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>The Fed data shows that a degree still makes an important contribution to financial stability

I don't see the causality explained. I would replace "contribution", with "correlation".


People currently living there don't see it as a "housing crisis". They see it as "too many people coming here, trying to change our single family house peaceful residential neighborhood into bigger buildings".

So "how about limiting influx of new people / new development?"

"Sure, let's do that"

I understand newcomers may disagree with that approach, out of understandable self interest.

But implying people currently living there are clueless or more selfish by defending their interests?? Trying to make newcomers sound morally superior? Come on.... You can do better that than that.


So their plan to solve the housing crises essentially involves trying to keep new people out of the SF Bay area? Keep in mind that this is an area that heavily prides itself on being diverse and inclusive.

People aren't clueless for defending their interests, but they absolutely are being highly deceptive in the way they are going about it. Many even go so far as to try and claim that increasing housing supply will actually increase prices. There was even a ballot initiative to ban market rate housing construction in central San Francisco.


Again, from the people living there, what's the housing crisis?? Yes, they are trying to limit how many people are coming in, that's obvious. This is different from inclusive and diversity issues. This is about 100 new diverse people rather than 1,000.

Again you can disagree with them, it is fair, but I think their approach is perfectly understandable, and if you want to argue and debate, no one should assume they are hypocritical or morally inferior. I read thosr comments all the time on HN.

The minute you say "housing crisis", you show which situation/point of view you're coming from. It's not a crisis that "needs" to be solved with more housing, it is just your viewpoint.


It's not an assumption of hypocrisy. It genuinely is hypocrisy. A group of people are praising themselves for their inclusivity, while pushing for exclusionary policies. If they want to pursue these policies without being hypocritical then they need to change their messaging to be transparent about their desire for exclusion rather than inclusion.


Are you saying that unless one welcomes an infinity of people in their backyard, one cannot be inclusive?

I think you should explain and defend the policy you wish, instead of critizing an imaginary adversary by putting words in their mouth.

If you want more housing, hoping that prices will go down, say so. If you favor a SF Bay area looking progressively more like NY City, say so. Many people are very happy in NYC. And prices are also very high there.

Just expect some people to frankly disagree with that proposed evolution, and don't attack them by being non inclusive: this is not the question. Misrepresenting their arguments is not helping further your point of view.

(whose incumbent said "we will do anything to solve the housing crisis?" in your original point?)


I'm saying that if one supports policies with the intended effect of excluding people from moving into one's neighborhood, it's hypocrisy to call oneself inclusive.

> If you want more housing, hoping that prices will go down, say so. If you favor a SF Bay area looking progressively more like NY City, say so. Many people are very happy in NYC.

Yes, absolutely. Build more housing and build denser housing. This is what pro-housing people have been saying for years.

> And prices are also very high there.

There's 8 million people in NYC instead of 800,000 in San Francisco.

> Just expect some people to frankly disagree with that proposed evolution, and don't attack them by being non inclusive: this is not the question. Misrepresenting their arguments is not helping further your point of view.

Pointing out the contradiction of one's purported values with their actions is not an attack. When people support exclusory policies like rent control and curbing housing development with the goal of reducing the ability of people to move there, they are being exclusive. This is not a misrepresentation. People who support said policies while simultaneously purporting to foster an inclusive community are indeed being hypocritical. This is not an attack, this is a factually correct observation.


> Are you saying that unless one welcomes an infinity of people in their backyard, one cannot be inclusive?

San Francisco is a sanctuary city so officially they do encourage more newcomers to come.


> Again, from the people living there, what's the housing crisis??

Well, their children can't afford to live here so that's going to be a problem.


The thing that I will never understand is that the incumbents with this attitude are still hurting themselves with these policies. Even if they own a home and are protected by Prop 13 from large property tax increases, they still have to contend with all the rest of the problems that the housing crisis brings. Perhaps the fear of change overrides common sense, but I find it hard to believe that, rationally, the neighborhood "changing in character", or home values dipping the slightest bit, would be worse than the other negative realities that NIMBYs still experience here.


I think a lot of it boils down to an ingrained belief that real estate should be an investment. Everyone buys a house with the expectation that its value will go up. This means that homeowners are extremely adverse to policies that might reduce home prices (like building more housing).

