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[-] Aceticon@lemmy.world 4 points 10 hours ago

They wanted to keep the juicy margins of SUVs whilst being forced (whist bitching and moaning all the way) to transition to EV technology, so ended up pushing EV SUVs.

Their EVs are expensive mainly because of them targeting higher market segments instead of making an "EV for the people", all the while that was exactly what most Chinese car-makers were aiming for.

[-] Aceticon@lemmy.world 3 points 10 hours ago

The "great industrial leaders" heading these companies have been protected and mollycoddled by the German State, especially at the time of the Emissions Scandal (were the only person to get convicted was a lowly Engineer), so they interiorised well the "we're too big to fail" message and proceeded to go into full-on extractive mode in the full knowledge that no matter what the German and even European taxpayer will pay for saving their mismanaged and bled dry companies.

The result is entirely what invariably happens in such situations.

[-] Aceticon@lemmy.world 19 points 10 hours ago

Worry not! Biden will expedite a new weapon shipment to replace the bullets used by the brave Israeli soldiers protecting their great nation from that evil Hamas-loving antisemite!

[-] Aceticon@lemmy.world 7 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Above a certain level of seniority (in the sense of real breadth and depth of experience rather than merely high count of work years) one's increased productivity is mainly in making others more productive.

You can only be so productive at making code, but you can certainly make others more productive with better design of the software, better software architecture, properly designed (for productivity, bug reduction and future extensibility) libraries, adequate and suitably adjusted software development processes for the specifics of the business for which the software is being made, proper technical and requirements analysis well before time has been wasted in coding, mentorship, use of experience to foresee future needs and potential pitfalls at all levels (from requirements all the way through systems design and down to code making), and so on.

Don't pay for that and then be surprised of just how much work turns out to have been wasted in doing the wrong things, how much trouble people have with integration, how many "unexpected" things delay the deliveries, how fast your code base ages and how brittle it seems, how often whole applications and systems have to be rewritten, how much the software made mismatches the needs of the users, how mistrusting and even adversarial the developer-user relationship ends up being and so on.

From the outside it's actually pretty easy to deduce (and also from having known people on the inside) how plenty of Tech companies (Google being a prime example) haven't learned the lesson that there are more forms of value in the software development process than merely "works 14h/day, is young and intelligent (but clearly not wise)"

[-] Aceticon@lemmy.world 0 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

There are way too many of the "old ways" still around in Germany, from a surveillance culture and a very propagandistic Press activelly indoctrinating people to them continuing to support an ethno-Fascist state committing a Genocide with weapons very overtly because of their race and German courts convicting people for "anti-semitism" when they say the "from the Land to the Sea" saying (which is about Israel, not the Jewish Religion) but not doing the same for actual overt racist statements and behaviors against other ethnic groups.

The rise of the AfD has happened in a field well plowed by mainstream German politicians with the idea that people's worth depends on race, with some races being deemed good (ubermenschen) and others bad (untermensched) - they might not use the same words anymore, but they certainly share that same view of Mankind.

The apparatus of the State and even the Justice System in Germany is riddled with the very same ideas about people - the racist idea that people's value is determined by their race and some races are better than others - that served as the foundation of Nazism.

[-] Aceticon@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago

"These are my Principles and if you don't like them, I have others"

[-] Aceticon@lemmy.world 0 points 2 days ago

It's really very simple:

  • When it's for the benefit of the Owner class (in this specific case mainly Publishers) it's ownership hence people are told they're buying games (only to discover after paying that it's not so) and piracy is described and even in some countries treated as Theft.
  • When it's for the benefit of citizens in general it's intellectual property and it's not really owned by them when they buy it (only licensed, often in such a way that they can lose access to what they were told they were buying) and if they do happen to created intellectual property themselves it can easily be taken away from the by the Owner class who "curiously" even in those countries which treat Piracy the same as Theft won't be criminally held responsible for it.

It's the good old "one rule for thee another for me" so popular with authoritarians, especially Fascists (which probably explains why Germany is one of a few countries in Europe that criminalizes piracy, but de facto only treats it as such when it's the little people doing it).

[-] Aceticon@lemmy.world 8 points 2 days ago

In all appearances a totally symbolic something with no real impact, so probably just pure public opinion management.

[-] Aceticon@lemmy.world 5 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

That's because his talk doesn't match his walk.

You know how Trump just shamelessly lies as easily as he breaths? Well Biden also massively lies, he's just far more sophisticated at it than Trump (hardly a tall barrier, lets be honest) hence less obvious at it yet in the end you still see his the actual actions or the end result of them (when the deceit technique is to pass know impossible measures or just half of what's needed and not the other requires half so those measures don't actually do what it says on the tin) not matching his words.

Let's hope Kamala is much less of a liar.

[-] Aceticon@lemmy.world 0 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

New Labour politicians have a massive debt to Israeli-linked Jewish Groups in the UK for the Anti-Semitism slander campaign against Corbyn and the Labour Party during his leadership that lost Labour an election and brought him down as leader of the party to be replaced by a New Labour leader (who promptly started a pogrom against Leftwingers in the party).

Of course, as is tradition in England (and because in the recent elections they lost 10 Parliament seats to people who campaigned as independents exactly because of New Labour's pro-Zionist "No Genocide is too great" policies), they're doing a bit public opinion management with a loudly announced measure that de facto does nothing.

If there's one thing that over a decade of living in Britain has taught me was to always look behind the curtain when it comes to grand very public gestures by the local politicians, the more the noise they make about their "great measure" the more the need to dig out the part of the story they're not telling people about.

[-] Aceticon@lemmy.world 47 points 4 days ago

Sound like a critical race condition or bad memory access (this latter only in languages with pointers).

Since it's HTTP(S) and judging by the average developer experience in the domain of multi-threading I've seen even for people doing stuff that naturally tends to involve multiple threads (such as networked access by multiple simultaneous clients), my bet is the former.

PS: Yeah, I know it's a joke, but I made the serious point anyways because it might be useful for somebody.

[-] Aceticon@lemmy.world 2 points 4 days ago

I suspect indirectly both variants come from the same source or maybe even it's the La Haine that's indirectly the source for my variant (though I learned this joke a long time ago, possibly before 1995).

By the way, that's excellent film intro.

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Aceticon

joined 1 year ago