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cujo

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cujo
·6 miesięcy temu·discuss
unquestionably. i'm not sure when we all decided to be hush-hush about people doing ethically dubious work.

i'm allowed to judge you based on who you take money from.
cujo
·6 miesięcy temu·discuss
> I don’t blame people at Fox News for bending the knee and taking that Saudi money

i do, and i judge people who take money to push harmful things. i don't see why this is bad.
cujo
·7 miesięcy temu·discuss
why though? are they just using it as a proxy for "is 'gitremote' working today?"
cujo
·9 miesięcy temu·discuss
"citizen" is pretty well defined in every country i've ever been in.
cujo
·12 miesięcy temu·discuss
yes, but those epo-esque drugs aren't exactly trivial to use these days. the testing process makes the doping process much more difficult for drugs that have these direct performance benefits.

recovery help is where it's at these days i expect, in most sports.
cujo
·12 miesięcy temu·discuss
have you seen the physiques and workloads that nba/nhl/mlb players are dealing with these days? these athletes have more incentive than cyclists to dope ($$$), and the testing in those sports is a joke.

there are obvious performance benefits for traditional endurance sports, but the testing infrastructure is pretty robust and the financial incentives are much less than those big team sports. it's harder to dope (and get away with it) and the financial pressure is less.
cujo
·12 miesięcy temu·discuss
it's a safe bet that your big money sports (not cycling) have a lot more doping than cycling. the issue is that you can't report what you don't know.

* cycling is a mix of moderate money and lots of drug testing. there are significant incentives to dope, but it's fairly hard to do these days since there is a lot of testing.

* big money sports (in the us especially - nfl, mlb, nba) are the jokes of the testing world. they rarely test and often inform their athletes when a test is coming. the big money basically assures that the incentive to dope is also big. but you'll never get caught if the testing process is a joke, so there is nothing to report.
cujo
·2 lata temu·discuss
why does it matter? but to answer: literally near any bordering country.
cujo
·2 lata temu·discuss
working with llms as part of my day job and i wouldn't fault them one bit. the errors and reliability issues are not overblown.
cujo
·2 lata temu·discuss
i think the problem isn't the phone number, but the special hardware/vendor lock in that is required for it. if you travel a lot or live in a country where it is just easy to cross borders as a part of life, it quickly becomes obvious that being tethered to a regional provider for your phone number is a problem.

you end up paying ridiculous roaming fees to keep your number active in the other country, or you lose any ability for people to contact you by phone. it's incredibly frustrating when voip is so close, but not the 100% solution. couple that with providers still charging ridiculous fees to call numbers in other countries and it gets even worse.
cujo
·2 lata temu·discuss
Why wouldn't it keep nasal passages moist? If I wear a mask very long, the environment under it becomes a relative sauna.
cujo
·7 lat temu·discuss
Thanks for the background. Ive's wikipedia page didn't have much.
cujo
·7 lat temu·discuss
I want to believe this, and as there is no evidence one way or the other, it sounds good enough that it makes me hopeful for future products.

My question is, what did Ive do that was truly great? I honestly don't know and his name is mostly brought up with respect to designs that didn't pan out. What did he do that everyone seems to respect him as an uber-designer?

I do think, for a while at least, apple's design was eye catching and cool. But for a long long time now it's been stagnant and copycatted all over the industry. So much so, that it doesn't really stand out any more. That's all fine, but it makes me wonder what Ive has been doing for the last 5-10 years, because not much has changed.