Everyone always says this, but how much do they actually make per unit sale. I buy $2k+ TVs, are they making $50 off of my data, or $5? Does it even pay for the department they hired to write the software that collects the data?
Let me see if I am understanding what you are saying correctly. Docker microservices running a python backend and a JS frontend with 1000 dependencies for a web-based UI for basic car control systems?
Edit: Fuck it, let's put some AI in there too. Volume adjustments should pass through a 100M parameter model first to determine if we should change the volume and by how much.
Right but businesses famously operate on 3-month intervals, not 30-year intervals. No business can actually make a 30-year promise like that.
I also don't think the calculus is as simple as "setting it back 3 years", all you would be doing is creating power vacuums (instability), whereas you ideally need constant upwards pressure. It would be like injecting cash via lotteries, it won't actually help in the long run, just create further instability and wealth inequality.