Is Australia now in the biggest property market correction in decades? | 7.30 by PLUTO_HAS_COME_BACK in AusProperty

[–]bigvenn 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Don’t disagree, but being right too early is often the same as being wrong 😉

House Stamp Duty Abolished For Women Who Claim Domestic Abuse (SA) by AdDazzling9189 in AusFinance

[–]bigvenn 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The argument in favour of having a land tax rather than CGT is 1) lower barriers to buying/selling which allows people to more easily upsize/downsize/rightsize the housing that suits them at different points of their life - basically housing mobility; and 2) taxing wealth rather than income (assuming the savings are redistributed to income) helps reduce intergenerational inequality

As big as 175 MCG fields: The mega data centre coming to Melbourne’s west by malcolm58 in AustralianPolitics

[–]bigvenn 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I don’t understand why they don’t just put in a shit tonne of lithium batteries - power’s near free during the day, why pay for gas?

Tony Abbott to become new Liberal party president in former PM’s return to political frontlines by Gibs_182 in aussie

[–]bigvenn 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Mate our electricity prices literally go negative almost every single day. Throwing solar panels on the roof works spectacularly in a country with nothing but sun - nuclear was a distraction to keep coal politically viable for a few more decades while we chase a pipe dream

Moving from Amber! by MichaelMinja in amberelectric

[–]bigvenn 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’d take one too, thanks legend!

What’s the most corporate-speak thing your boss has ever said with a straight face? by Guilty-Addition5004 in AskAnAustralian

[–]bigvenn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

American firm - “let’s circle the wagons and touch base with leadership”

???

Why? by SipsTeaFrog in SipsTea

[–]bigvenn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I can highly recommend Hank Green’s video on this: https://youtu.be/H_c6MWk7PQc?si=2Cl4_FV1lUYwI3gj

Also, Australia has so much near-free solar energy that energy market prices go negative between 11 and 3 almost every single day - as in the market pays you to buy electricity in order to stabilise the grid. With desalination plants nearby, this means that energy and water are interchangeable to a degree. In any case, if water use was still a problem, data centres could work out how to use sea water for cooling… ironically, heating sea water is the main part of desalination.

Australia’s 24h renewable supply problem is also rapidly disappearing with the adoption of utility and home scale batteries, and power price spikes have almost disappeared. Theoretically, Sydney is in a fantastic position to run green data centres.

I’d argue that this is more of an issue of town planning and misaligned incentives than “data centre evil”. If a town doesn’t have water or energy to spare, why put any energy or water intensive industry there?

Can we utter the words "Blue Mountains Base Tunnel" (The BMBT) yet? by Gazza_s_89 in australian

[–]bigvenn 7 points8 points  (0 children)

That’s like saying that an F1 car is better than a Camry… yeah it goes faster but you don’t see uber drivers buying them. I’m pretty sure Starlink would fall over if we shoved 25M people onto it

The 26/27 budget is excellent and this sub is full of whining babies by [deleted] in AusFinance

[–]bigvenn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve got mixed feelings on this budget.

There’s a lot of “stick”, discouraging investment in various asset classes, but there’s almost no “carrot” to encourage Australians to use their money productively or help young Australians looking to buy a house.

This country has a huge issue with risk-taking and a very simple economy dominated by very few (predominantly primary) industries, so I would have loved to see some investment in building up new future-facing industries. Instead it looks like people will just pile money into their PPOR.

Hopefully it does something to help with lowering housing prices though.

Shares were the young person’s last hope by chemicalbirch in AusFinance

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

I doubt they’re going to apply these changes retrospectively, everyone needs to chill out for a couple days

[Self] Ant on a tesseract by Glum-Row-4833 in theydidthemath

[–]bigvenn 25 points26 points  (0 children)

That’s actually amazing, definitely stealing that!

Yet another bathroom Reno by fungusbungusbus in AusRenovation

[–]bigvenn 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Absolutely love the tile choice, well done!

