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cs702

38,137 karmajoined 15 years ago
https://news.ycombinator.com/user?id=cs702

Submissions

How Liberal Law School professors fueled rise of Federalist Society

news.harvard.edu
1 points·by cs702·3 days ago·0 comments

The Bessent Doctrine (Essay by Mohammed El-Erian)

nytimes.com
3 points·by cs702·3 days ago·0 comments

How Modern life compounds the ancient struggle to belong

current.fas.harvard.edu
4 points·by cs702·16 days ago·3 comments

Venezuela reveals $240B in debt it cannot pay (~$100B more than expected)

euronews.com
87 points·by cs702·17 days ago·105 comments

Nvidia unveils general-purpose chip for laptops and desktop PCs

tomshardware.com
5 points·by cs702·last month·0 comments

The Oil Shocks of the 1970s

energyhistory.yale.edu
3 points·by cs702·4 months ago·0 comments

AI hallucinations haunt users more than job losses

ft.com
6 points·by cs702·4 months ago·1 comments

What Does Extreme Wealth Do to the Brain?

nymag.com
4 points·by cs702·4 months ago·0 comments

Guest Essay: America Cannot Withstand the Economic Shock That's Coming

nytimes.com
9 points·by cs702·4 months ago·3 comments

Ask HN: What can humans do that intelligent machines will not be able to do?

4 points·by cs702·4 months ago·0 comments

Limitations on Safe, Trusted, Artificial General Intelligence

arxiv.org
2 points·by cs702·4 months ago·0 comments

Wall Street hit by UK mortgage lender collapse, raising fears

reuters.com
8 points·by cs702·4 months ago·0 comments

New Credit Blowup in London Has Wall Street Chasing Billions

bloomberg.com
1 points·by cs702·4 months ago·0 comments

"If there is reincarnation, I want to come back as the bond market."

quote.org
2 points·by cs702·4 months ago·1 comments

The Dance of the Naked Emperors

experimental-history.com
3 points·by cs702·5 months ago·0 comments

The rise and fall of peer review

experimental-history.com
3 points·by cs702·5 months ago·0 comments

Artist who “paints” portraits on glass by hitting it with a hammer

simonbergerart.com
256 points·by cs702·5 months ago·109 comments

Corporate America demands refunds after tariffs are struck down

ft.com
10 points·by cs702·5 months ago·1 comments

Mohammed El-Erian on prominent private credit fund halting redemptions

twitter.com
2 points·by cs702·5 months ago·1 comments

Opinion: The Finance Industry Is a Grift. Let's Start Treating It That Way

nytimes.com
7 points·by cs702·5 months ago·1 comments

comments

cs702
·14 hours ago·discuss
The OP talks about the drought extensively. Quoting:

> there is quite a lot of compelling evidence that period of LBAC [late bronze age collapse], especially the 1190s, was unusually dry in the Eastern Mediterranean, which would have caused reduced agricultural output (crop failures). Interestingly, this would be most immediately impactful in areas engaged primarily in rainfall agriculture (Greece, Anatolia, the Levant) and less impactful in areas engaged more in irrigation agriculture (Egypt, Mesopotamia).³ And, oh look, the areas where LBAC was more severe are in the rainfall zone and the areas where it was less severe are in the irrigation zone.
cs702
·yesterday·discuss
It's not hard to imagine that will be able to do as good a job as a human accountant in the not too distant future.

It's also not hard to imagine tax authorities using AI to audit everyone's tax returns every year.

We sure live in interesting times.
cs702
·2 days ago·discuss
Arguably, they're a better choice for customers than a shutdown.

I mean, they're at least keeping the service alive for as long as possible.
cs702
·2 days ago·discuss
Yes, agree.
cs702
·2 days ago·discuss
Think of it as a perpetual bond with declining coupon payments.

Customer "inertia" or "lock-in" might be better terms to describe what the company is looking for in an acquisition.

Their ideal customer may well be someone who's forgotten they have a subscription on credit card auto-pay.
cs702
·2 days ago·discuss
Also, in case you didn't already know, I saw a headline announcing that the sky is usually blue.
cs702
·2 days ago·discuss
Bending Spoons is a company that acquires SaaS companies/products that are not growing or losing users but have a well-known brand and customers who stick around.

The execs at Bending Spoon buy these SaaS services on the cheap, cut costs, jack up prices, and milk remaining users for as much cash as possible for as long as possible.

Rinse and repeat. The goal is to generate the highest possible rate of return on invested capital in a law-abiding manner.
cs702
·2 days ago·discuss
The little photo of the guy with a top hat, dancing, with high-wire towers behind him, cracked me up. It's a literal "high-wire act!"
cs702
·4 days ago·discuss
> the economy is filled with bullshit jobs, bullshit corporations, and bullshit products.

Yeah, it sure feels true.

There's even a book about it, you know, to help people cope with it:

https://press.princeton.edu/books/hardcover/9780691276786/on...
cs702
·5 days ago·discuss
Yeah, that's true. Sigh.
cs702
·5 days ago·discuss
Sure, touchscreens are cheap, but high-quality touchscreen software is most def NOT CHEAP!

Apple and Google have spent untold amounts of money developing iOS and Android. CarPlay and Android Auto are really nice.

Tesla has spent gobs of money on its touchscreen software too. It's the only native car touchscreen UI I've tried that feels smooth, snappy, responsive, simple.

I've tried the native touchscreen UI of quite a few US and European carmakers. All of them fall short. They feel janky, clunky, obtuse.

Physical buttons are much, MUCH cheaper than high-quality touchscreen software.
cs702
·5 days ago·discuss
Love the title. I think it's a great idea to associate pervasive surveillance with the all-seeing eye of evil incarnate from The Lord of the Rings.

General audiences reading only the title, or coverage of it in the media, will immediately understand it, without having to read or think too much about it.
cs702
·7 days ago·discuss
Reminds me of caveman: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47647455
cs702
·8 days ago·discuss
Very interesting. The author claims to have proved that markets can be informationally efficient or competitive, but not both. The implications for policy and regulation are significant.

The author looks credible:

https://philipmaymin.com/about-philip

Thank you for sharing this on HN.

--

To the mods: The title needs to be edited to replace the equal sign with not-equal.
cs702
·11 days ago·discuss
... and funny too. A great book!
cs702
·13 days ago·discuss
Interesting, these really old menus would not look too out of place at a restaurant today.
cs702
·16 days ago·discuss
> The problem is millions of people have been raised in a bubble built on the assumption that this is a good thing.

Please don't attack a straw-man. I've never met anyone who believes extreme inequality is a good thing on its own.

However, I have met plenty of people who believe capitalism, combined with a safety net and democratic institutions, may not be great, but is definitely better than all other alternatives that have been tried in the past. No other system has produced significantly better societal outcomes.
cs702
·16 days ago·discuss
Hi, I shared the OP. I don't agree with all the points it expresses, but I found them thought-provoking.
cs702
·17 days ago·discuss
> If anyone has an outline of to whom the other hundreds of billions are owed, I’d be curious to see it.

Me too. That's one of my questions. The other questions I have are about the shocking misuse of funds.
cs702
·17 days ago·discuss
The legal claims from expropriation, I get that... but everything else was actually borrowed.

Whether the form was debt issuance or unpaid accounts payable, the rest actually was borrowed.

It's kind of an "impressive accomplishment" in my view.