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1 yr. ago

  • These sorts of preparations speak about the uncertainty mentioned in the article. That kind of uncertainty also hurts both countries. I don’t think there’s any net benefit to anyone.

  • Some highlights I found interesting:

    The tariffs have been met with deep anxiety in Canada, whose majority of exports are sold to companies and clients in the US. Officials predict up to a million job losses if a 25% across the board levy went ahead, while economists warn that a recession is imminent if they persist.

    Even with the tariffs being scaled back temporarily, the uncertainty alone is hurting both American and Canadian economies, says Rob Gillezeau, an assistant professor of economic analysis and policy at the University of Toronto.

    "The most sensitive thing to uncertainty is business investment," Prof Gillezeau says, adding that firms are "not going to want to spend a dime anywhere" until they have some clarity.

    That trepidation is also seen in the stock market, which had erased virtually all its gains since Trump won the presidency in November.

  • “Land of the free”, they said. Freedom of speech, and all that.

  • By eradicating one species, you're probably going to save the entire planet. I guess in 500 million years the descendants of modern crows could become the new dominant species and they'll end up nuking the planet sooner or later. You win some, you loose some.

  • The orientation of the connector occupies both states at the same time. If you look at it, the superposition collapses into either of the two.

  • Here's a twist I just came up with. We experience time passing, because we're sliding through it uncontrollably.

    Imagine a sled sliding downhill. If you wanted to stay still in time, that would take active effort. It's like pushing against the sled to prevent it from sliding down. If you want to go back where you came from, it would take even more effort. It's like climbing uphill.

    Also, I have zero evidence about any of this, which makes me 99% confident that time doesn't really work this way. It just sounds like an appealing concept that should be a foundation of a scifi novel.

  • Amazing! I need to check how many of my cables actually follow this rule.

    Also, the socket side tends to be aligned in a particular way, but it won't work with all manufacturers. I recall seeing some laptops that had their USB-A sockets upside down. Oh, and desktops too! Those sockets are usually vertical, and facing a wall, so it's anyone's guess which way is right.

  • That's cheating! You gotta wing it like a pro.

  • You need a strategy to reach your goals, and it should include getting enough sleep. Neglecting it will not help with your goals, unless one of them is to be as miserable as possible.

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  • Once you have the experience, you can go back to the city and actually get a nicer job that pays well. Until then, you can either relocate and get the experience, or stay in the city and get a McJob where you get zero experience.

  • The USB law.

    When you try to plug in a USB-A connector, there's a 70% probability it won't go in. Mathematically it should be 50%, but I don't believe that.

    You switch it around, and there's a 30% probability it won't go in. This is not something they taught at school.

    You switch it around the third time, and there's a 5% chance it still won't go in. Your mind begins to melt down, you switch and insert repeatedly until it finally works sooner or later.

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  • After graduating, I had to compete in a big city with people who have a higher degree and more experience than I do. Obviously, that didn't work out so well for me, so I ended up working in the wrong field for a while. I kept my eyes open, until eventually, I found the right job in a small town in the middle of nowhere. Turns out, there was hardly any competition, and I got the job. Being willing to relocate and having the right degree was all it took.

    Backwater places like that can't afford to demand 15 years of experience and a PhD in precisely the one thing they care about. If you have a degree in anything close enough, and are willing to relocate to a small town, you're in the top ten. If you happen to have the exact right degree, you're going to win hands down.

    Years later, I met some of my friends who stayed in the city. Oh boy, has it been rough for them! Several low-paying jobs in the wrong field, several career switches, more studying and all that.

    If you're a fresh graduate, here's my advice: If things don't work out in the city, consider relocating. When there's a job opportunity in a small town, apply anyway and see where that takes you.

  • It will make you angry and frustrated, if that's what you're looking for. Probably doesn't help with learning at all, quite the contrary. If you're interested and engaged with the material, you can learn so much faster. If you hate what you're doing, there will be very little progress, if any. Take a nap, and look at the material with fresh eyes when you feel better.

    There can also be something I call "mental inertia". Occasionally, it's difficult to get started. That's when a short warmup can help. Start with something easy, to get in the right mood. After that, you can tackle some of the harder problems.

  • There could have been a defect that caused immense stress in the glass. Alternatively, there could have been microscopic cracks caused by mishandling. Or both. Either way, a tiny temperature fluctuation was probably the final straw that broke the camel's back. The actual root cause probably happened several years ago.

  • Nowadays, things are documented pretty well. As long as the documentation is available, I don't think there's anything that would be common but mysterious.

    However, if data is lost, pretty much everything becomes a total mystery. Like, popsockets and phone cases for example. How would you figure those out in a thousand years if you haven't read any blog posts, reviews or marketing material about any of this stuff. If you don't know how expensive, fragile and useful phones are, and how would you figure it out that people are so worried about cracking the screen? Pretty much none of that data is on paper, so loosing that information can happen very easily.

  • Plastic crumbles to dust sooner or later. This means that most electronics are going to look pretty bizarre in a thousand years. Even common kitchen appliances use so much plastic, that they will look completely different. There are also a million ways you can make a kettle, so the remains of all of them won't look very similar, especially when all you have left is the metal parts.

  • Pretty much everyone has, but that's not the problem here. What if you don't really want to give them a unique identification number like that? What if you don't want them them to know you that well? What if you're not even planning to use your real name at all.

  • Back in the old days, you could register an account without giving your phone number. Nowadays, pretty much all the big social medias won't let you register an account without a number. I guess that's not a big problem for people who don't care about privacy, but for me that's a total deal breaker. This means, that there's a huge barrier to entry.

  • This kind of strategy will only make America lonely. Who can trust a partner like that?

  • That is a valid point. If we take those numbers with a hefty heap of salt, Reddit would still be 10x or 100x bigger than Lemmy.