Tess Ti FAYH
This is a short video that gives voice to what most of us were thinking about "product as service". I wasn't going to link to it as my embedded video to actual content ratio is all out of whack right now. But, there are a couple of things mentioned as asides that really got my goat. First, I had no idea until this brief mention of it just how malignant Google Stadia is. It really is the worst of every awful trend in video games concentrated and wrapped in maliciousness. Likewise the PS-5 looks like it is going to be, well, evil. I had seriously thought about a Tesla pickup in the future though not so much after this. However, the thing that got me so mad that I got up walked out and left the room and had to come back after cooling down was the "letter of concern" at 15:06. Which indicates that whatever firm the individual is working for (probably a bank or investment firm) has a corporate culture that makes them unfit stewards of other people's money. It also speaks how important superficial fashion is becoming in our society and how perniciously powerful it is for enforcing conformity. With the mean girls in high-school one could avoid them or ultimately matriculate. Now that our corporate class are overwhelmingly foppish aristocrats, there is no escape.
One thing that SFO only lightly touches on in the above disquisition is that this isn't just a terrible idea from a consumer standpoint. This blog mentioned how bad this could potentially get when discussing the Patreon situation back in mid-December of 2018, and SFO did a really good, source heavy and long deep dive into the antics of the payment processor about two weeks after that.
About 18 months ago the Chinese social credit system was very topical. "Product as Service" makes that sort of tyranny far worse and much easier to implement.
This is nothing new, but implications of this are terrifying.
1
The only proper response to that Steve Thompson scumbag is Μολὼν λαβÎ.
Posted by: Rick C at Sat Mar 21 00:51:32 2020 (Iwkd4)
2
XYZ as a service is a model that really annoys me. In small things, it's tolerable. In large things (housing, cars, etc) it leads to serfdom. If you own nothing, then the rent is always going to be grow to be as high as you can pay, with nothing left over.
I try to impress on my peers the importance of owning things when I can. In a healthy society there would be a broad distribution of ownership - the people who do the work would own things, own their livelihoods in many cases. In the unhealthy society we can see developing, rentiers and 'providers' own everything and grant it to the people who make society function 'as a service': That way lies communist revolutions, because feudalism sucks enough to make it seem like progress.
Posted by: MadRocketSci at Sat Mar 21 23:52:03 2020 (+G8SK)
1
There's promising news of a treatment regime using a combination of cheap and readily available drugs (hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin) that together clear the virus from your system in a week. Not a full double-blind randomised trial, but they ran the COVID-19 test before and after on both groups, and the group on both drugs were all virus-free by day 6.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Thu Mar 19 07:41:00 2020 (PiXy!)
2
I've heard this too. I read somewhere that the Koreans were trying basically anything and this worked, so a group did a more controlled test in Italy and got promising results. I've also read that the Chinese have been using this for a while but didn't mention it. Sadly I lost the tab and I'm not gonna put something like that last bit in an actual post without a citation.
One of the problems with these sorts of things is that in extremis, double blind studies become ethically questionable. (do you let the placebo group die when treatmentX seems to be working). Of course without that you don't know for sure and then if you rush it to market you're rolling the dice on how it will react with a wider variety of phenotypes. In the USA and Canada we've got the benefit of people from most everywhere on earth.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Thu Mar 19 09:02:08 2020 (5iiQK)
3
Being fat while doing hard labor comes from suboptimal eating: at wrong intervals, eating potatos, and the like. Even not drinking enough can do it (your kidney stone story hints strongly that it may be a factor). Unfortunately, it's not easy to fix: performance food is more expensive, and you do need those calories. Eating at the right intervals is no easy task when not having a luxury of sitting in your office. I cannot presume to give advice over the Internet. But it's something that can be fixed if you find someone among your local friends who knows about food and metabolism and is not a new wave quack.
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at Thu Mar 19 09:04:39 2020 (LZ7Bg)
But....but it's the INTERNET. Shouting at people that they're wrong is what it's for.
