Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | awakeasleep's commentslogin

Look up the biocompatibility and safety profiles of siloxanes

Yeah probably one of the others.

your point would carry more weight were it possible to switch the default music player

And metadata plus encrypted traffic fingerprinting is enough to provide huge signal to an intelligence agency.

or overlapping board members who are essentially paying themselves

I don't like the comparison's fundamental assumption that they're addressing the same market.

If these are both addressing the same market then yes of course the Neo wins.

But I think actually one of these is for linux nerds and one is for the masses who barely understand what OS is running on it.


If you've got a device that is both cheaper and more performant then there is very little room for "different markets" arguments.

>linux nerds

Is unfortunately not enough to carry a product

Framework (and windows flavour laptops) will need to respond to the neo. Something along qualcomm's snapdragon is probably the best bet


> Framework (and windows flavour laptops) will need to respond to the neo.

Framework doesn't even sell in half markets Apple is in (They only manage 40 or so countries [0]), they can't afford to fight race to the bottom battles.

The Neo exists because Apple has crazy economy of scale and a stranglehold on chip supply, smaller makers should be fighting on other grounds.

[0] https://knowledgebase.frame.work/what-countries-and-regions-...


Only on countries with strong Apple market presence.

The Neo price isn't that great deal in other countries.


There is a segment of Framework's customer base which is ride-or-die for Linux, but it's not their entire customer base: they still exist in a market where they need to compete on features and cost. Before the Neo, that wasn't too bad because they were more-or-less at parity with Apple on cost, close enough on polish, and better on repairability. But the Neo is just so cheap, and with Apple's level of polish it's really tough to compete with.


The Neo costs the same as an on-sale Macbook Air, but doesn't support Asahi Linux. If any Framework customers were tempted by Apple hardware, they would have bought the Air a year ago and probably look at the Neo like it's a Fischer-Price laptop. Cost and polish aren't going to push sales for this market segment.


Because Apple makes iOS, they could have a much more rigorous solution, like Google’s.

A nondeterministic, energy hungry classifier is inferior to writing a policy to define channels.


You really need both.

Channels are a great first level, and iOS absolutely needs to implement an Android-tier version of this.

But channels continue to be abused, even on Android. When all deterministic controls fail...

Secondly, channels are set by the developer (or platform). In an ideal world, I want to define whatever channels I care about, and turn them on/off at will.


Try having a dog repeatedly hump your leg till completion. “Theres nothing we can do about it” I hate my office and the stupid pet rules more than you could believe.


I have a similar issue with the couple of cats we have in our office (known also as my home). Either they want to go outside, get fed (again), or simply just decide they need attention more than I need to work. But still, sometimes it is a nice distraction, and sometimes that distraction is what I needed to help me actually re-focus on the task at hand :)


Please mention that color e-ink has significantly lower contrast than black and white. I thought I did enough research, but was bitten by this caveat- I would trade basically any feature for more contrast.

On the plus side, with your setup, you can have the lowest friction ebook experience possible on planet Earth by installing koreader, and then the z-library plugin.


Color (Kaleido) eInk screens can't show pure white, because the color filter is in the way. That makes the display significantly darker, and negates the entire purpose of eInk.

I sold my color eInk device after trying it for two days, and went back to B&W.


There are some tablets with RLCD screens that have decent colors and contrast (not quite as good as 300dpi eink, but close, with color and fast updates), but most w/color screens lack proper frontlights for some reason, and they all run android so it's a bit of a mixed bag compared to a proper Kobo/Pocketbook/Linux eink tablet, but having a decent browser on a reflective display without having to cross-compile for 32-bit ARM linux is great.


It’s not a matter of loosening up, but in his ideology collective bargaining is a form of evil.

That’s not at all uncommon in the United States.


History provides the same answer every time this question arises


...it does? This level of automation is recent, and industrialization is the blink of an eye in human history.

If we're talking shorter scale, people have traditionally hand-waived it with 'Oh, these jobs will go away, but they'll be replaced with other, higher-skilled jobs!'.

That's an economist's idealism and doesn't fit reality.


CGP Grey has an older video now about what happened to horses over time.

For a while every economic advance seemed to mean more and better jobs for horses. But then the automobile comes along and there's no more need for horses and we can see what happens to an animal that has no economic reason to exist.

We still have a much smaller number of horses for the few economically viable roles a horse can fill and as toys for the wealthy.

The question is if labor will follow the same path.


At the risk of invoking “but this time it’s different”, AI hasn’t produced a new job sector. A farrier who can’t make a living off of horseshoes could at least go work at the Ford assembly plant.

In other words, I have no idea where all the white collar workers are supposed to go.


Prompt engineering of course.


Population in developed countries is already decreasing, so who knows what happens after that? Unfortunately a lot of the foundations of our economy are built on top of an ever-increasing populace.


We still have a much smaller number of horses for the few economically viable roles a horse can fill and as toys for the wealthy.

Yes, but those were horses. Now substitute the word 'human'.


The main difference is that horses are incapable of organizing a revolution


Domesticated horses are chattel. They existed for the needs of humans. When the needs went away the horses did too. Many of the world's poorest already exist without anyone's tolerance, even though their economic contributions are a rounding error. I suppose it's possible that the world's wealthiest will decide to commit genocide (maybe to create nature preserves?) but it feels like a very far-fetched outcome. If they do not, the price of commodity goods and human wages will decrease in tandem. Massive inequality, perhaps homelessness and lack of healthcare if those sectors remain captured by special interests, but I do not think most people will literally starve or die of exposure. More likely unregulated housing and healthcare will expand.


Well Bezos did actually state that he wants to turn Earth into a natural park.

But yeah, the robot armies don't need grain so why hike up the price of bread? Lack of grain makes those people resentful which means you need to deal with their anger. Sure, it can be dealt with but it's just cheaper to give the humans grain so they are docile. This is basic governance 101 that goes back to the romans (and further).

They also didn't slaughter all horses immediately. You can't eat that much horse meat anyways. It happened piece by piece.

The only good reason for an abrupt mass culling of the 99% (for a coldly calculating rich person with no empathy) would be game theory, i.e. them not being a contender for power any more. If there are no humans, there is nobody who can question the control of the 1%. It would be thus less about economics and more about power.

I am really rooting for the bottom 99%, myself being a part of it, but I really don't know what will happen to us.


Historically it has fit reality, but yes, this time may well actually be different...


I think his answer is just even more work. In this case it could be services where in general and for historical reasons people want to interact with people.


> History provides the same answer every time this question arises

You mean that after some popular discontent arises, the top authorities will simply be overthrown by a competing faction within the ruling class, but that competing faction will fool the masses into thinking that “people power” won out and things are any better?

That is, after all, how most “successful” revolutions have played out. Other revolutions that end with the ruling class being completely overthrown often cause the country to collapse into instability that is terrible for quality of life, until a strongman manages to cement his authority.


Well, we were overall better for a couple of centuries after abolishing all-powerful kings + some welfare laws here and there (ymmv, maybe serfdom sounds nice to you). So those changes can work for a while, big emphasis on can and for a while.

Greedy accumulators always end up ruining things for societies when it gets into ridiculous extremes (and there is a part of society that notices and gets fed up).


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: