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lasean

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lasean
·2 lata temu·discuss
The Adobe deal didn't go through. Last publicly hinted valuation was back at ~$10B when employee share buyouts happened in JAN 2024.
lasean
·2 lata temu·discuss
lol. funny because it's true
lasean
·2 lata temu·discuss
Good point.
lasean
·2 lata temu·discuss
The government can both subsidize development with low construction loan rates and disincentivize owners from flipping homes for quick profits. There are places where capital gains rates on home sales are onerous if sold before ten years. Both can be true at the same time. The likely oversupply of homes in this scenario is what most people would reject.
lasean
·2 lata temu·discuss
I think we'll see these types of films going the way of books and recorded music. We'll have an explosion of films released to hyper-niche audiences (at best). The middle of the market goes away. 10-20 traditional films still get produced and marketed to large audiences. This evolution makes more sense, since to your point — people like you have already stopped watching the product.

I suspect there is a market for adult-focused genre-based animated films that where never economically feasible before.
lasean
·2 lata temu·discuss
I'm not sure existing cities can evolve themselves to fully solve these problems.

There are Americans that want affordable housing in densely populated areas that are also car centric. Hard to get all of three of those requirements. There are other Americans who already have a home in their ideal neighborhood and don't want change. The two groups are just incongruent.

Affordable housing is possible, but it requires a number of drivers:

1) Don't make policies that disincentivize developers. 2) Don't turn homes into financial assets. 3) Don't build the city around cars. 4) Don't romanticize the single family residence (SFR) home.

This might require brand new cities to be built — where these promises can be set from the get go.
lasean
·2 lata temu·discuss
Related: Anyone using libSQL (SQLite fork) and Turso for production apps? Any lessons learned to share?
lasean
·2 lata temu·discuss
Agree. That's point. I'd rather scan a QR code that links to great photos than have a printed menu with no photos. They informally call them food picture books in restaurants I've eaten at in China, Indonesia, Japan, and Singapore. Example: https://www.kawanointernational.com/assets/file/KADO%2008%20...
lasean
·2 lata temu·discuss
Side Topic (Menus With Photos): There seems perception in the US that menus with pictures of the food are less sophisticated or cater to a less discerning clientele. In Asia, photos of the food in the menu is more of the norm than the exception (even for more upscale places). I discover more items I like when the photos are present. I would take QR codes with foods photos over a physical menu without (even for a $$$$ restaurant.
lasean
·2 lata temu·discuss
I'm not an attorney, but have sat through many sessions with our legal team in the past on this topic (pricing models). Agree the practice may fee icky, but I'm not sure this case would qualify as anticompetitive (in the US). First, lawyers would have a field day at defining and redefining the market. Related, it is unclear what other services we as consumers no longer have access to due to them executing this strategy. So across consumer harm, market power/monopoly, and predatory pricing the legal case might be challenging to construct. Back to your point, maybe this practice SHOULD run afoul with anti-trust laws, but the laws may need to change to apply to this situation.
lasean
·2 lata temu·discuss
You're implying native app. Previous comment said (browser) web app. Not sure who is correct on feature support, but you're cross talking on the product SKU.