blueworld

joined 5 months ago
[–] blueworld@piefed.world 10 points 1 day ago

AI slop which has been assembled, me thinks.

[–] blueworld@piefed.world 26 points 1 week ago (1 children)

According to a new POLITICO poll, half of all Americans are finding it difficult to afford food. Even more damaging for Trump, a majority (55%) blames his administration. So Democrats were quick to pounce on his absurd advice. Sen. Ruben Gallego of Arizona posted on X, “Trump needs private jets and an Oval Office covered in gold but your kid only needs one pencil.” 

And because the president is nothing if not predictable, his speech eventually strayed from the economic gaslighting, quickly devolving into angry tangents about alternative energy, immigrants and other odd grievances.

In a particularly baffling moment, Trump attacked the concept of energy storage despite Pennsylvania having recently secured hundreds of jobs with a new zinc battery factory. “They want us to go to batteries!” he jeered. “We don’t have battery content. So let’s go to batteries according to these morons that were in our country.”

[–] blueworld@piefed.world 2 points 3 weeks ago

I love it, but is anyone supporting the bug fixes for security?

[–] blueworld@piefed.world 31 points 4 weeks ago (8 children)

This article is framed from a capitalist CEO, and while it touches on reality, feels incredibly lost in it's point.

Cassandra Cummings, CEO of New Jersey-based electronics design company Thomas Instrumentation. ...

Both the cellular and internet infrastructure has to operate to be backwards compatible in order to support the older, slower devices. Networks often have to throttle back their speeds in order to accommodate the slowest device

I'd Boohoo, if they actually were thinking about rebuilding the network stack to consider something like MultiPathTCP and reframed the devices to actually use all the networks they were on rather than a single one... But no they want you to by a single provider and depend on that plan... For the economy.

Further Telecoms choose not to upgrade towers (to save costs). In 2023, AT&T/Verizon spent $10B less on network upgrades than projected. Because they were being profit-driven underinvestment.

She does go on to say:

To ease the transition to new technologies, she says there should be designs that are repairable or modular rather than the constant purge and replace cycles. “So perhaps future devices can have a partial upgrade in say ethernet communications rather than forcing someone to purchase an entirely new computer or device,” Cummings said. “I’m not a fan of the throw-away culture we have these days. It may help the economy to spend more and force upgrades, but does it really help people who are already struggling to pay bills?” she said.

So slightly redeeming.

The article also makes note of repairing:

He adds that when people hold onto their phones or laptops for five or six years, the repair and refurbishment market becomes an active part of the economy. But right now, in both European, American, and global markets, too much of that happens in the shadows.

But this attempt to point out that productivity is lost on old devices:

The price to the organization is then paid in lack of productivity, inability to multitask and innovate, and needless, additional hours of work that stack up. Workplace research conducted by Diversified last year found that 24% of employees work late or overtime due to aging technology issues, while 88% of employees report that inadequate workplace technology stifles innovation. Kornweiss says he doesn’t expect there’s been any improvement in those numbers over the past year.

There’s a disconnect between the numbers and behavior. Many workers report that aging devices stifle productivity, but like a favorite pair of shoes or an old sweater, they don’t want to give them up to learn the intricacies of a new device (which they’ll learn and then have to replace with another). Familiarity can trump productivity for many workers. But the result of that IT clinginess is felt in the bottom line.

Fails to point out the waste of resources and it's impact on climate, health, and the economy; loss of privacy and it's impact on democracy, health, and yes the economy; and also how often new things don't actually help productivity...

Some how the "Upgrade to help the economy" falls flat when you consider Windows 11 and it's non-upgrade upgrade. Or MS Office which is still producing Word/Excel/PowerPoint/etc decades later with the same shortcuts. Your ‘productivity lag’ is your boss refusing to train you not your laptop

I mean if upgrade = economy, why does Apple sit on $165B in cash? They should spend it — not you!

Profit-driven innovation that wants to sell us the same iPhone with a new camera, is not helping the economy. We need real innovation that disrupts big tech as much as it disrupts everything.

Oh and that 'business equipment investment' from the fed was about factory robots and large capital investments, not phones.

