict between left and right. The Luigi left, Kirk killers, anti-Tesla terrorists, and Altman attackers are already in shoot-on-sight mode against conservatives, libertarians, and technologists. The right isn’t there yet; they’re called reactionaries because they only react, so they’re always one cycle behind. Thus, the left has already started shooting while the right is still “only” mirroring the lawfare of last decade’s left. But anyone can see how incandescently angry the American right is getting, so one can expect them to mirror leftist tactics eventually, just as J6 followed BLM. A problem then arises. You see, when communists and nationalists duke it out, technologists tend to be hated by both sides…and tend to leave. That’s what happened in Europe. In the early 1900s, Europe was the undisputed center of science. But then the far left rose to power in Russia, and in response arose a far right in Germany, and then those two psychotic factions blew each other up and took much of Europe with them. The result was that scientists with options left. Shown below is the graph of Nobel prizes. Science used to be centered in Europe when America was still a relative backwater…renowned for cranking out widgets but not much else. Then, as Europe tore itself apart, the smart scientists (and capitalists) simply left for America. Many had no choice; you just couldn’t be a Russian capitalist in the Soviet Union or a Jewish scientist in Nazi Germany, no matter how many years your family might have been in the country. Passionate protestations of ideological loyalty and everlasting patriotism didn’t matter. At best the enemy classes and races were unbanked and denaturalized; at worst they were simply killed. And arguably, all of that — the communism, the nationalism, the wars — all of that arose from the disruption wrought by the Industrial Revolution. We might anticipate similar levels of disruption from the Information Revolution. If so, if America is torn between Democrats and Republicans, or Wokes and MAGAs, or whatever factions succeed them, it’s just not going to be a good place for technological progress. Instead, progress will decentralize to other locations around the world, as it did before.

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christian
christian@cxgonzalez·
whatever you were into at 16 is what you were born to do
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Bags
Bags@0xbags·
first brew in the new coffee cup the wife made me
Bags tweet media
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JSMinPA
JSMinPA@JSMinPA1·
@rpondiscio You'd also need to address lack of parental support/guidance and the school district bureaucratic machine. And you'd still not have addressed all the dipshits who think that anyone can teach. Also you'd need to provide breakfast and lunches for kids so they are adequately fed.
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JSMinPA
JSMinPA@JSMinPA1·
@rpondiscio It's a partial fix. And the pay would have to be significantly higher to help stem the losses of teachers during their first 5 years of teaching. You still haven't addressed lack of school funding/teachers having to pay out of pocket for materials every year.
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JSMinPA
JSMinPA@JSMinPA1·
@Ariannnyy_ @jefflynw4646 Water mains. Increased water to an area/fixing water usually only happens if the city thinks that area is going to need it.
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Annalise Keating
Annalise Keating@Ariannnyy_·
@jefflynw4646 That’s interesting. My research identified several early indicators of gentrification, including increased police presence, expanded access to rapid transit, sudden investment in sidewalks and street lighting Their makes me wanna revisit
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Bags
Bags@0xbags·
@VNTGPRN got a haircut today too and walked out shockingly even more good looking than before, amazing tech
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JSMinPA
JSMinPA@JSMinPA1·
@USofWhatevs @EricBalchunas Its designed to make sure you understand the principles of phospholipid bilayers, cell membranes, vesicles, etc.
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Eric Balchunas
Eric Balchunas@EricBalchunas·
Helping my 15yr old prep for biology final exam. It’s like another language. Just curious if anyone knows the answer to this one? (Every q is like this)
Eric Balchunas tweet media
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JSMinPA
JSMinPA@JSMinPA1·
@drgurner @magills_ Remember in 2008 when food suppliers shrank the size of various items to keep the prices the same and/or increased the prices because the gas went up. Yeah the prices never went back down. The size of a pint of ice cream never recovered. A pound of coffee became 12oz.
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Dr. Julie Gurner
Dr. Julie Gurner@drgurner·
@magills_ Everything has definitely been broken since 2020, but don't you think it should have returned by now?
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Magills
Magills@magills_·
Lunch costs $28 because you freaked out about the flu
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JSMinPA
JSMinPA@JSMinPA1·
@juchawild @TheFlowHorse Also, with the closing of a lot of hospitals, there isn't one within a reasonable distance in a lot of rural areas now. So you can't get sick or have an accident.
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Horse
Horse@TheFlowHorse·
Crazy how different things are. 20 years ago you could own a home, raise a family, and put kids through college being like a guy who handled the power tools section in Home Depot, or working a deli. My dad did it cleaning floors. Now? No chance. Priced out of a good life.
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JSMinPA
JSMinPA@JSMinPA1·
@juchawild @TheFlowHorse Three things. One you have to get a decent job which there aren't many of in the country/middle of nowhere. Secondly, the education is usually lacking. Third, if you try to ever sell your house, it will take forever because you have to find someone with money to buy it.
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JSMinPA
JSMinPA@JSMinPA1·
@SolanaRules @TheFlowHorse Goes back further than that. Nixon going to China opened up US markets and allowed US companies to establish over there.
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sol.gene
sol.gene@SolanaRules·
@TheFlowHorse Ronald Reagan, simple as that. CEO's made 10-12 times the assembly line worker, now it's in the multiples of thousands. Both parents work, rent, live month to month and pay half a salary for childcare. Where their taxes could help they instead will go to J6ers. U.S. is cooked.
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Dyme
Dyme@CryptoParadyme·
@TheFlowHorse I remember $20 used to fill a shopping cart in the 90's. It was a chunk of change. Now $20 is nothing.
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charlie marketplace
charlie marketplace@charliemktplace·
@therollupco Interesting - someone should tell the coingecko top 15 Centralized Exchanges that L2s don't make sense! Cause almost 1/2 are running optimism based L2s.
charlie marketplace tweet media
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The Rollup
The Rollup@therollupco·
"L2s were a failed experiment. App chains were a failed experiment outside of Hyperliquid." Logan Jastremski reveals why he hasn't thought about Ethereum since 2021: "L2s never made sense. A transaction is just bytes. An L2 compresses 5 bytes to 1 byte. If you want compression, why apply it to a low-throughput chain instead of a high-throughput one?" "Ethereum is mostly an artifact of people making money in the early days. From an institutional and product use case standpoint, it's largely dead. The most overvalued asset in the world."
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Peter Haymond
Peter Haymond@peterhaymond·
@therollupco Coinbase and Robinhood are literally building L2s on Ethereum infrastructure. The Ethereum vision increasingly looks like neutral settlement, institutional trust and app-specific execution layered on top.
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JSMinPA
JSMinPA@JSMinPA1·
@TheLaurenChen Restaurants-cost of labor, cost of rent, cost of produce/meats/material, cost of electricity and gas, cost of kitchen equipment to outfit the kitchen, cost of front of the house decor and furniture. Cost of maintaining certifications and inspections. Probably more I'm forgetting.
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JSMinPA
JSMinPA@JSMinPA1·
@TheLaurenChen Food trucks-cost of prep kitchen, cost of storage facility for food truck, cost of gas for generator, cost of food and material, cost of licenses to serve food and permits to sell food in a given area, cost of labor if you aren't running the truck yourself, cost of insurance.
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