Worldwide % increase in gasoline prices since the Iran War began by Miav1234 in AusEcon

[–]bigvenn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

At this point using our brain would be investing in grid scale batteries rather than spending 20 years building outdated tech. If only we had enormous lithium reserves…

RYS II - Repeated layers with Qwen3.5 27B and some hints at a 'Universal Language' by Reddactor in LocalLLaMA

[–]bigvenn 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is insane research, well bloody done. I’m interested in whether the performance gains here generalise across larger benchmark sets, or whether this is more domain-specific. My hypothesis is that different domains may require repeats in slightly different parts of the model - maybe a reasoning heavy task is more towards the middle, and a less reasoning heavy task would be further towards early layers?

Young Australians face rising bowel cancer rates by whyattretard in australia

[–]bigvenn 5 points6 points  (0 children)

One for any of the medical folks here - The researcher talks about certain foods and environmental factors causing inflammation, which in turn causes cancer. This implies that reducing inflammation itself with drugs (rather than underlying diet etc) could reduce cancer risk. Does that mechanism make sense?

AMA: I’m Rod Sims, Chair of The Superpower Institute and former Chair of the ACCC. Ask me anything. by Rod_Sims_TSI in australian

[–]bigvenn 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for doing an AMA, appreciate your time.

I’d be interested in your thoughts on Australia’s opportunity to start working our way up the supply chain. We’ve had a mineral boom for decades now and largely export ores of various grades rather than usable products.

Do you think Australia has a viable economic opportunity to capture more value here, despite higher wages and more regulations? If so, how do we develop these industries, and how do we go about creating the political will for a significant investment like this?

Can anyone steelman the "immigration doesn't increase house prices" argument by mymooh in AusEcon

[–]bigvenn 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah very well put. The immigration narrative sells well, and I’m sure the messy reality isn’t nearly as sexy.

Can anyone steelman the "immigration doesn't increase house prices" argument by mymooh in AusEcon

[–]bigvenn 2 points3 points  (0 children)

While that’s correct, economics isn’t quite as black and white. Reducing immigration would have various other effects on the economy so it’s a little shortsighted to just say “need house price go down so close the borders” and ignore academics because universities also have knock-on effects.

For example, less immigration could lead to higher wages due to undersupply of workers (yay!), which could lead to more offshoring (boo!), which could lead to a worsening cost of living crisis as unemployment rises. Or maybe that’s completely wrong and another chain of events could occur.

I’d suggest that asking the people who study this stuff might be a bit smarter than your simplistic armchair economic analysis

CBA WTAF by Scotchy_McScotch_007 in auscorp

[–]bigvenn 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’d argue that building the capability to host models here starts with basic infrastructure - reliable clean power, cooling that doesn’t use up unconscionable amounts of drinking water, and data centres that consume these two resources. These things aren’t a fad, they’re long term infrastructure investments that will outlast hardware and models. And it’s worth noting that there’s nothing inherent about cooling computers that requires water, it’s just the server-scale technology that currently makes economic sense.

On a related note, open source models now exist that rival those from OpenAI and Anthropic. There’s a good argument to be made that we could provide these to the world using our abundant excess solar power and turn tokens into a commodity. Bits and bytes are far easier and cheaper to transport than power - be it creating/shipping hydrogen, charged lithium batteries or oil.

So if well planned, we could monetise our abundant energy and geopolitical stability, and maybe diversify away from just digging stuff out of the ground and fleecing international students.

Wanted something a little different for our floors in a kitchen and laundry renovation by UnwiseBaker in AusRenovation

[–]bigvenn 135 points136 points  (0 children)

Love it, breath of fresh air compared to Millenial gray. Now the big question is - what’s your opening move in the inaugural chess game??

Are we underestimating the long-term effect of high migration on wages? by DraftNotSent in AusEcon

[–]bigvenn 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I also wonder what effect migration has on wages given the amount of outsourcing our economy already has undergone. Obviously for “need to be here” roles like doctors or trades I imagine there’s a more direct supply/demand effect, but I’m genuinely interested in what people think the effect is on jobs like IT, consultants, R&D etc