[–] blueworld@piefed.world 5 points 4 weeks ago

Indeed, tis a cute jest about Confirmation Bias, which is fair in polling given the challenge it is.

Just a note that Real clear politics, the owner of realclearpolling.com was considered nonpartisan until a few years when more conservative influences have taken root. I point it out in contrast to Nate Silver who tends to lean left a bit.

[–] blueworld@piefed.world 12 points 1 month ago (3 children)

I agree with the sentiment, but disagree with the polling.

https://www.natesilver.net/p/trump-approval-ratings-nate-silver-bulletin Show's the Cheeto down

RCP shows him at least level with a few weeks ago, and way down overall.

https://www.realclearpolling.com/polls/approval/donald-trump/approval-rating

There are others as well, but basically, he's beginning to hurt hard on some of the issues and that's making midterms looks difficult for the Republican next year. It's telling to me that he's stopped his tariff crusade, especially lifting ones on food. Also did the ACA extension, in spite of being so against it that he wanted to remove the filibuster. His staff is desperate for big wins and he's been stymied in finding them when the courts reject his deployments, curtail or.monitor his ICE raids, and even reject his parties gerrymandering attempts. Many many people are beginning to just ignore his histrionic, such as Ukraine and Europe, as well as China.

In essence, while I am not as optimistic as the article, as I think he's got lots of damage to be done under the news radar (like gutting the edu dept), I do think the middle ground who voted him in (the middle 20% of voting Americans, not the conservative 40%, or progressive 40%) has come to realize the folly of their choice... Or begun to.

[–] blueworld@piefed.world 2 points 1 month ago (1 children)

What's your use case?

[–] blueworld@piefed.world 7 points 1 month ago (1 children)

What the fuck is with this article? All over the place. Horrible read. Two relevant paragraphs.

Eight Senate Democrats caved to Donald Trump and voted to approve a budget deal with Republicans to end the government shutdown, angering their colleagues in Congress as well as their own party’s base.

These eight senators, including independent Angus King who caucuses with the party, are all either retiring or up for reelection years from now. They likely feel that they won’t have to pay an electoral cost for failing to stand up for Democrats’ goal of extending health care subsidies, instead settling for a future vote on the matter.

The full list of these Democrats is below:

Senator Richard Durbin (Illinois, retiring) Senator Angus King (Maine, term ends in 2030) Senator Catherine Cortez Masto (Nevada, term ends in 2028) Senator Jacky Rosen (Nevada, term ends in 2030) Senator Maggie Hassan (New Hampshire, term ends in 2028) Senator Jeanne Shaheen (New Hampshire, retiring) Senator John Fetterman (Pennsylvania, 2028) Senator Tim Kaine (Virginia, 2030)

[–] blueworld@piefed.world 7 points 1 month ago

How can a company with $13 billion in revenue make $1.4 trillion in spending commitments?

Sam then goes on an unhinged rant, claiming OpenAI makes "way more revenue than that" and defensively telling Gerstner what he can do next.

...

In the past few months alone, OpenAI has racked up commitments of nearly $1.5 trillion, including:

$250 billion with Microsoft - using Azure cloud platform capacity

$500 billion with Oracle - for cloud computing capacity

$38 billion with Amazon - for use of AWS data center capacity

$22.4 billion with CoreWeave - for GPU cloud capacity

$100 billion - in general data center buildout, committed to using Nvidia GPUs

"tens of billions" with AMD - to deploy AMD Instinct GPUs

"undisclosed" with Broadcom - to design and produce in-house AI accelerators

OpenAI literally does not have the money to pay for these commitments. Its estimated top-line annual revenue of $13 billion doesn't even cover its costs, let alone provide for profit. In fact, OpenAI is currently incinerating cash, reporting a net loss of $11.5 billion in the past quarter ending September 30, 2025. That is insane. That is not a company prepared to spend a trillion dollars on infrastructure buildout.

...

 

While many observers predicted chaos, visitors who headed to NPS-managed sites over the summer mostly saw parks that seemed to be functioning as normal. The bathrooms were clean, the trash picked up, the visitor centers staffed.

