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skx001

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China Makes History with $1T Trade Surplus for First Time

fortune.com
10 points·by skx001·vor 7 Monaten·1 comments

The Core Misconception That Is Driving American AI Policy

garymarcus.substack.com
3 points·by skx001·vor 7 Monaten·2 comments

TIME's Top Photos of 2025

time.com
3 points·by skx001·vor 7 Monaten·0 comments

How Much Wealth an AI Stock Market Crash Could Destroy

economist.com
43 points·by skx001·vor 7 Monaten·103 comments

Gen Z Loses Faith in America

axios.com
9 points·by skx001·vor 7 Monaten·1 comments

Harvard Youth Poll – Gen Z Is Rapidly Losing Faith in America

iop.harvard.edu
10 points·by skx001·vor 7 Monaten·4 comments

New Interview - Michael Burry from the Big Short Speaks [video]

youtube.com
3 points·by skx001·vor 7 Monaten·0 comments

Amazon Previews 3 AI Agents, Including 'Kiro' That Can Code on Its Own for Days

techcrunch.com
1 points·by skx001·vor 7 Monaten·1 comments

Time Became Money: Clocks, Capitalism and Wealth

ft.com
3 points·by skx001·vor 7 Monaten·0 comments

OpenAI's Sam Altman Declares 'Code Red' After Rivals Make Advances

ft.com
2 points·by skx001·vor 7 Monaten·1 comments

Yttrium – The Rare Earth Metal Driving Tensions Between the US and China

wired.com
1 points·by skx001·vor 7 Monaten·0 comments

'Rage Bait' Named Oxford Word of the Year 2025

bbc.com
6 points·by skx001·vor 7 Monaten·0 comments

AlphaFold Is Five Years Old – These Charts Show How It Revolutionized Science

nature.com
3 points·by skx001·vor 7 Monaten·0 comments

A Visual Guide to How the Hong Kong Fire Spread

bbc.co.uk
10 points·by skx001·vor 7 Monaten·3 comments

OpenAI Partners Amass $100B Debt Pile to Fund Its Ambitions

ft.com
6 points·by skx001·vor 7 Monaten·5 comments

China's Tech Giants Take AI Model Training Offshore to Tap Nvidia Chips

ft.com
4 points·by skx001·vor 7 Monaten·0 comments

14M Requests 1 Engineer: How Ghost Runs a 50k-Site Directory on Laravel Cloud

laravel.com
1 points·by skx001·vor 7 Monaten·0 comments

Chile's Route 7: One of the Last Great Road Trips

bbc.com
5 points·by skx001·vor 8 Monaten·0 comments

MUMPS – The Curious Database Powering America's Hospitals [video]

youtube.com
5 points·by skx001·vor 8 Monaten·0 comments

Nvidia Plays Down Google Chip Threat Concerns

bbc.com
1 points·by skx001·vor 8 Monaten·0 comments

comments

skx001
·vor 7 Monaten·discuss
https://archive.md/wfjPS
skx001
·vor 7 Monaten·discuss
And China is really good at executing on long term 5-10 year plans. I am sure they have really smart scientists advising the government to pace themselves unlike the US where pretty much all of the GDP growth came from AI spend.
skx001
·vor 7 Monaten·discuss
"paying an ad-tax to the gatekeepers of eyeballs" is such a great analogy for paying for google/fb ads. Its disheartening that to sell anything online you have to pay these companies thousands of dollars just to get in front of people.
skx001
·vor 7 Monaten·discuss
Yes, it would assuming pension funds have AI/Tech stock exposure.

- A rule of thumb suggested by one study is that every $100 drop in stock market wealth leads, on average, to a $3.20 drop in consumer spending. Under such an assumption, a dotcom-style crash would cut American consumption by about $890bn, or 2.9% of GDP.
skx001
·vor 7 Monaten·discuss
A rule of thumb suggested by one study is that every $100 drop in stock market wealth leads, on average, to a $3.20 drop in consumer spending. Under such an assumption, a dotcom-style crash would cut American consumption by about $890bn, or 2.9% of GDP.
skx001
·vor 7 Monaten·discuss
- The above totals do not include indirect holdings-such as investments via pension funds and life-insurance companies-of which American households have some $20T.
skx001
·vor 7 Monaten·discuss
https://archive.md/EzGW2

- A drop in nominal values on the same scale as the dotcom bust would wipe out $16T, or 8% of American household wealth. Foreign investors would lose $7T.
skx001
·vor 7 Monaten·discuss
The industry will truly only find out how well AI adoption is going if it allows users both internal (employees, tech workers) and external (general users/consumers) to fully opt-out.

