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I know nothing about this other than I thought it was a joke at first, but I think it's the same idea https://github.com/RapidataAI/human-use


That talks about getting some kind of free feedback out of the human for free.

Now we have to find the next level and condition the human to pay to respond to questions.

It seems like an idea bad enough to pay $10 to downvote? Or should that be good enough?


This is great!

I made an attempt at something similar, but putting it online was a bit beyond what I know how to do.

https://github.com/JonGerhardson/Epsteindb


Not OP but the EPA has a calculator for estimating emissions to energy consumption. https://www.epa.gov/energy/greenhouse-gas-equivalencies-calc...


>(I wrote an extensive suite of software to track this)

Interesting. . . do you have a page for the project or anything?


No it’s internally used. Think of it like archive.ph but with text extraction and a diff like interface over the text.


Can you share examples then?



I once wrote a ~2,000 word draft,on an alpha-smart ($6 at a goodwill) and then couldn't get the transfer to computer function to work correctly, so I had to rewrite the whole thing because I wasn't gonna sit there and manually re-type three lines at a time from the grayscale LCD. The subsequent draft was actually better though, so for this reason I would recommend such a device. It's also a fun novelty thing. Really though, if you keep getting distracted from your writing, maybe consider if it's because you don't actually have anything to say?


Writing things twice is actually a technique for improving quality.

https://grantslatton.com/software-pathfinding


Yeah this one is funny because it's literally the stated mission of several U.S. based Zionist/anti-antisemetic organizations.


You are probably thinking this means life will be more like that Jack Kerouac line "the mad ones..." I am imagining how what you describe plays out is more like a billion reality TV stars all trying to one up each other.


It will probably be a mix of both. "One-upping reality star" is still something of a genre in itself, and it turns off a lot of people.

IMO it's very possible to convey authenticity via video, if you know what you're doing. I'm thinking of someone like Dry Creek Wrangler School:

https://www.youtube.com/@DryCreekWranglerSchool


This applies to carrier locking, not their practice of preventing bootloader unlocking on devices sold by Verizon, correct?


There's some annoying parts to using it, but the query tool for the Air Force Civil Engineering Center's CERCLA records database is otherwise good and information dense, IMO. https://ar.cce.af.mil/


> Essentially 100% of those people are making more via tips or under the table

source please


https://www.bls.gov/opub/reports/minimum-wage/2023/

> Nearly 8 in 10 workers earning the minimum wage or less in 2023 were employed in service occupations, mostly in food preparation and serving-related jobs. For many of these workers, tips may supplement the hourly wages received. (See table 4.)

There's a long tail but you can start with 80% of that 1% getting tips in food service.


That's not 80%. Food preparation doesn't get tips. Fast food employees rarely get tips.

Federal minimum wage for tipped workers starts at $2.13/hr. Only if tips aren't at least $5.12 does the employer have to pay more.


No fast food workers are making $7.25.

I'm sorry but if you think that's happening you are utterly disconnected with the real world. Mcdonalds is hiring at $15/hr and not succeeding.


Point taken.

Please tell me where these minimum wage food preparation and serving-related workers are working then.

I can tell you don't live in California, where McDonalds pays a minimum of $20/hr.

I can tell you don't live in West Virginia, where McDonald's averages about $10/hr.

McDonalds isn't the only fast food place.


?

They are waiters at non-fast-food restaurants and bars who make a nominal $2.50/hr and take most of their income in tips. I was very clear about this. I don't understand what's confusing.


Of those nearly 8 in 10 workers, how many are in tipped positions?


https://www.bls.gov/opub/reports/minimum-wage/2023/

539,000/869,000 are food service employees under minimum wage.

Payment under min wage is only legal if they net above min wage after tips.


There's a fair bit of caveats in that report:

> The estimates of workers paid at or below the federal minimum wage are based solely on the hourly wage that respondents report (which does not include overtime pay, tips, or commissions). It should be noted that some respondents might round their hourly earnings when answering survey questions. As a result, some workers might be reported as having hourly earnings above or below the federal minimum wage when, in fact, they earn the minimum wage.

> Some workers reported as earning at or below the prevailing federal minimum wage may not in fact be covered by federal or state minimum wage laws because of exclusions and exemptions in the statutes. Thus, the presence of workers with hourly earnings below the federal minimum wage does not necessarily indicate violations of the FLSA or state statutes in cases where such standards apply.

I don't think you can easily conclude that all those employees must be tipped.


Listen, everything is staring you in the face. You can live in whatever reality you want, but the market rate for labor is not $7.25 anywhere in the country. Nobody has any reason to tolerate federal minimum wage, and they don't.

You can try to find poke holes in reports to find caveats that oh maybe there are food service employees actually rounding down and making min wage, but it doesn't change the reality that there aren't.

You cannot in real life find a real person making $7.25 in a restaurant, because they aren't. Arguing about it on HN doesn't change that reality.


> the market rate for labor is not $7.25 anywhere in the country

Here are a couple of restaurants where the feds found they broken the federal minimum wage law, from last fall.

https://www.dol.gov/newsroom/releases/sol/sol20241220

"Court orders 3 West Michigan taco restaurants to pay $823K in back wages, damages to 177 workers shortchanged minimum wage, overtime"

"... concluding that the restaurants operated an illegal tip pool that led to violations of federal minimum wage and overtime regulations."

"the court found the employers ... Failed to pay tipped employees the federal minimum wage of $7.25 per hour."

https://www.dol.gov/newsroom/releases/whd/whd20241121

"US Department of Labor recovers $87K in back wages, damages from New Port Richey restaurant for 21 workers denied minimum wage, overtime"

"U.S. Department of Labor Wage and Hour Division investigators found the restaurant required employees to purchase a uniform shirt, which caused their average weekly wages to fall below the federal minimum wage"

That site lists more, and I'm sure they aren't the only organization which does these investigations.


I'm only going to waste my time on one of these.

> 0, Defendants violated the provisions of Sections 206 and 215(a)(2) by including kitchen staff employees in the tip pool when they are not customarily or regularly tipped employees, thereby invalidating the tip credit.

It was an invalid tip pool, because it included kitchen staff in the pool. So then the feds threw out the tip credit when calculating the effective minimum wage. In fact, there's no evidence at all that the employees actually took home less than $7.25. It's a technical violation, sure, but not evidence to your point at all.

This should have been obvious if you read your own link — do you honestly believe the waitstaff was working for $3/$4 an hour? Come on.


It's now quite clear even to me that my understanding of this topic is well and thoroughly shattered.

Thank you for putting up with me.


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