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> a French gambler and intellectual socialite enlisted the help

Imagine Blaise Pascal and Pierre de Fermat teaming together to solve your problem.


Any plan for a 75% keyboard?

75% keyboard?

No numpad

Note that they did not "publish" the picture. They shared it in a private group. This is 1984 kind of stuff. This will hurt Dubai's brand way more than any kinetic attack from Iran.

Dubai's brand (before the war) was "you're welcome to come here to make money, but criticize the government and you're out". I'm sure there's a ton of young influencers who don't know the first thing about the place to not have internalized it, but I remember a spate of articles and books about 15 years ago of Westerners falling afoul of the local laws and losing everything.

Yeah, tbh people not scared by stories of people as wealthy and white and Western as then being prosecuted for kissing their unmarried opposite sex partner on the beach or falling out with the wrong person are not going to be worried about how wartime paranoia interacts with airline employees

Actually all those people go to Dubai to SPEND the money. They still make the money in America, Australia and Europe.

An important footnote on the economy of Dubai.


There are a lot of things that I would expect to hurt Dubai's "brand" but people still travel there. I don't understand why anyone would travel there in times of peace, let alone during war. You don't even need it for connecting flights.

You can tweak the current Ghidra MCP to work in headless mode. It makes things much easier.

An interesting critique of the meritocracy/technocracy: The Rise of Meritocracy by Michael Young.

Written in the 50s it's prescient to what has been happening since.

[0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Rise_of_the_Meritocracy


You can argue that a true meritocracy still wouldn't be ideal (as Young did), but that argument seems irrelevant -- the problem in the real world is that we pretend that we have a meritocracy, but often the person who gets the promotion or whatever isn't actually the best at their job, but is a cousin or fraternity brother of the person in charge -- the old "it isn't what you know, but who you know".


  > often the person who gets the promotion or whatever isn't actually the best at their job
it would be interesting to experiment with how people get promoted in orgs... maybe vote by co-workers? or by team members?


"Sincerity is the key to success. If you can fake it, you've got it made"

-- Groucho Marx (probably)


Now I'm wondering what a 'The Tao of Groucho' book would look like.


"If you're only going to be good at one thing, be good at lying, cuz if you're good at lying, you're good at everything"

- Do not remember where I heard this and desperately hope it did not come from my own corroded soul.


That hits. I've always been terrible at lying, so I just try my best not to. I'm so bad at it that I wear it on my face. I've been passed up for many opportunities in life that went to someone who was better at it.


> An 18 hour highspeed NYC to LA train would be amazing.

Often I think of the cut intro scene for "Escape From New York" where Snake robs some sort of bank and then escape in the inter state subway[0]. That future is grim but at least they got high speed long distance underground subways.

[0]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BsLT-zRWWdQ


High speed around the world rarely gets people taking more than about a 5 hour trip. I'm sure a few would take such a train, but not near enough to make it worth the cost of building an maintaining it. In the mean time everyone talking about that distracts from building transportation that people would use.

If you want trains in the US then you need to focus on the DC-NYC-Boston route - this should be an obvious route with affordable high speed trains every 10 minutes all day. You also need to get local trains to stop bloating the costs such that nothing but the most dense areas can afford to build them. Solve those and then start focusing on areas where trains are harder.


It was mandated because, in some cases, getting data from the patient is actually harmful. A CT scan is not benign. So to ensure that CT scans from manufacturer A could be read on a review station of manufacturer B, the DICOM standard was created.

But there is a real health element to it. Although I perfectly agree that standards are good for the consumer, the incentives here are not as strong.


There are also similarly a lot of controls mandated on who they cannot give the data to. It isn't like health records are an open free for all.


Contrary to windmills, which slows down the rotation of the earth.


Doesn't that depend whether you point them east or west?

Point them north and you'll increase Earth's axial tilt.


I think you just solved both leap seconds and daylight savings time.


I personally would like more hours in the day.


No problem: Just build a subterranean boat and launch a few nukes close to the core to restart rotation.


Won't someone think of the ~children~ birds?!


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