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nicolashahn

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nicolashahn
·vor 9 Monaten·discuss
Because they're better than humans at driving in all other ways too? Why would cats be some outlier?
nicolashahn
·vor 9 Monaten·discuss
It's not a leap to say that a driver that's safer to humans is also safer to cats. Human drivers try to avoid hitting humans and cats. Waymos make less driving mistakes in general. They're also never inebriated, tired, or inexperienced.
nicolashahn
·vor 9 Monaten·discuss
Sad but at the end of the day Waymos are significantly less dangerous drivers than humans. If all cars on the street were Waymos, cats (and everyone else) would be much safer.

https://waymo.com/blog/2025/05/waymo-making-streets-safer-fo...

Though, Waymo should absolutely be responsible for this and be treated as if it were a human who hit the cat.
nicolashahn
·letztes Jahr·discuss
Income is inversely correlated with fertility

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Income_and_fertility
nicolashahn
·letztes Jahr·discuss
I found this article from 2017:

https://www.pewresearch.org/religion/2017/11/29/europes-grow...

The most recent birth rate stats I can find is 2005-2010 where Muslims have a birth rate of 3.0 while the rest of the country is at 1.8. Estimates say it's more like 2.5 now, but the current overall UK birth rate is only 1.57 from a quick Google.

https://assets.pewresearch.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/11/2...

The same article also states that the average age for Muslims is much lower than non-Muslims as of 2016, 28 vs 41 for the UK.

https://www.pewresearch.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/7/2017/...
nicolashahn
·letztes Jahr·discuss
The difference is that this is a change in the demographics of a population, not the overall growth, which is limited by resources available. The growth of Islam isn't constrained by anything other than the cultural practices that lead to them having more children than the rest of the population and the tolerance of the country for immigration. These things could definitely shift to balance the scales but there's no guarantee that happens and there have absolutely been many times in history where a native population has been displaced by the growth of an immigrant group.

Stepping back a bit, Pew expects Islam to overtake Christianity as the dominant world religion in a few decades: https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2017/04/06/why-musli...
nicolashahn
·letztes Jahr·discuss
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nicolashahn
·letztes Jahr·discuss
You're not comparing the same stats. The original stat was growth rate compared to the rest of the country. Islam's overall growth rate has been fairly steady for decades, although admittedly it has slowed, but at a rate that could conceivably stop above Christianity, which your chart shows is decreasing about as rapidly as Islam is rising. I think it's reasonable to project that it may settle below Islam eventually. Realistically, there will be continued backlash by native English and that may temper immigration, though even if immigration stops, the birth rate of Muslims in the UK is still much higher than native population.

However - if we're including atheist then clearly that'll be the majority position.
nicolashahn
·letztes Jahr·discuss
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nicolashahn
·letztes Jahr·discuss
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nicolashahn
·letztes Jahr·discuss
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nicolashahn
·letztes Jahr·discuss
I said "on the way to".

> Between 2001 and 2009, the Muslim population increased almost 10 times faster than the non-Muslim population.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islam_in_the_United_Kingdom?wp...

Granted 2009 was a while ago but they're still the fastest growing population in the UK by a lot.
nicolashahn
·letztes Jahr·discuss
Raising the birth rate is extremely difficult and immigration will destroy a country's culture if not managed properly.

For an interesting case study, compare Japan (who refuses to allow mass immigration and is at risk of going extinct) and the UK (who has embraced it and is on the way to becoming Muslim-majority). It'll be interesting to see in 50 years which one has had better outcomes.
nicolashahn
·letztes Jahr·discuss
So close! Pensions are actually property taken from the younger generation and given to retirees.
nicolashahn
·letztes Jahr·discuss
I feel like there really hasn't been sincere data-backed methods with proper resources behind them, for example governments giving out minor cash benefits to parents of a few thousand dollars when that's a drop in the bucket compared to the total cost of raising a kid and is not going to convince anyone who wasn't already going to have kids.

Also, that's a wild solution. You'd have to do away with monogamy which would cause some pretty insane societal shifts. However, as a straight guy I can see the appeal lol.
nicolashahn
·vor 4 Jahren·discuss
I don't have hard data (do you?) but all bootcampers we were working with were laid off and threads on Blind seem to indicate bootcamper layoffs were heavy
nicolashahn
·vor 4 Jahren·discuss
Recent hires who haven't yet been allocated to a team, though they do work with teams on real tasks and produce code. Usually non-specialists, though some like ML engineers do go through bootcamp.
nicolashahn
·vor 4 Jahren·discuss
Nope, other comments are correct, Reality Labs, aka AR/VR and other hardware
nicolashahn
·vor 4 Jahren·discuss
Some data from the inside:

Reality Labs (AR/VR) hit less hard than the rest of the company. No one on my team or adjacent teams let go.

Most bootcampers (unallocated new hires) are gone, even ones that were performing well.

Low performer from my past team outside RL was let go, so it appears performance was a factor for a lot of roles, rather than just axing entire teams based on business need.

edit: updated to clear up some confusion about the meaning of RL and bootcampers