Contrast this with houses in Japan, where it's expected that a home is a depreciating asset. Houses in the Special Wards of Tokyo can be bought for $300-400k: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iGbC5j4pG9w


That's a very good point. I'm of the opinion that a primary residence is a liability, not an investment, but it's true that I'm in the minority when it comes to the US.


> But implying people currently living there are clueless or more selfish by defending their interests?

Somebody defending their interests doesn't make them not selfish.


True. But it does not make them "more" selfish because they just disagree with one's just as selfish opinion. (My point) Let's stop calling people names, and all argue what evolution we want, and possibly respectfully disagree.


1- salmonella is not due to eggs only, but meat and vegetable also

2- you probably read in the article like all of us that chicken in Europe are vaccinated against salmonella, while this is not mandatory in the US

Therefore I am not sure how you reach this conclusion.


I am a ghost online, and nobody is talk-trashing me.

If someone tells me I am a ghost online, I'll smile and says "correct!!". And if the person is interested, I can explain why.

Questions are opportunities for meaningful conversation.


VOIP. 150 ms max recommended, noticeable degradation of UX at 250ms. Many phone operators use wifi to connect when they can. If people's phone does not work well, they'll complain.


Not GPS related, but the day I am really worried about is January 19th 2038 3:14:07AM... Unix time will roll over if stored in a signed four byte integer field.


Or slightly later the use of a 2-digit year in x509 certificates. The standard assumes that dates with year <50 are 20xx, and >=50 are 19xx. It doesn't help that this is one of the best designed, most understandable, and well-thought-out parts of the x509 standard.


We’re already seeing problems from that. It will be handled, probably without the financial bonanza of 2k, but as such will probably cause more problems.


I used Windows instances a few years ago. Beyond the slow start, once started, frequently the CPU would stay stuck at very low %, and my tasks would run very slowly.

Eventually I would get to 100%, but it could often take 10 minutes.

What I learned from those pains is how to use Linux in the Cloud.


Seems like you were using T2 instances which have a low baseline performance and burst credits. I would imagine that you quickly run out of credits on some of the smaller instance types after creation, given how lengthy and costly (in terms of CPU usage) the instance creation and boot process is.


I was typically using c3.xlarge for CPU-intensive tasks (video processing).

Boot time was OK. I would log in on the machine with RDP, because sometimes my processes were almost frozen for a while. It felt like my neighbours were stealing my CPU, but I did not know how to prove it.

Once I moved to Ubuntu, same instance type, I never experienced this.


Instances launched from EBS snapshot (or EBS-backed AMI) are lazily loaded from S3, which probably explains slow performance, if you are doing lots of I/O operations (in my experience Windows is more I/O heavy, especially on boot).

From Amazon documentation[1]:

However, storage blocks on volumes that were restored from snapshots must be initialized (pulled down from Amazon S3 and written to the volume) before you can access the block. This preliminary action takes time and can cause a significant increase in the latency of an I/O operation the first time each block is accessed.

[1]: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/UserGuide/ebs-init...


But I was logged in with RDP when I saw this... So I assume everything related to boot was over and not related.


I've experienced this lately with a variety of Amazon Windows images. For example I will boot a 2016 image from this year vs one from last year and last year's will be significantly faster on the same hardware.


Any chance that might have to do with patches for the spectre vulnerability taking a performance toll?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spectre_(security_vulnerabilit...


Its possible. I didn't run any numbers or look at patch levels. It just went from running AD FS flawlessly on one to being barely usable over RDP on the other. Now I'm interested and might have to dig up which AMIs I've been through.


...and? From a job market standpoint, does it help him? Does he "sell" it on his resume, in interviews? Is it valued? Did it help him competence/knowledge-wise?

From a personal standpoint, did it help/enrich him?


The minute you take investors money, whether seed, convertible debt, series A, then you are not the only boss anymore. You KNOW you will not be able to be independant and stick it to the man.

That's a very important decision, very early. And once you make it, you can't change it.

The decision to agree to sell to FB was made when they took their first seed money.


The French government passed a law in mid-2018 that ends the special "cheminot" contract for new hires. It will effectively grandfather the old way in 10-20 years, and make it smaller every year.

So I don't think this is fair or accurate: "rather than addressing the fundamental issues (inability to fire people, change cost structure"


Nor did that changed anything. Most employees are contractors nowadays.

French politics must stop playing with trains and grow up. And fire the management that's been there for 10 years and made it worst.


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