I've always found this a weird comparison. There is no more important use of water than providing food. I love tech and earn my living from it, but the importance of food cannot be overstated.
This is such a tiresome perspective. The value of the quote from Thiel should be based on how true/predictive/helpful the quote is. Not the political leanings of the person who said it.
Someone locally said they wouldn't listen to anything Strong Towns wrote because they are pro-housing. Even though the article from Strong Towns directly addressed the question the person was asking about quite well.
Tribalism is going to destroy us all. Thiel can have great perspectives, even if he has been undercutting democracy at every turn.
This combined with a tv that had tactile buttons again would be nice! So tired of the buttonless TVs now, or the buttons that have no tactile feedback so you don't know what you are doing in the dark.
Like no tactile controls in cars, this was also a mistake for TVs
There was a video posted in the article that demonstrates it better than a comment would. One of the most glaring defects these days are the keyboard registering the press on the correct letter, and then inputting a different letter. The keyboard is hot garbage right now.
I think Denver (I live here) is an example of our horrible zoning. We have entirely focused our cities (especially Denver and RTD (Regional Transportation District)) around people commuting in for work.
This is one of the main principles of BAD design, where you create an entire area around close to a single use (offices). That creates a very fragile city. This "single use" zoning that the US proliferated makes us really fragile to changes like working from home vs in-office work.
Another point is that cities are rather hostile for families. We create cities so they need to be fled as soon as people have kids. We have streets entirely of concrete and 1 and 2 bedroom apartments. If we want cities to be more resilient we need to rethink them. We need streets that have greenspace as a fundamental part of the infrastructure. We need permeable surfaces.
I went to Park am Gleisdreieck in Berlin and stayed in a multi-family unit right along the park. There were tons of families with kids playing in the park, people riding bikes for transportation along the park bike paths, adults playing ping pong on outdoor tables together. It was wonderful. It made me rethink what a city can look like.
Denver needs to take notes. We don't need a single use city and a light rail system that only goes into that city. We made an incredibly fragile city. We can build better cities.
Interstate 70 in Colorado is very problematic. It is constantly backed up. Colorado needs to learn from this and get serious about rail for shipping and for human travel.
It's great to see other people working on this. It's a problem that needs solving, and you've solved it in a meaningful way. I have been building https://spoonme.kitchen/ for a couple of years now (but with a different focus) to help solve this problem and a few others that are meaningful to me.
One aspect that I've been really wrestling with is how can we make the end user experience of seeing a recipe better, while still providing meaningful income to the recipe creators who labor so much to share their stuff with us. I'd be interested in your thoughts on this. That to me would be the very meaningful, positive change: that end users get a better experience, and creators get paid. That's been my overarching goal and motivation.
I have the opposite viewpoint, and I lean heavily progressive in most of my views.
Healthcare in the United States isn't a market, and that is why it is so terrible. For instance, there is no reasonable ability to compare prices of services. Prices are entirely hidden. Then there is the "with insurance" price vs cash prices.
Healthcare doesn't function as a market, to our detriment.
One of the main things that I want changed for conversation mode is I don't want it to be so sensitive to any background noise. ChatGPT can be reciting back and answer and someone across the room turns a page in a book and it stops dictating, and then, instead of finishing the previous answer, starts to answer the same question in a different way. ChatGPT is way too deferential for any noise during the conversation.
I think this is true. It can super charge some bad takes.
But I've had the opposite experience. The average person is never going to read a scientific study, nor invest the time to find out the real details of any topic they are opinionated about other than simply typing a Youtube search and finding a video that is:
- Entertaining
- The person has their same biases
- the present the information in a short, consumable manner that doesn't require much investment.
In comparison to this dynamic LLMs are wonderful. They can reference scientific data. I have noticed that they do push back on bad takes (very gently) and steer people towards truth.
It's not that I think LLMs are perfect. They are not. But they are infinitely better than the average human at discovering truth.
I pay about $90/month for a small company I own. I've been thinking about moving off Slack, but this is a good push over the edge. I am going to migrate over to once.com/campfire.
ReSim | https://www.resim.ai/ | Application Engineer | HYBRID Mountain View, CA Preferred / REMOTE (US)*
ReSim is on a mission to revolutionize robotics development by building the ultimate virtual testing platform. We empower autonomy teams to scale simulation for their robots, helping them accelerate their progress and impact. We're looking for an Application Engineer to join our Professional Services team to help onboard and support our customers in integrating ReSim into their workflows. You'll also help develop the product across the stack to deliver customer requests.
This role is perfect for someone who thrives at the intersection of technical expertise and customer engagement. Our ideal candidate will have:
- A love for robotics or simulation
- Strong skills in Python and/or C++
- Experience with Docker, modern CI/CD systems, and Bazel
- Passion for creating intuitive APIs and working with customers
- For this hire we are specifically targeting a candidate who has experience at a product-focused robotics company
If you're interested, reach out to us at jobs [at] resim.ai with your resume and some examples of relevant experience.
*Note on location. While we have a presence in Mountain View much of our team is remote. We have a strong customer base in South Bay. A team member located in the Bay Area could be a strong fit.
And the failures as well to avoid survivorship bias. Sahil wrote a great book called "The Minimalist Entrepreneur" that goes into a lot of depth about finding customers. Also, Stripe Press has a book called Get Together that covers how to create community as well. I would recommend both books.
I have had a lot of issues with my mini-splits. I am a firm believer in the technology, but my Pioneer units have had a lot of issues. I am glad some innovative companies are getting into this industry. I built a passive house that has triple-framed walls. We don't need much heating/cooling, so mini-splits seemed the obvious answer. Hopefully we get them squared away soon as we have been in the home for 1.5 years and have learned that in the Denver area (zone 5b) they don't perform well when it gets into freezing temperatures. I am interested in the technology you have described (the injection) to keep it heating during really cold days.