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Posts
8
Comments
1,134
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • What about just a measurement base time? we could have that for given points in space time (ST) that accounts for other bodies as well?

    So earth is at a given apogee with other significant bodies (SBs) is one time zone

    We just increase the measurement of SBs until all the given points of a related points of ST (PSTs) when controlled for the gravity of SBs have the same time within a give precession range.

    Seems more scalable and better at accounting for the movement of SBs

  • Companies like Suse, redhat, gruntworks, etc etc all offer stuff like that. There is a clear model here. I think libs get little live because contracts are a lot if work so the smaller the contract the less it makes sense (to the people writing contracts).

    Maybe open source coop that sells support contracts for libs in bulk deals in the same a farmer coop sells bulk crops from famers all around an area.

  • Definitly seems like a good lesson in that some interesting urban planning alone won't fix every issue. A take that maybe more biased from my perspective, that an over emphasis on amenities over production (that ultimately pays for the amenities and the rest of peoples financially fufiled wants) is probably detrimental to both

  • Sick I might actually get a nebula account, though I worry about the legality (and accidentally supporting a proprietary entity right before it slaps this service down). Any details I'm missing that might assuage my fears?

  • There's gotta be a better way to verify programs then just what the devs do. For example patching the fuzzer, that should be seen as a clear separation of duties problem.

    That constant issue of low Dev/high use dependencies is awful and no one I've met on the business end can seem to figure out that need to support those kind of people or accept, what should frankly be, legal liability for what goes wrong. This isn't news its just a cover song. And its not an open source problem, its just a software problem. (

  • Housing cooperatives seem good. There have been some successful uses of community land trusts to keep prices in check too.

    Better laws surrounding collective loans feels necessary for medium density too high density housing to be bought up by groups tenets. This just an issue at large for community and worker owned coops in my experience. There are some creative crowd funding type bonds out there but its not very responsive and better suited for long term plannings then seizing on need or opportunity.

    Lastly there are tenet unions to at least mitigate the rise of rent and unmet obligations by land lords.

  • Rail for intercity/town transport plus bikes and buses/trams for in town is my dream set up.

    I just want to get to places quickly, safely, and without breaking the bank. It doesn't need to be bullet train for me, or with a quintuple 9 degree of safety and I would pay more in taxes or personal cost to have it. Just something better than the constant growing traffic and distances every year.

  • Subsidies. Both in form of roads and home ownership incentives being focused on single family homes. The fact that renting is the primary way to live in the city seems detrimental to it being cost effective too.

  • Unskilled labor is a myth but Boeing leadership bought into it. You can codify a lot but eventually with too much churn even the knowledge of the docs, and automation gets lost. Let alone the knowledge to improve or maintain that code. In software the idea "code rots" is true for a reason.

  • Do cp capture the raw bits like dd does?

    Not saying that its useful in the case you're describing but that's always been the reason I use it. When I want every bit on a disk copied to another disks, even the things with no meta data present.