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Comment Re: Bill Gates gets the Cesar Chavez treatment? (Score 1) 52

He gave cash to name the building, if they strip off the name, it is conceivable he is entitled to consideration - otherwise, the school could continually resell naming rights anytime it wanted, tanking the value of naming the building and eliminating an easy source of income/donations.

Comment Re: Bill Gates gets the Cesar Chavez treatment? (Score 1) 52

Things named after Chavez were named as an honor to him.

Things named after Gates, et al, were bought and paid for with (presumably) very, very large cash donations from Gates.

Would schools give back the money 'evil' Bill Gates gave to name facilities after him? I doubt it.

What has *actually* been proven about Bill Gates and Epstein? AFAIK the issue is they were buddies, and his wife left him because of his association with Epstein - I'm not aware of anyone claiming Gates personally took advantage of anyone, etc.

Lots of politicians took donations from Epstein, are they "tarred with the same brush" as Epstein?

Comment Re: Entertainment, huh? (Score 1) 64

Its damn sure a FACT that Windows 11 is the best advertisement for Linux..

Please, explain why that advertising campaign isn't winning over more converts? Have Linux usage numbers gone up dramatically since Win 10 went off-support?

Real people that care about security updates (a small minority of the computer using population) don't complain that their 7-10 year-old computer is no longer supported and needs to be upgraded, and people that don't care about security updates won't update their 7-10 year-old computer and happily run Win 10 a few more years.

Comment Re: Typical Stupidity (Score 2) 124

Kernel support for an architecture does not translate to distribution support for that architecture. Just because a Linux kernel supports a 486 CPU, but that doesn't mean the latest distribution of a given flavor of Linux will run on a 486.

For example, can Ubuntu 2024 LTS run on a 486 machine?

Hasn't this already happened? From 2025 - https://www.zdnet.com/article/...

Comment Re: The problem with the analysis (Score 1) 166

For instance, the article mentions that the median price of a home is about $500k. This likely isn't enough to buy a studio apartment in lower Manhattan.

Manhattan isn't considered "typical" by most measures. 'Middle class' Americans don't buy apartments in Manhattan, wealthy American buy in Manhattan, middle class Americans rent.

Comment Re: Not for long (Score 1) 166

"Punative taxes" on EVs? Explain.

When the federal gov't stopped SUBSIDIZING EVs folks called that punative, it's not, it's prudent.

When states talk about assessing road usage fees on EVs to make up for lost road taxes that would normally have been collected on gasoline purchases, some call it punative, it's just prudent.

People aren't 'owed' $7,500 for an EV purchase, nor are EVs entitled to use our public roads for free - so please, don't try and claim treating EVs like ICE vehicles as "punative."

Comment Reminds me of Realpage "scandal" (Score 0) 88

An employer trying to figure out how little they can offer an individual seems like a lot of work, which will blow-up in their face if/when the employees compare compensation packages.

I can't imagine an employer doing this on any sort of large group of employees. Unless you have a mono-sexual, mono-racial workforce, different individual compensation for the same job is just a shit-storm waiting to happen. What if Women are, generally, paid less then men in the same position? Or if minorities are paid less than Caucasian workers?

I've worked in places where one worker ;an older woman) learned she was paid about $5K less than her colleagues, but that was because she came to the job with no experience, the others had 5-10 years industry experience when they were hired. She felt she was 'cheated', it affected her work and her relationships with coworkers. Ultimately they quietly bumped up her pay, but she still complained - it turned out bad for her (impacted her review, cost her a performance raise at year-end).

Bottom line, the worker is owed what the employer offers and the employee accepts. If the offer is too low, don't accept it. It isn't anyone's fault but your own if you accept a too-low offer.

I don't understand the outrage of using publicly-available information to make a business decision - in realpage scandal a company used computers to determine the maximal rent a landlord/owner could charge a tenant, and in this case an employer is using a service to create a profile of a worker from public information to figure out how low an offer the candidate is likely to accept. These are things that have been manually done for decades, but somehow automating it makes it bad?

Employers look at candidates, review their job history, and arrive at a number they think the candidate will accept. That a candidate has gone and used payday loans is (apparently) publicly-available info - the issue is to maybe make the info private?

Employers do background checks, criminal record checks, and, I would assume, some sort of financial background check before hiring certain workers - it's labor-intensive, so probably not very common, but for certain occupations, I'm sure it's standard.

Comment Re: UK has them, Waze still useful (Score 0) 187

Or, you know, obey the law and drive under the speed limit...

If everyone obeyed the laws, there'd be no need for this kind of "enforcement" exercise, and the third-party company will take down the cameras and move to a new city.

I just love the "pervasive" surveillance network argument - "I know I'm driving a car on a public road with an easily readable license plate, but you have no right to read my license plate and keep track of when and where I was!"

Where exactly does the presumption of privacy come into this argument?

Comment Ye Gods! (Score 1) 79

"Amazon "must negotiate with a labor union representing some 5,000 workers at a company warehouse on Staten Island,"

5,000 workers?!

I fully expect negotiations to drag out for years (longer) - Amazon is apparently intending to appeal the previous decision, and even if forced to sit down and negotiate with the workers union, that process will drag on...

I expect this is a war of attrition - Amazon can just maintain status quo and overtime the workforce will turn-over, perhaps to the point that Amazon can get the workers to vote down the union...

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