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Initialised t1_jcpw1dn wrote
Reply to comment by theworldsucksbigA in Meet China's latest AI news anchor, a young woman who runs virtual Q&A sessions to teach people propaganda by ethereal3xp
Call the faithful to their knees to hear the softly spoken magic spell.
Initialised t1_jcowe1w wrote
Reply to comment by YourWiseOldFriend in Meet China's latest AI news anchor, a young woman who runs virtual Q&A sessions to teach people propaganda by ethereal3xp
Even if they are corporate or government propaganda mouthpieces?
Initialised t1_jcopj0p wrote
Reply to comment by YourWiseOldFriend in Meet China's latest AI news anchor, a young woman who runs virtual Q&A sessions to teach people propaganda by ethereal3xp
Just virtual anchors?
Initialised t1_jax18yf wrote
Reply to Game Theory's ultimate answer to real world dilemmas: "Generous Tit for Tat" by TryingTruly
Tit for Two Tats
Initialised t1_j9ygeg6 wrote
Initialised t1_j9ydrs3 wrote
Reply to comment by shanoshamanizum in A platform for products with no planned obsolescence by shanoshamanizum
I worked for and bought from companies that have lease options in Europe. If a customer has a faulty unit it gets repaired or replaced according to the terms of their SLA unless it’s physical damage. We offer additional tools for device management that can tell when a drive, battery or cooling system might be going bad to proactively target failing machines before end users notice.
The model you propose exists and your last statement is not reflected in how leasing works in Europe.
Again, what are you leasing and who from?
Initialised t1_j9y77pv wrote
Reply to comment by shanoshamanizum in A platform for products with no planned obsolescence by shanoshamanizum
Which company are you leasing with and did you also buy management with hardware monitoring?
Initialised t1_j9y64h9 wrote
Reply to comment by shanoshamanizum in A platform for products with no planned obsolescence by shanoshamanizum
No, if you lease computers when on fails you get a same or next day swap out.
Initialised t1_j9y2eex wrote
Reply to comment by Nakotadinzeo in A platform for products with no planned obsolescence by shanoshamanizum
One: that’s what insurance is for.
Two: Upgradability assumes I’m talking about something that is still in development, not a mature technology.
Three: that’s recyclability which is a different attribute.
Initialised t1_j9y1sn0 wrote
Reply to comment by Dry-Influence9 in A platform for products with no planned obsolescence by shanoshamanizum
It has a place, many people’s phones are part of a subscription service, it’s quite common for cars and leased fleets of laptops in large organisations.
Initialised t1_j9y1n1v wrote
Reply to comment by shanoshamanizum in A platform for products with no planned obsolescence by shanoshamanizum
That’s just a product as a service model and already exists.
Initialised t1_j9xy455 wrote
Reply to comment by shanoshamanizum in A platform for products with no planned obsolescence by shanoshamanizum
I can see that in your answers.
There are manufacturing trade offs between competing qualities: affordability, reliability, longevity, modularity, reparability, environmental resistance, recyclability. No one product can score highly in all areas so each has a balance of attributes and the legislation of the market it is sold in.
It’s not as binary as you suggest, most product segments are split into three regions on a sigmoid curve of quality as a function of price.
Budget, Mainstream and Premium.
To suggest that budget products have built in obsolescence by design vs premium is incorrect, they are built to a lower quality so will wear out quicker. Similarly a premium product may seem overpriced, especially in a rapidly evolving product like semiconductors. True value exists in the linear mainstream section where performance and quality goes up linearly with price. This spectrum exist for buyers too,
We already have leasing and subscription based services, Desktop as a Service, mobile phone contracts, vehicle subscriptions, rental properties. These make sense while a technology is evolving but less so for mature products like furniture where we don’t perceive planned obsolescence as problematic.
Initialised t1_j9xvegv wrote
Reply to comment by shanoshamanizum in A platform for products with no planned obsolescence by shanoshamanizum
If a device is overbuilt and hardened to the point where it is unlikely to fail in your lifetime does design for reparability matter?
Initialised t1_j9xv3zy wrote
Reply to comment by shanoshamanizum in A platform for products with no planned obsolescence by shanoshamanizum
Those aren’t examples.
Initialised t1_j9xv2a7 wrote
If a device is overbuilt and hardened to the point where it is unlikely to fail in your lifetime does design for reparability matter?
Initialised t1_j9xuo4v wrote
Reply to Songs about lists of girls? by Spare-Machine6105
Suede - Lonely Girls fits well with your definition, also consider Song for Whoever by The Beautiful South
Initialised t1_j8tug11 wrote
Reply to comment by Few-Ganache1416 in IAMA Environmental Engineer AMA about cleaning up after chemical spills! by Few-Ganache1416
It’s cheaper than the alternative at 10x the cost.
Initialised t1_j8tsrdj wrote
Reply to comment by Few-Ganache1416 in IAMA Environmental Engineer AMA about cleaning up after chemical spills! by Few-Ganache1416
Half a trillion dollars, bargain!
Estimated 14 trillion dollar cost of sea level rise if we don’t get the climate under control.
Thanks for the detail and perspective.
Initialised t1_j8ssct0 wrote
Reply to IAMA Environmental Engineer AMA about cleaning up after chemical spills! by Few-Ganache1416
Assuming CO2 emissions remained static, how much carbon capture and storage would be necessary to reduce atmospheric CO2 to 1900 levels and how much energy would it cost to do it?
Initialised t1_j869t4g wrote
Reply to comment by taedrin in Solar-powered system converts plastic and greenhouse gases into sustainable fuels by landlord2213
But if the fuel is electricity + plastic + CO2 then it’s not sustainable because the plastic component is fossil fuel.
Initialised t1_j2dxbiz wrote
Reply to In opposite : could you list things cheap today that will be unaffordable in 2030 ? (and why) by salutbobby
Fossil Fuel, (and therefore transport) by 2030 all subsidies will be gone, globally we will have stopped exploiting new resources in favour of solar energy. There may be niche areas where using solar to make synthetic fuels make sense but biofuel means farming for fuel instead of food.
As we move to a world where transportation isn’t powered by cheap dirty fuel the economics of mass production will change and redistribute making localised recycling necessary to avoid the massive energy, environmental and pollution cost of digging up and transporting new raw materials.
Another side effect is the daily mass migration we call commuting will be much smaller, leaving more town centre buildings vacant.
As a result more and more stuff will be produced much closer to the point of use than it is now. with food in vertical farms, (in those now empty offices). 3D Printing and Rapid Prototyping will be used for machine parts, you might actually be able to download a car rather than having it shipped around the globe.
Initialised t1_izn6hwo wrote
Mars, Venus, Mercury and perhaps the larger moons of Jupiter and Saturn might be colonised in the not too distant future if we can figure out a zero waste method of living. The energy requirement of shipping live humans much further is very problematic so interstellar travel will have to wait until we’ve evolved beyond our meatsacks.
Initialised t1_iy5a00d wrote
Reply to comment by TheBeardedSingleMalt in Beside Die Hard, what are some "unofficial" or covert holiday movies? by hkkhpr
Best Christmas Movie Ever.
Initialised t1_iy4hvn8 wrote
Gremlins
Initialised t1_jdqdzrq wrote
Reply to Printed organs becoming more useful than bio ones by TheRappingSquid
It’s probably going to be your tissue grown on a scaffold to avoid rejection rather than a full artificial organ as in Repomen but we might need those as regrown organs mature or as a stopgap while a spare organ is grown for you.