Mostly.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Thu Mar 19 09:36:39 2020 (5iiQK)
5
"if you rush it to market you're rolling the dice on how it will react with a wider variety of phenotypes"
The good thing about both hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin is that both have been on the market for so long that the side effects are well understood on a global level. In fact it's even been long enough that both are off patent and generics are made worldwide. Azithromycin is one of the go-to antibiotics prescribed when you walk into a doctor's office with a bacterial based cold. It's interesting that it has an effect on a virus as antibiotics usually don't. Doctors can legally prescribe them for COVID-19 today, the trials are mainly about confirming that hypothesis that they work, determining how effective they really are, and quashing any remaining malpractice liabilities and insurance reimbursement issues.
Posted by: StargazerA5 at Fri Mar 20 20:22:35 2020 (BqCPe)
At The Intersection of Vigilanteism, Consumer Advocacy, and Internet Videography
In a world that is enmeshed in stupid regulation those who expose the corrupt can find themselves breaking the law.
Then there's these two loons from the current arc of My Hero Academia.
"While we wait for the cops to respond, let's read the super-chats."
Gentleman Criminal and LaBrava are two obnoxious LARPers who stream their petty (Ever. SO. Petty.) crimes in pursuit of clicks. Being supervillains, their campy videos keep getting deplatformed, which is playing havoc with their income stream. Given that monstrous propoganda videos by actual psychopaths continue to stay up (and get more clicks than the silly antics of these two) it seems that their targeting by content providers stems mainly from the fact that they keep embarrassing bad actors who have a lot of clout.
I'm 3 episodes behind, but this subplot now looks to be rather more consequential than it first appeared. This show, an ode to American comic books, has had some villains that are both well realized and truly terrifying, so I find myself both surprised and amused that this world actually has some 'silver age' villains running around.
Happy St. Patrick's Day!
Most of us are probably not going to be going out for green beer, corned beef and cabbage today, but wherever you're spending this holiday may it be pleasant.
1
Staying in, having a Guinness for the holiday, and some Johnnie Walker Green in memory of departed friend, as has been my custom for a few years, now.
Posted by: Canthros at Tue Mar 17 20:47:54 2020 (mToqK)
2
We made the corned beef and cabbage twice this year. We mistakenly thought the St. Patrick's Day was last week. So, we made it. And now we made it again. Well, "made" is more like "cooked", because the American food industry did the job of fermentation of the brisket.
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at Tue Mar 17 22:36:27 2020 (LZ7Bg)
This was not an obscure, below the radar story either. On the same day this blog published a post consisting of no content other than 4 separate videos from TV channels and You-Tubers. ALSO on the 26th, the Bitchute channel CoronaChan, was set up to aggregate videos pertaining to the outbreak that were being censored by You-Tube and the media in general. .
On January 30th this was posted on 4-chan's /pol/ board. Ignoring the anti-semitic vermin trolling the thread's OP it lays out a bunch of very good guesses about what would transpire over the next two months.
This was not hard to see coming.
It was actually in the news. A bunch of mid-level you-tubers were on it like ugly on a moose ringing the church bell to get the word out.. HUNDREDS of videos many on site from Hubei were posted about it. A frickking shiposter on /pol/ played Cassandra and laid out a prophecy two months in advance that proved to be every bit as accurate as Nostradamus wasn't.
Hell, even your humble Z-list blogger saw this coming and advised all 4 people who drop in here to buy canned goods two months ago.
This was not hard to see coming. The cold equations of exponential growth and the reality of logistics leave few options and present difficult decisions, but there is one question that infuriates given the ample warning and coverage...
How is it that there are so many of the powers that be, and the media acting so surprised?
1
Because too many people did not want to make the PRC get upset at them.
It is ironic that the only nation that truly anticipated and took near immediate actions regarding the Wuhan Flu, is the single biggest target of international ostracism by the PRC, to the point the PRC got Taiwan kicked-out of the WHO a few years ago.
Posted by: cxt217 at Sun Mar 15 23:17:10 2020 (LMsTt)
2
Getting a broken picture icon above the embedded picture, which is apparently actually a Twitter link.
