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Comment Re:I don't think they have a really wanted to do i (Score 1) 32

Another good example is when movie studios buy up the rights to a book and then never make it into a movie. Because they really just wanted to make sure nobody else does

Example? Many times stories/scripts are bought but don't result in a movie, but the reason isn't to prevent anyone else from making the script/story... That makes no literal sense, I need to hear a real-world example. Movies aren't made because book rights are bought as vanity projects that fall apart - can't find a star, too expensive to shoot, can't write a good script, etc. No one pays an author prevent a work from being produced.

Comment Re:Good Riddance (Score 1) 32

Even in the case where you have the money, as long as you are careful not to get into debt over your head, there's absolutely no rational reason to turn down an interest-free loan. Anything else you do with that money in the interim other than spending it is pretty much guaranteed to be a better use of the funds

Last year I bought an EV with 60 month, zero interest credit. I didn't want a loan, I was prepared to pay cash, but that zero interest loan for 5 years was too good to pass up. Occasionally I consider paying a little extra to bring down the loan balance, but then I realize doing that just reduces the benefit of the zero interest loan.

I'll probably pay it off early someday, but zero interest on a major purchase is very appealing.

Comment Re:Hmmm (Score 1) 32

there is usually an aura surrounding Apple users as higher income and more desirable as customers. Is this mostly a reflection of the changing demographics for Apple users or rather some unique aspects tied to using the Apple Card?

How many Apple products are sold to college students who are also taking on massive student debt burdens? There are certainly well-heeled Apple buyers that use the Apple Card for its zero interest credit period (better manage payment schedule) and/or appreciate the small cash back/discount the card offers, but I suspect there are a large number of Apple Card holders that struggle to manage their finances...

Comment Re:Hmmm (Score 1) 32

Given that many ultra-rich people, such as Donald Trump and Elon Musk, are notorious for not paying their bills

Given? It's an anecdote - contractors withholding payment for unacceptable work isn't the same as not paying your credit card bill...

I think you need to provide documentation to support your supposition that the higher-than-average delinquency rate is being driven by lower-income individuals.

Why, you think lower-income borrowers are better credit risks than, say, a middle-income or higher-income borrowers? Really? Lets just take a moment and think about that...

Recently Donald Trump was in court because NY Attorney General decided that Trump lied about asset valuations, and something, something, lower interest rates, something-something, unfair... Every lender the state decided was cheated explained they weren't lied to, they did their own due-diligence (they don't offer multi-million dollar "liars loans") and were all paid back on time, in full, and would happily do business with the Trump organization again.

Maybe go ask a reporter man which neighborhoods they do the most work in?

Credit cards are unsecured loans, if a borrower defaults, the credit card company has limited ways to try and collect - phone calls, letters, threats - but they can't drive to your house and reclaim that MB Pro you aren't paying towards.

Comment Re: I'll wait for better color eInk (Score 1) 52

There's no way I'd use the electricity and cause more wear on my TV by having it on displaying art all the time. It would also suck at night when you have a glowing thing on the wall when you want darkness.

If only there was a way to set display hours and set the device to turn off, say, during the times the room is not used? You could maybe rig a motion sensor to over-ride screen shutdown if there were people in the room outside the frame's normal operating times... but naw, it's impossible...

Comment Re: Power Consumption (Score 1) 52

Now an e-ink display would be really efficient, only needing power when the image is changed, but those aren't practical for TVs (or likely for any large use).

Please, tell me more about these full-color, 4K resolution e-Ink displays that consume NO power until the image changes... and please, provide pricing info also...

Comment Re: This is just a shallow form of marketing... (Score 1) 52

If I really wanted something like this why would I pay $900 when I can buy a 60" 4K TV for $200 during a Black Friday sale and use it to display any number of works of art or other images I wish to as opposed to being limited to merely 2,000 different works.

Well, let's see, your counter-product relies on special, loss-leader pricing which occurs once a year, and you gloss over the need to collect the artwork, prepare it for display device (oh, I'm sorry, are all your images proper even fractions ok your devices 4K resolution?), and some sort of computing device to store and serve-up the images, with the requisite hacking/programming to make all work seamlessly... I'm eager to learn about your woodworking/frame making skills to house this collection of pieces, not to mention how you're going to integrate streaming and cable TV reception into the unit.

Perhaps penny-pinching über-geeks from Slashdot aren't their target market for this museum-quality art displaying product?

Comment Re:Interesting to see divergence in pathes to fasc (Score 3, Interesting) 169

He simply cut funding, they were free to solicit donations from viewers.

The media marketplace has changed/evolved since the CPB was created, how has it changed/evolved?

I don't want govt owned/funded broadcasters, why do you think it is important for there to be state-funded broadcasters?

Comment Re:About time! (Score 3, Insightful) 169

so you would prefer more overt propaganda on FOX?

FOX is self-funded, it goes away the moment people stop watching it.

 

meanwhile there are fewer resources that teach kids to literally fucking read. but no big deal, you think what you think.

Well, it's a pretty sad state of affairs if children have to watch PBS after taxpayer-funded K-12 education just to learn to "literally fucking read"

It's a taxpayer-funded shell game.

Gov't funds CPB, which in turn funds public tv stations, who in turn pay PBS for the shows the broadcast between fundraising drives.

Sesame Street is a profitable operation, they sell merch, have a theme park, and collect huge fees from pbs stations to broadcast their shows.

We could cut out a lot of the expense if PBS just went to a streaming model, stop with the transmitters and over the air broadcasts.

I'd be curious to know, what percentage of pbs viewers watch it on over the air broadcasts vs cable tv?

Comment Uhhh... (Score 3, Informative) 169

The org noted that the rescission of all of CPB's federal funding came after years of political attacks. "For more than half a century, CPB existed to ensure that all Americans -- regardless of geography, income, or background -- had access to trusted news, educational programming, and local storytelling," said CPB president/CEO Patricia Harrison.

Every American has or can have access to the internet thru various free/subsidized broadband access as well as free/subsidized smartphones, and even internet access subsidized in schools and libraries.

I don't think there is a problem for anyone to get access to PBS/NPR content - is there some benefit to watching PBS/hearing NPR off the public airwaves, or is streaming either acceptable.

The CPB money went to buy programming and run transmitters/studios, that's about it.

Comment Re: This is a parody, right? (Score 1) 249

The article is about New York City, not the U.S. or the world, and it has literally nothing to do with Imperial vs Metric units of measurement.

Go ahead and mock the Mars rover(?) that slammed into the surface of mars, but be sure and include all the ESA probes and rovers they've sent around our solar system successfully...

Comment Re: Wait, what? (Score 3, Informative) 32

Uh, to be clear, the current administration is stopping the practice.

President Donald Trump signed into law this month a measure that prohibits anyone based in China and other adversarial countries from accessing the Pentagon's cloud computing systems.

How about foreign nationals living in ANY adversarial country (including China) not be allowed to work on anything related to national defense? If they can't even bother to move to the U.S. let's keep them away from our defense systems? OK?

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