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@TheConversationUS because they provide fodder for dramatic storytelling that doesn't actually matter all that much.

They provide clickbait.

@pglpm@emacs.ch IMO it would be a way of interfacing with the site but not the site on its own.

Stackexchange sort of provides an archive of answers while Fediverse is about transient exchanges.

I could see Fediverse feeds to help people contribute to the site, but the site itself needs to be more than a scrolling feed to provide answers to future searchers, if that makes sense.

@fj I mean, with the FAA delaying the moving fast part, yes, we can blame them.

We are watching an FAA delay, that the FAA confirms, so why not blame the FAA?

The regulator says it needs more resources to keep up with their workload. Why not take their word for it?

@marcusgreen maybe to build on something @dameoutlaw@mstdn.social was touching on:

An ax I grind is that the ActivityPub protocol and Fediverse were consciously designed to put instances, not users, at the center of the system.

Everything is controlled by instances, and the refrain of "Well a user can just set up their own instance!" only reinforces this.

The instance focus has all sorts of implications ranging from moderation through system performance, so it's no small deal.

I would much rather have had a focus on users, but that ship has sailed, and there's not much to do about it at this point.

@fheinderyckx

Does this mean we can finally agree that Krugman is an overrated moron?

These days the guy seems to do nothing but sell slanted opinions that are often so easily debunkable.

Yes, he was better in the past. Now he's off on a limb.

@reiver

I think it's crucial for people to realize that Fediverse has basically no privacy protections, so regardless of what SHOULD be, fact is you don't even have the choice.

When you post to Fediverse there is zero guarantee that your content won't be subject to search.

It's just part of the design of the system, for better or worse.

Fediverse was built around giving instances all the power, so if an instance wants to search, it can.

@atomicpoet

@tc_morekindness again, SCOTUS ruled on an issue of federal law, so it went through the federal court system.

This is a state law issue, so it's going through the state court system.

They are two almost entirely separate court systems operating under different rules and applying different laws to different questions.

I don't think you realize that they are apples and oranges.

@SAUNDERS

They're both tools that have their places.

Think of functional as the software equivalent of MMX/SIMD on processors, where you have a large amount of data that you can process in parallel instead of one at a time.

MMX/SIMD had been really successful, right? A ton of problems lend themselves to such coprocessing?

I do mostly program in OOP, but when I see a problem requiring the churning through of a large dataset I'm excited to slam down a functional solution :)

@bonifartius @mia

@binaryhawk sounds like you're missing the causality here.

The same poisoned political environment that elected Trump also elected representatives who weren't so interested or able in moving forward.

The two are symptoms of the same political failures that lead to their elections.

@binaryhawk you seem to be making the mistake of thinking the House is ruled by an authoritarian inflicted upon them.

No, the hundreds of members of the House vote for their preferred leaders, so you can't blame the ones they elected for the stage.

Really, there's so much posing for the cameras and strategic spinning that go on.

We need to stop reelecting those jerks.

@monkeyben

I suspect it was already dead, so the new business bought the body to salvage what they could.

Joke's on them, though: "Bandcamp" doesn't have the "e" that Songtradr seems to desperately need.

@jwz

@losttourist specifically on this point I'd say a lot of it comes down to hysteresis, as an engineer would say.

I assume the UK right-wing government has backed away from some workers' rights policies? Well they started from a place that means even with the walking away they couldn't politically make it back to the US policies even if they wanted to.

More broadly, everything from the design of US governments through political perspectives in the population prevented US policies from going out that far in the first place.

By design there's a good bit of dampening in the US system, so it tends to approach new equilibrium slowly when at all.

@aires @jwz

@w7voa well that's one way to describe political officials pressuring content sources to quash inconvenient messages...

@samlitzinger a lot of people criticizing Musk seem to be making assumptions about his goals and plans.

He didn't purchase Twitter to keep it the same.

So really, it's we who don't have much of a clue, and maybe the enterprise will fail, but so far we don't even really know what it's supposed to be failing *at*

@SAUNDERS

I probably mentioned above that I'm a fan of functional programming, though I know that's a rarity. One reason is because functional programming is inherently positive for programs running on multiple processors/cores.

And oh look, we're now in an era where computers are running lots of cores :)

Same with xquery. It's a different tool with different plusses and minuses, but it just so happens that one plus is amenability to parallel programming.

I've never looked deeply into nosql so I'm not sure whether it has the same benefits, but maybe it does.

They're all different tools in the toolbox, but interestingly these less popular tools might be better suited to the tasks of today.

@bonifartius @mia

@tc_morekindness keep in mind that federal courts (and different federal courts) and state courts have different jurisdictions.

The federal Supreme Court didn't say this state court could make the decision.

And arguably the Supreme Court doesn't even have jurisdiction *itself* to dictate what jurisdiction such a state court could have.

SCOTUS is the head of the federal court system. This is about the NC state court system.

@debrashannon

Space is pretty huge! They wouldn't bother launching anything if it was just going to run into something else and blow up.

There's a lot of... space up there :)

And from launching NASA exploration vehicles through the underserved areas now being served by StarLink we can see for ourselves that these claims that Musk doesn't do things to help mankind are just bunk.

It's really a nutty claim, like telling someone through the internet that the internet doesn't exist.

It's gaslighting.

@arstechnica

@mariskus sounds like you're reading more into this than there is.

They pointed out that the name sounded stupid. That doesn't mean they hate the platform or anything.

And I tend to agree with them, although it's just a matter of superficial branding.

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