Behind that veneer of normalcy, though, all was not well. Outside Articles Editor Fred Dreier spent two months talking to active and former rangers at Rocky Mountain National Park and learned how staff cuts—and now a government shutdown—have stretched some of them to their breaking point.

....

And what people told me is, “Look, the people who work at the NPS care a lot about their jobs. And they’re going to do everything within their power to make sure it seems like things are not falling apart. They are going to do so at the sacrifice of their own mental and physical well-being. They’re going to take on extra shifts and work long hours and do these things to make sure that the park appears like it’s working normal, even though they’re going to have to really step up to do it.”

And so that’s the thrust of the story, is about how the people at Rocky Mountain National Park, the rangers, the full-time rangers—they lost anywhere from 30 to 40 of their co-workers—but they are stepping up to fill those jobs and to fill those positions. And by doing so, they are having to take on lots of overtime, lots of extra shifts, and work these insanely long weeks and long hours to make sure everything is working well. But they are doing so at the sacrifice of their own mental and emotional well-being.

...

things have always been tough and it’s always been a labor of love, but this is the year that it reached a ridiculous level of physical and emotional strife. My sources told me they saw people breaking down in tears on their job, searching for other jobs, just having really, really difficult situations.

And park management knows this. One of the most pressing parts of my story was that I obtained an email that was sent from an NPS full-time employee at Rocky Mountain National Park to management as a ‘reply all’ to a message that had been sent by the park superintendent. And in this email, the NPS worker said, “This is beyond what I’ve ever seen. I’ve worked for the NPS for 12 years. I’ve worked for the Forest Service. I’ve worked for the BLM. And I’ve never seen a park unit so understaffed, so overworked, and seen people pushed so to their breaking point. And we need relief. We need some type of light at the end of the tunnel that’s coming.” And from what I understand, that was not addressed by park management.

...

 

I was reading the article from the Pew research on recent poll numbers, and was wondering if anyone knew if national crime stats have actually gone down? (Reflecting the impression that the poll indicates.) My guess is they haven't. I'm lost in other projects at the moment, but would be curious if anyone has good sources or knowledge on this?

 

While there may not be wholesale changes to the NYPD if Tisch stays as police commissioner, there would be new initiatives under Mamdani, such as a new civilian agency called the Department of Community Safety. The agency would focus on a community-based prevention approach targeting homelessness and people experiencing mental illness.

Its hallmark won’t be adding more police but rather adding more mental health professionals and violence interrupters – a plan Mamdani says he hopes would free up officers to respond to other crimes.

...

Looming in the distance as well is the threat of potential federal intervention into crime-fighting in New York City, should Mamdani win the election.

Mamdani has spoken out about President Donald Trump sending National Guard troops into Democrat-run major cities, a move the president says is to restore law and order. Mamdani previously told CNN he would respond to the attempt by filing a lawsuit.

 

cross-posted from: https://piefed.world/post/533816

...

CNN asked Miller whether the Trump Administration will abide by a district judge’s order blocking the Guard’s deployment in Oregon. “Well, the Administration filed an appeal this morning with the Ninth Circuit,” Miller began. “I would note the Administration won an identical case in the Ninth Circuit just a few months ago with respect to the federalizing of the California National Guard.”

Then, Miller said: “Under Title 10 of the U.S. Code, the President has plenary authority, has—” before making an abrupt stop. Miller blinked several times, with anchor Boris Sanchez calling out his name, though he still did not respond.

...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plenary_power

A plenary power or plenary authority is a complete and absolute power to take action on a particular issue, with no limitations.

 

...

CNN asked Miller whether the Trump Administration will abide by a district judge’s order blocking the Guard’s deployment in Oregon. “Well, the Administration filed an appeal this morning with the Ninth Circuit,” Miller began. “I would note the Administration won an identical case in the Ninth Circuit just a few months ago with respect to the federalizing of the California National Guard.”

Then, Miller said: “Under Title 10 of the U.S. Code, the President has plenary authority, has—” before making an abrupt stop. Miller blinked several times, with anchor Boris Sanchez calling out his name, though he still did not respond.

...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plenary_power

A plenary power or plenary authority is a complete and absolute power to take action on a particular issue, with no limitations.

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