Posted by: Mauser at Mon Mar 16 00:07:09 2020 (Ix1l6)
3
Wasn't there something else happening in January that had the complete focus of the media, congress, and much of the executive branch? Even though it was a pure exercise in political theater and election year battlefield prep, not a matter of actual substance? In a just world, the democrats and media (but I repeat myself) would be being raked over the coals for that right now.
Posted by: David at Mon Mar 16 04:05:54 2020 (UmjNG)
4
And thank you for the warning. I tend to be "have a couple weeks of at least a minimal diet on hand at all times" person but I gradually stocked up starting the first couple weeks of February. Decided to buy my 15-pack of TP for the year on the 29th of February, glad I did. Glad I have a crapton of books and fabric and knitting yarn and can just hunker down in my house.
I guess a national curfew is coming here, like it did to Italy and Spain, because the people who got begged to stay home either figured they were immune (because they're 21 and, apparently, planning on consuming mass quantities of alcohol) or because they've somehow been convinced this was a hoax.
My university will be finishing out the semester online. I hope I have a job, still, come fall but I fear that I won't. I don't know what the moonscape our society will become will look like after this. I am just praying my 83 year old mother (who is staying home as strictly as I am) stays safe, and that my uncles and their families stay safe.
Posted by: fillyjonk at Mon Mar 16 11:04:59 2020 (+MBAo)
The blog's crack team of embed management technicians has encountered a conundrum.
(Actual footage of our North American IT department at work.)
If someone is watching an embedded a Bitchute video, is there any way to watch it on Bitchute the same way one can with Youtube? Given Bitchute's diffident search engine, this seems like it's another hurdle for new channels to get traction.
Obviously this has no real impact on the blog's active channel, which has had 6 posts in 14 months. The active Bitchute channel is just to post videos for this blog especially stuff that's likely to be taken down by You-Tube. I don't create much content and don't migrate stuff unless it's run afoul the YT censorbots.
1
Yeah, I've run into this issue several times on this blog. I have figured out a workaround.
1. Hit F12 to bring up the page code
2. Look for a link that looks like: https:///www.bitchute.com/embed/kSd1Jzuhzihp
3. Copy and paste into URL bar
4. Change 'embed' to 'video' and hit enter
Or alternately the person posting the video embed int he blog could include a link to the page with the video
Posted by: StargazerA5 at Sun Mar 15 18:48:12 2020 (BqCPe)
2
Yeah, that works. Besides revealing that I suck at puzzle games, I was genuinely curious as to whether I was missing something obvious.
Something else obvious.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at Sun Mar 15 19:35:08 2020 (5iiQK)
3
I'll update the Bitchute tag to display a link for people to click on, until they can get their player sorted out.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Sun Mar 15 19:54:20 2020 (PiXy!)
1
The big doctor's office I go to always has standard-grade masks out in cold/flu season, and makes it clear that the purpose is to keep your germs in, not keep anything out.
-j
Posted by: J Greely at Sun Mar 15 15:42:46 2020 (ZlYZd)
The planet has an anomalously large percentage of helium 3 in its clouds and a bunch of cool icy moons which seem quite comparable to Ceres.
The system is far enough out to keep the pesky tourists at bay.
Interestingly though, Matter Beam's article has an idea for a potentially interesting "killer app" that could make the the two "ice giants" quite useful in the far future.
Well. THAT Was an Odd Glitch
For those of you arriving late the front page just filled up with duplicates of a half typed post title.
Anyway, the President just gave his speech and by Trump standards it was reasonably short on the hyperbole and such. Between sniffles and wheezes he laid out several things being done to deal with the current crisis, among them being a rather belated set of restrictions on travel to and from Europe and pending financial assistance for those ill or caring for family members with the virus which is intended to prevent people from going to work sick.
I think the big takeaway from this will be the sniffling and wheezing though.
1
Meanwhile, most of the House Democrat caucus decides they really want to let people from the PRC and Iran to travel to the US, no matter what else happens.
Posted by: cxt217 at Thu Mar 12 17:21:12 2020 (LMsTt)
Scientists examining a meteorite think they have discovered a protein inside it. This is significant because, while amino acids have been found in space rocks, proteins had not. The researchers are reasonably sure that the protein is not due to terrestrial contamination due to its isotope signature and the fact that the protein is like nothing ever seen before.