AI is being forced down peoples' throat. Millions want to but cannot disable Gemini from Gmail. Many SWEs don't want to use AI tools but managers are forcing them to do so.

How do you know if something is really liked/needed/wanted when there is no opt-out?
skx001
·vor 7 Monaten·discuss
Key points:

- Overall, 59 percent said they regard AI as a threat to their future job prospects, far more than immigration (31 percent).

- 43 percent said they were already struggling financially or had limited financial security.

- Fifty seven percent felt the country is headed down the wrong path. During the 2009 recession, that number was only 37 percent.

- When asked about political violence, 28 percent said they view it as “acceptable when the government violates individual rights.”
skx001
·vor 7 Monaten·discuss
Official Harvard IOP report here https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46153748
skx001
·vor 7 Monaten·discuss
The above is the official report from Harvard IOP.

Article below

Discuss article here https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46153770
skx001
·vor 7 Monaten·discuss
Start with this while I come up with a thoughtful comment of my own.

https://www.swyx.io/marketing-yourself
skx001
·vor 7 Monaten·discuss
https://archive.md/WnDwm
skx001
·vor 7 Monaten·discuss
This video shows the the A320 computer and how the computer cooling system works

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HQuc_HhW6VA
skx001
·vor 8 Monaten·discuss
https://archive.md/ZlpjF
skx001
·vor 8 Monaten·discuss
Link works now.
skx001
·vor 8 Monaten·discuss
> Yes, it's easy to build entire cities from scratch in a centrally managed society, such as a dictatorship or communist nations.

I would like to pushback on this assumption. I made that point because you mentioned Canada and its rapid immigration rise in the last 5 years. Western countries, namely Canada can do a lot to build more to ease the pressures on its housing demand.

Vast amounts of land is available to build amazing cities. There are specialist architect firms that can plan the most beautiful, walkable, livable, affordable cities very close to major hubs and metros currently.

In the 50s/60s/70s these very Western countries, spent a lot and built all kinds of infrastructure which led to meaningful increases in quality of life and perhaps created the most prosperous generation in these countries.

Even now when any government in the West wants to really do something, they don't really care about anything and it gets done, the money magically appears, the votes are found no matter how unpopular it may be. But for some reason building infrastructure, housing, mass transit has been completely forgotten.

The real bottlenecks are governance, bureaucracy, and NIMBYism. Like a few comments above pointed out, its keeping boomers happy with their high property values at the expense of the young.

Some things just don't make sense to me as an outsider. A few examples I read recently.

[1] It will take three decades to turn an 18-mile stretch of the A66 road in northern England into a dual carriageway. [2] It will take 20+ years just to add another runway at Heathrow London and cost $64 Billion Dollars! [3] While Dubai is building a brand new whole airport for $35 Billion, I think the worlds largest when its finished.

Nearly all of the political problems in Canada, UK, Australia and much of the US (NYC,SF, etc.) will completely go away if they had the "Build, Baby Build" attitude. Just build housing like there is no tomorrow.

There is no such thing as an "oversupply" of a basic human need, livable shelter.

I can assure you, knowing how Asian countries like China approach governance, Chinese cities will have no major issues in 50+ years. Any outstanding issues will will resolved well before they start to become a problem with various 5-10 year plans. The same for Malaysia, Singapore etc.

[1] https://archive.md/PcOZV

[2] https://www.reuters.com/world/uk/uk-chooses-heathrow-airport...

[3] https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/2024/4/29/dubais-ruler-ann...
skx001
·vor 8 Monaten·discuss
https://archive.md/ANFEW
skx001
·vor 8 Monaten·discuss
The West just refuses to build anything. Whereas in Asia its not uncommon to build entire cites from scratch.
skx001
·vor 8 Monaten·discuss
Alternative Link: https://www.aa.com.tr/en/asia-pacific/jakarta-world-s-most-p...

Key Facts: Number of megacities, urban areas with 10 million or more inhabitants has quadrupled from 8 in 1975 to 33 in 2025.

Jakarta is now the world’s most populous city, with nearly 42 million residents. The current population of Indonesia is 286 million.

In 2019, Indonesia said it will be moving its capital to Nusantara, a new city which is under construction.