"Artificial general intelligence (AGI) is a type of artificial intelligence that matches or surpasses human capabilities across virtually all cognitive tasks."
AGI is when it can do all intellectual work that can be done by humans. It can improve its own intelligence and create a feedback loop because it is as smart as the humans who created it.
My point is that people making 200k-1000k are closer to middle class than billionaires. So it makes sense to me why they don't group themselves with the billionaires.
Anyways, I think the answer is just based on how you want to define middle and upper class.
Pay the 10x developers 3x to join your company. A lot of startups are just groups of very skilled engineers who have identified each other and left a behemoth together to work for themselves.
It's very hard to give 15+% raises at behemoths so there's always people who are very underpaid for what they do.
If someone wanted to sell a new app, they have to get people to recognize their brand and install their app no matter what.
Ride sharing companies then also have to reach a critical mass where drivers and riders can match in a reasonable time. I think overcoming that is the network effect.
This is why I think it's crucial to find a good engineering manager. He or she takes care of the politics for you and makes sure you're properly rewarded for your work. It lets you keep your head down and focus on tech.
They're usually a main contributor and value good code as much as you. They're surrounded by a set of engineers who have worked together for 5+ years. And most of these engineers have followed the manager from one company to the next.
If a company starts treating the group unfairly, they move on to the next company as a group.
Yea, the `catch` would probably have to set an 'errors' object on the response. The following `then` would then decide whether or not to throw an error based on that. Not pretty.
Also, I think `finally` makes your code easier to read. I always put the same kind of cleanup logic in there, everyone on the team knows what to expect in that block.
How about the return on PonziCoin everybody missed out on?
It's gone up about 10,000% in 2 months. Market cap should surpass global GDP mid-May next year.
There are other factors that also push up housing costs.
placeybordeaux just disagrees that NIMBYism is the ONLY factor.
I don't know if NIMBYism is even the primary factor.
For example, we have a small public transit network resulting in few options for high density construction.
There's a construction labor shortage that will likely worsen.
It's not like driving the wrong direction. Lets say you build 3 systems and only one gets used. You are still getting 3x the experience and your revelations could end up being very valuable for the system that does get used.
UBI avoids the step function where there is no (economic) incentive up until the "income floor". Policies like UBI could ally people (politically) of low to mid income.