The hemolithin protein found by the researchers was a small one, and was made up mostly of glycine, and amino acids. It also had oxygen, lithium and iron atoms at its ends—an arrangement never seen before.
"Hemolethin appears to be a new word invented just for this protein. but that's not NEARLY as important as the validating fact that one actually CAN find protein in space!"
1
Extraterrestrial proteins being discovered at exactly the moment that a highly infectious virus is sweeping the globe seems like excellent grist for grade-Z science fiction movies.
Posted by: Canthros at Sun Mar 8 22:54:34 2020 (mToqK)
Deep in the heart of Coronaville , it appears that Uyghers are being trucked in from their "re-education" camps to staff the factories in the plague zones that are either unsafe to operate due to contamination or have massive numbers of people out sick. The purpose of this appears to meet government mandated targets for production in an attempt to rescue an economy hammered by having its workforce immobilized by this disease. Of course if members of a demographic that the CCP is trying to exterminate are infected with a deadly pathogen, then, (presumably) they won't be required to be trucked back to the concentration camps. As far as the CCP is concerned, "two bats, one stone".
As vile as it is, this situation is actually worse than that.
The utilization of these people in the disease wracked regions is a current expedient, but it turns out that this pool of 80,000 or so workers has been used as a sort of slavery temp service since at least 2017.Long before COVID19 was unleashed upon the world, this cadre has been used by various firms to round out the labor pools at factories that include those of western companies set up in China.
This practice has been noted in a in-depth report by The Australian Strategic Policy Institute a PDF of which is here. It gives extensive citations regarding the practice and helpfully notes which companies have been taking advantage of this abhorrent service.
Abercrombie & Fitch,
Acer,
Adidas,
Alstom,
Amazon,
Apple,
ASUS,
BAIC Motor,
BMW,
Bombardier,
Bosch,
BYD,
Calvin Klein,
Candy,
Carter’s,
Cerruti 1881,
Changan Automobile,
Cisco,
CRRC,
Dell,
Electrolux,
Fila,
Founder Group,
GAC Group (automobiles),
Gap,
Geely Auto,
General Motors,
Google,
Goertek,
H&M,
Haier,
Hart Schaffner Marx,
Hisense,
Hitachi,
HP,
HTC,
Huawei,
iFlyTek,
Jack & Jones,
Jaguar,
Japan Display Inc.,
L.L.Bean,
Lacoste,
Land Rover,
Lenovo,
LG,
Li-Ning,
Mayor,
Meizu,
Mercedes-Benz,
MG,
Microsoft,
Mitsubishi,
Mitsumi,
Nike,
Nintendo,
Nokia,
The North Face,
Oculus,
Oppo,
Panasonic,
Polo Ralph Lauren,
Puma,
Roewe,
SAIC Motor,
Samsung,
SGMW,
Sharp,
Siemens,
Skechers,
Sony,
TDK,
Tommy Hilfiger,
Toshiba,
Tsinghua Tongfang,
Uniqlo,
Victoria’s Secret,
Vivo,
Volkswagen,
Xiaomi,
Zara,
Zegna,
ZTE.
I note that many of the western entities on this list not only profess their own piousness but frequently presume to lecture us on what they claim are our moral failings (usually sins involving mere words).
China is a brutal dictatorship, and a nuclear power. Our ability to affect their internal affairs are necessarily limited. However, while we can't stamp out all evil in the world, willingly engaging in this atrocity is another matter entirely.
This is a list that needs to get some distribution and attention.
I spent about 55 bucks apiece on virtually identical items I bought myself and my family in 2018-19.
That screenshot is actually from the 27th. As I type this, this whole category is largely sold out or won't be delivered until mid-March at the earliest.
20 pound bags of rice are still available for around 20 dollars though pinto and kidney beans are now running about $50-$60 for a 20 pound bag.
1
Costco is a carnage right now. They are out of TP, paper towels, purified water, oatmeal, and canned meats. Low on spring water, about to run out.
