In fact the actual point should be that those production houses will never buy this stand because they already have their stands. (this is what MKBHD said anyway).
And to be honest, if I had the money I would buy that stand, I always loved these move-around-stay-in-place gadgets.
So far no one mentioned the poor dinoes who would be saved from the vicious predators with the proposed declawing. I mean, it's not like I like dinoes, but too many shitty demigods are too many.
Wha? I was never into paleo, I think it's stupid, every damn vegetable and animal has changed since, and it's not like we are sure people actually were so much better of back then...
No, it means that the people who were compelled to follow a low carbohydrate diet for one reason on another lived shorter. It doesn't tell you anything unless you know why they followed the diet they followed.
1. in reality, nothing ever is continuous, and those small errors are black swans.
2. PN!=P not because we can't solve it, but because it is impossible to solve, because there are more possible solutions than space we can use to model them. (oversimplified, i know)
3. que?
"open isn't a magic bullet" yeah, but closed is a harmful pattern. Open isn't about everything magically getting better, but when you do close development of something that potentially influences billions of people, it's an invitation for disaster. We do not want open because we like open, we want open because we are afraid of closed.
and just to be clear, the least whatever you are doing in a closed format affects people the least i want it to be open.
That is not what I said. What I said is that math ultimately doesn't need to and doesn't want to deal with reality. The "proofs" they create do not even have to be consistent with each other, you can pick whatever you need...
math resides in the land of abtractions(fantasy land) and actual code has to run on actual physical machines in the real world. In the real world you can't just state an axiom and fix bugs as math people have solved all their problems in the past 150 years.
And to be honest, if I had the money I would buy that stand, I always loved these move-around-stay-in-place gadgets.