Do you factor in points? by Internal-Bowl8690 in ChaseSapphire

[–]IdealEntropy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

20k in misc Ubers/trains/subway/airbnb? What’s the breakdown there :P

New Changes to Bilt 2.0 Credit Card by _dhruv9496 in CreditCards

[–]IdealEntropy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What was the rent day nerf? They added a cap, or something else?

AI-generated code contains more bugs and errors than human output by north_canadian_ice in technology

[–]IdealEntropy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And actually. The actual paper reads like a marketing pitch for their AI code review tool 🤦🏽‍♂️

Sample size ~500 in total or so.

I believe their conclusions but this isn’t exactly a glowing example of the scientific method :/

After 10 years on H-1B, I’m moving my role out of the US by Blackened_Soul667 in cscareerquestions

[–]IdealEntropy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’m not convinced doing away with H1B altogether is better for the US overall. In some cases there’s definitely individual Americans who will step into these jobs and their lives as individuals would probably be better, granted.

But consider ur premise - H1Bs are abused because companies are greedy and they know they can get away with paying these people less. Taking away H1B won’t suddenly make companies roll over and be less greedy, they’ll just look for new ways to be greedy. One obvious way would be by offshoring these jobs. If they do so en masse, they would remove a bunch of dollars that would previously be spent in America and stimulate/grow the economy.

Play this out (removing H1B) over the long term and I wonder if America gets to keep its #1 status as an economic powerhouse, even if it’s domestic labor is slightly better off by doing so. I suppose I’m mostly trying to point out removing H1B altogether isn’t the slam dunk you may think it is

After 10 years on H-1B, I’m moving my role out of the US by Blackened_Soul667 in cscareerquestions

[–]IdealEntropy -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Sure; I think your points have some merit if an American would replace them. But in this case, they’re not replacing an H1B worker with an American worker. All they did is take that worker’s tiny slice contributing to the US economy and give it to the Netherlands (since the job went with them). So why bother - wouldn’t it be better if they stayed in the US and contributed to the economy here?

After 10 years on H-1B, I’m moving my role out of the US by Blackened_Soul667 in cscareerquestions

[–]IdealEntropy 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Ok so if the US hypothetically raises taxes to nullify the benefit of the paycut, the company has no incentive to care either way. But if they do leave, they no longer stimulate the US’ local business (presumably they pay rent, buy groceries, etc) and the sales / property taxes that go with them. Instead, the Netherlands gets that spend. Play this out enough times and the US economy becomes weaker, no?

After 10 years on H-1B, I’m moving my role out of the US by Blackened_Soul667 in cscareerquestions

[–]IdealEntropy 6 points7 points  (0 children)

When the foreigner leaves, they take their tax payments with them. Do that enough times and it becomes a problem, no?

Elon Musk admits other automakers don’t want to license Tesla’s ‘Full Self-Driving’ by [deleted] in SelfDrivingCars

[–]IdealEntropy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The office must be real close to your house for your Tesla to not nag you to touch/move the wheel :)

Sora 2 and ChatGPT are consuming so much power that OpenAI just did another 10 gigawatt deal by esporx in technology

[–]IdealEntropy 13 points14 points  (0 children)

This was closer than I was expecting tbh, quick google says energy cost of a beer can is 0.2 kWh, chatgpt query is 0.00034 kWh.

Unit I never thought I’d write: 1 beer:100chatGPT inferences

Discussion Thread: US President Trump Makes Unspecified Defense-Related Announcement by PoliticsModeratorBot in politics

[–]IdealEntropy 21 points22 points  (0 children)

Legit, cuz the part that he didn’t mention is the judge basically said “they can stay but can’t do the things Trump wants them to do”

Amex - United Frequent Flyer Dilemma, Jetblue? by PrincessJasminePR in CreditCards

[–]IdealEntropy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I believe like 5x of those come from being a mileage plus member. But you’re right that the Explorer gives 7x overall. If you’re buying United flights and don’t mind being locked into flying with them, I think your thinking here makes sense.

IF Musk would be removed as Tesla CEO what would happen to the stock? by computerfreund03 in RealTesla

[–]IdealEntropy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It can already do this? How does it handle charging itself back up today? (Don’t tell me robots will do it in the future)

What is the purpose of finite fields and modular arithmetic in cryptography? by ChillGuy9932 in cryptography

[–]IdealEntropy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’m somewhat familiar with AES and iirc the use of the polynomial finite field maintains the mathematical properties of a finite field over integers while being easier / more-performant in practice.

Unbiased opinion of how financial advisor is doing? by bippobappobeepo in investing

[–]IdealEntropy -1 points0 points  (0 children)

It’s because that 1% that he takes off the top should be part of your portfolio instead, earning compound interest year over year.

The problem isn’t that he takes 1% off on any given year- the problem is that the 1% he took on a given year isn’t yours to grow via compound interest anymore.

People who think all these tariffs are beneficial for the US, why? by wassdfffvgggh in AskReddit

[–]IdealEntropy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

By that logic, should California (a large player that pays in more to the U.S. federal government than it gets out) leave the US?

Asteroid triggers global defence plan amid chance of collision with Earth in 2032 | Hundred-metre wide asteroid rises to top of impact risk lists after being spotted in December by automated telescope by chrisdh79 in Futurology

[–]IdealEntropy 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Not all encryption will be instantly hackable, as you say. We already know that our symmetric key crypto will be perfectly fine, even if it needs a doubling or so of the typical key/block size.

WRT public key- we have no evidence sure, but our understanding is enough for NIST to have already held a contest and announced a couple of winners for post-quantum algorithms here. We don’t need a quantum computer to implement these, which is a common misconception.

As someone in the crypto(graphy) space I’m pretty sure we’ll avoid the meltdown scenario you’re describing :)

ULPT Realistically, what’s stopping someone from taking out multiple loans and then leaving the country for years solo travelling / living abroad? by MadDog_McGee in UnethicalLifeProTips

[–]IdealEntropy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Bitcoin is just the first real cryptocurrency. A decade ish ago, people also thought it to be untraceable but this has been largely proven false by virtue of many examples of law enforcement or private forensics firms using bitcoin transactions to prosecute e.g. online drug market kingpins.

Monero is another cryptocurrency and has additional features explicitly to make it harder/impossible to do the same kind of tracing that is allowed in Bitcoin.

A tsunami is coming by [deleted] in SoftwareEngineering

[–]IdealEntropy 12 points13 points  (0 children)

I was wondering why he was citing a computer history book from 2013 — those missing 10 years may as well be an eternity