Posted by: Pete Zaitcev at Mon Mar 2 17:40:35 2020 (LZ7Bg)
2
Some panic buying at my local supermarket too, but not so much that they'd actually run out of anything. Unless you wanted a specifically sized pack of a specific brand of toilet paper. (I was only there for a gluten-free chicken nugget fix, but I grabbed a dozen rolls of TP as well when I saw stocks were low.)
But bottled water? I mean, as a general prep thing, sure, you should keep some on hand. But it's not something you need for Corona-chan.
My favoured food to stock up on is microwave rice, because it's fairly cheap and keeps for nearly a year and at a pinch you don't even need to heat it up. The shelves were packed full of it even with the locusts running amok in the TP and bottled water aisles.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at Tue Mar 3 09:12:17 2020 (PiXy!)
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I am a hamster by nature and I am now feeling rather relieved that I have so many canned goods on my shelf. A couple weeks ago I invested in a 12-pack of the smoked trout in cans I like, and I have lots of canned beans. (Canned beans are still edible, if not that palatable, if the power is out).
I went out Saturday to the big Target. It was well-stocked and surprisingly empty of people and even the checker commented on that - especially given it was a payday Saturday. But now I have a great big thing of loo roll (which will last me a year) and tissues and enough laundry detergent.
My corona plan is to just stay home. I presume if it hits my region the university will just close for a couple weeks and I can sit in my sewing room and make quilt tops and listen to stuff on my smartphone.
I cancelled my spring break trip to go see my mom, out of an abundance of caution but also because we're in position-interviewing crunch time and I will be putting in a string of 14 hour days next week and I think rather than traveling I will just need to sleep through spring break.
And I'd feel absolutely horrible if I caught it and passed it to My Only Remaining Parent.
Posted by: fillyjonk at Tue Mar 3 17:17:14 2020 (o5UlT)
4
The only thing out of stock at my local stores is hand sanitizer, but they all had wipes and alcohol prep pads. Safeway had a few pallets of bottled water on display, but they weren't being bought in panic quantities.
The thing I'm watching for is news about the homeless population in San Francisco, the closest thing we have to a third-world sewer. If the thousands of drug addicts eating out of Chinatown dumpsters, sleeping on cardboard, and crapping on the sidewalk aren't dropping like flies, the rest of us will be fine.
-j
Posted by: J Greely at Tue Mar 3 19:21:04 2020 (ZlYZd)
5
Right now it's almost all old folks in a nursing home in Kirkland up here who have died.
Also, you have spam.
Posted by: Mauser at Fri Mar 6 21:32:50 2020 (Ix1l6)
All That and a Bowl of Grits
On my iMac, for browsers, I've got Safari, Opera, New Moon (A mysterious Macintosh fork of Pale Moon), Epic, and Vivaldi. All have good and bad points. Now I've loaded Brave and it is better than the lot of them. It's closest to Epic in concept and execution, being a "privacy browser" based on Chrome, but it seems rather more polished and is independently verified to be about as private as advertised. I'm not sure, but I assume given that last fact that Brave would also get maximum utility out of one's VPN.
Anyway, I'm very pleased with it. The only thing it lacks is a cute personification avatar. But we can rest assured that when it comes, it'll likely be a catgirl.
UPDATE:
My curiosity has out argued my skepticism so I've tentatively activated the Brave Rewards option and will keep you appraised.
Meanwhile: in the Commonwealth of Virginia's General Assembly
Much has been made of the fact that one of the more onerous Democrat gun-control bills did not pass the General Assembly, however, it is not actually defeated, just tabled until after the election. Several other anti-second amendment bills have passed and are heading to the governors desk.
There seems to be a virtual news blackout of the Virginia legislative session now except of the few victories or temporary reprieves regarding guns, even in the local news. The exceptions involve silly and tyrannical bills like the ban on balloons (which was defeated).
Art (sans text) is by Dairin, also here, whose NNV channel is here. (and who is not responsible for the context of her chibi)
These seem to be being used like the Democrats as chaff, to conceal the rest of their legislation.
One bit of legislation that seems to get no coverage, is the annexation of a chunk of Tazwell County (68 miles, presumably waterfront) into the "Clinch Scenic River State Park". Tazewell County was among the first of the counties to set up a sanctuary and is the first county to have the county government provisionally call up the "militia". Annexing their waterfront property could well be retaliation...or not...but its getting no coverage because the media seems to have a blackout on Richmond's antics.
