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dmwallin

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dmwallin
·4 tahun yang lalu·discuss
You also have to consider that faces are one of the things that we have the strongest perception of, with lots of our neurons dedicated to the task, so when you get things wrong it's far more noticeable than many other bodily animations would be.
dmwallin
·4 tahun yang lalu·discuss
I recommend thinking about what you can do that would significantly differentiate the gameplay from what is possible irl. Just putting laser tag in VR is a downgrade in many aspects from what you can achieve in reality, so you need a lot of gameplay innovation to make it a compelling proposition. One small example of where just copying things from real life falls short: Your proof of concept show walls (because that's what laser tag does to create compelling gameplay) but walls are a mediocre choice in a colocated VR game because the actual behavior (users can always walk through them in VR) defies the user's built in expectations about what it means for something to be a "wall".
dmwallin
·4 tahun yang lalu·discuss
It seems plainly obvious that history shows the opposite is true; corruption is increased when money and power are centralized amongst a few people. There's a reason the term "Robber Baron" came around the last time we experienced massive inequality as a country. If you have some examples to the contrary I would love to hear them.
dmwallin
·4 tahun yang lalu·discuss
This article's title is disingenuous and is guilty of the same thing it accuses the study of.

The actual content of this article is the following (TLDR)

1) That the study didn't show a reduction in negative health outcomes, rather the control group showed an increase in negative outcomes.

2) The author of the article disagrees that this is equivalent to the stated claim, and offers a number of alternative explanations why you might see this outcome in the data

3) The author offers some critiques around lack of data transparency and the statistical rigor of the study.

In the end the title is a semantic nitpick around the difference between "improved absolute health" and "improved relative health outcomes" and not the smoking gun of bad faith actors it implies.
dmwallin
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
No way to fail it but you also can't pass a non-existent test. N/A for cases like this would be more accurate.
dmwallin
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
That's not entirely true. Having a national presence can pay off in terms of being able to sign deals with larger clients.
dmwallin
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
The USA is already one of the world leaders in percent of population incarcerated; it doesn't seem we are suffering from an inability to imprison. If we as a society decide to revoke someones freedom and choice, then we should be willing to shoulder the cost. Making imprisoning low cost, or even worse profitable, creates massively perverse incentives. If it costs the system little to nothing, why bother to make sure people are really guilty? Why bother to spend the money to rehabilitate? Your goal should be to align incentives, which makes a high-cost and humane prison system have lots of favorable characteristics.
dmwallin
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
All these "illegal" guns started their life as brand-new perfectly legal firearms. It's a very leaky pipeline, one in which the industry and industry funded lobby groups have at least a bit of a mixed incentive to solve. The vast majority of the proposed gun-control laws focus on tightening up the leakiest parts of the supply chain, or on reducing the overall demand for various firearms.
dmwallin
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
>>> training your body to see the virus sooner and know how to attack it with less "training"

This is literally how every vaccine ever made works.
dmwallin
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
There's a difference between the way our minds work and the way reality works. In reality a physical object can only exist in one place which naturally leads to hierarchal organization being the dominant paradigm. On the other hand our minds operate associatively.

When we started to build out computer systems we based the UX on metaphors of real-life tool equivalents. I would posture though that as we become more of a computing-literate society and as computing moves closer to becoming an extension of our minds as opposed to an extension of reality, the dominant paradigm will shift towards associate models of organization.
dmwallin
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
The goals of a nation-state are not the same as those of a corporation. Having a monopoly on a strategically important industry is valuable in and of itself, especially when viewed from a geopolitical perspective. Just look at what's currently going on in semiconductors.
dmwallin
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
People love to roll out this popular criticism of democracy but there is very little actual evidence to support it. It can be quite a bit more expensive and much more visible when you have to influence a large number of people than to influence a small group of stakeholders. There's a reason why lobbying is such a huge part of american politics.

Even more to the point both historical and contemporary evidence indicates that power and influence spread more evenly across a countries citizens is strongly correlated to overall quality of life.
dmwallin
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
The approach that would be most interesting to me would be if you could build out your assets with really high quality assets, along with engine friendly low quality versions and then use a slower but high quality ray tracing setup to render out extremely well labeled training sets. This would potentially allow you to have detailed aesthetic control over the end results.
dmwallin
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
It's unfortunately nowhere near a stealth UBI experiment and really just a classic welfare trap, in the vein of so many other government programs. There are many bad incentives in our unemployment system and it was clearly never designed to be a delivery method for long term stimulus.
dmwallin
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
We are talking about liquid assets though, not net worth. As other commenters have pointed out, the middle class has most of their net worth tied up in non-liquid assets such as cars, houses, or retirement funds.
dmwallin
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
I think you need to adjust your internal model as to what constitutes solidly middle class. To quote some more realistic numbers:

>> Here, we define the middle class as the middle 60 percent of the income distribution in terms of what a family usually makes in a given year—ranging from $25,300 to $111,400 in 2016 (the latest year for which data is available). The median middle-class family has total liquid assets, defined as checking accounts, savings accounts, money market accounts, call accounts, and prepaid cards, of just $4,000. Unsurprisingly, the top quintile is more secure with a median of $31,300 and the bottom quintile is even less secure, with just $600.[1]

[1] https://www.brookings.edu/blog/up-front/2020/03/26/the-middl...
dmwallin
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
This is a poorly written op-ed. The author claims to prioritize the valorization of wealth, the encouragement of saving, and the encouragement of children, but fails to make any case for why we should value these. He then completely neglects to make any case for how increasing capital gains might lead to the deterioration of these values.

Raising capital gains is not going to discourage the next innovative companies, in fact it's likely to have the opposite effect. When a startup succeeds enough to reach a taxable event it is often at an exponentially large return on investment. In comparison a simple doubling of the tax rate is not going to materially affect the magnitude of that outcome.

Capital is always in search of returns. A general tax on net gains is not going to materially change that fact. The primary effect it will have is to further encourage investment into value-generating assets instead of speculative plays, something desperately needed right now in this frothy market.
dmwallin
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
What competitors?
dmwallin
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
This gets into a chicken and egg argument. You are arguing that the level of demand is leading to the current price point, while complainers about E Ink argue that anti competitive practices lead to higher prices which results in a lower demand.

In a competitive market, both are actually true. The fact that there aren't really any major competitors to E Ink in that market indicates however that there probably is some sort of moat (whether it is IP, or otherwise)and that prices are likely higher than they would be in a more competitive market. There are a lot of signs that there is latent demand in the market and lowered prices would lead to an increase in total market volume.
dmwallin
·5 tahun yang lalu·discuss
Seems pretty obvious to me that conservatives would be as susceptible to prejudices as the rest of humanity. Stating that common prejudices amongst those who identify as conservative might negatively affect specific policies is not itself moralizing.