Likely more important than any of this, are the changes to Virginia voting registration and election law, that are still not getting any coverage. I've posted a hyperlinked list below the fold and some of these are doozies.
This is the big battle, but like a cat we've all been chasing the ephemeral dot.
1
Given that Virginia is the only state to have let go parts of itself in the past (Necessitating legal contortions required by the Constitution.), it may be high time to finish the matter.
Posted by: cxt217 at Sun Mar 1 13:39:07 2020 (LMsTt)
2
Washington didn't pass their Magazine ban in time. So they added a buyback provision and brought it back as a budget item, not subject to the same deadlines.
Posted by: Mauser at Mon Mar 2 23:25:17 2020 (Ix1l6)
Hobby Space News of the commercial space industry A Babe In The Universe Rather Eclectic Cosmology Encyclopedia Astronautica Superb spacecraft resource The Unwanted Blog Scott Lowther blogs about forgotten aerospace projects and sells amazingly informative articles on the same. Also, there are cats. Transterrestrial Musings Commentary on Infinity...and beyond! Colony WorldsSpace colonization news! The Alternate Energy Blog It's a blog about alternate energy (DUH!) Next Big Future Brian Wang: Tracking our progress to the FUTURE. Nuclear Green Charles Barton, who seems to be either a cool curmudgeon, or a rational hippy, talks about energy policy and the terrible environmental consequences of not going nuclear Energy From Thorium Focuses on the merits of thorium cycle nuclear reactors WizBang Current events commentary...with a wiz and a bang The Gates of Vienna Tenaciously studying a very old war The Anchoress insightful blogging, presumably from the catacombs Murdoc Online"Howling Mad Murdoc" has a millblog...golly! EaglespeakMaritime security matters Commander Salamander Fullbore blackshoe blogging! Belmont Club Richard Fernandez blogs on current events BaldilocksUnderstated and interesting blog on current events The Dissident Frogman French bi-lingual current events blog The "Moderate" VoiceI don't think that word means what they think it does....but this lefty blog is a worthy read nonetheless. Meryl Yourish News, Jews and Meryls' Views Classical Values Eric Scheie blogs about the culture war and its incompatibility with our republic. Jerry Pournell: Chaos ManorOne of Science fictions greats blogs on futurism, current events, technology and wisdom A Distant Soil The website of Colleen Dorans' superb fantasy comic, includes a blog focused on the comic industry, creator issues and human rights. John C. Wright The Sci-Fi/ Fantasy writer muses on a wide range of topics. Now Read This! The founder of the UK Comics Creators Guild blogs on comics past and present. The Rambling Rebuilder Charity, relief work, roleplaying games Rats NestThe Art and rantings of Vince Riley Gorilla Daze Allan Harvey, UK based cartoonist and comics historian has a comicophillic blog! Pulpjunkie Tim Driscoll reviews old movies, silents and talkies, classics and clunkers. Suburban Banshee Just like a suburban Leprechaun....but taller, more dangerous and a certified genius. Satharn's Musings Through TimeThe Crazy Catlady of The Barony of Tir Ysgithr アニ・ノート(Ani-Nouto) Thoughtful, curmudgeonly, otakuism that pulls no punches and suffers no fools. Chizumatic Stephen Den Beste analyzes anime...with a microscope, a slide rule and a tricorder. Wonderduck Anime, Formula One Racing, Sad Girls in Snow...Duck Triumphalism Beta Waffle What will likely be the most thoroughly tested waffle evah! Zoopraxiscope Too In this thrilling sequel to Zoopraxiscope, Don, Middle American Man of Mystery, keeps tabs on anime, orchids, and absurdities. Mahou Meido MeganekkoUbu blogs on Anime, computer games and other non-vital interests Twentysided More geekery than you can shake a stick at Shoplifting in the Marketplace of Ideas Sounds like Plaigarism...but isn't Ambient IronyAll Meenuvians Praise the lathe of the maker! Hail Pixy!!