Yes. That's part of the math. That's how Ford handled the Pinto. It was decided how much the lawsuits and fines would cost for the exploding cars and since they'd make more selling exploding cars than they'd lose to civil suits or government fines they went with more money and let people burn to death.
I can easily envision execs at for profit hospitals running the numbers on whether a new more percussive strategy would pencil out to raise profits. They're not in the business of providing healthcare, so it's just about net profits, your well being be damned.
It's crazy how hard it is to show Americans that public transit helps with so many issues in our communities. We've had generations of people now who have never even ridden a bus. Our cities were demolished for cars so we're building our way out of a huge infrastructure deficit in the face of a populace who doesn't understand just how damaging cars are to everything around.
They learned from our local high-profile crooks that if you can delay proceeding for a couple years, the process ends.
Just fucking wild man
Yeah, we US Americans know. We're despairing that our justice system has finally failed after decades of active undermining be the right wing to install unqualified and ideological judges instead of people interested in a rule of law.
The delay delay delay tactics mostly work here if you have the money and connections for it.
I'm hopefully that Romania actually uses this case to prove their nation has a functional legal system when it counts, especially with such a high profile case. These brothers publicly derided, insulted, ignored, and put down Romania to their millions of followers. Go get them and make them pay for crimes and the insults. Show us all that Romania will enforce the law when it counts because the US barely is.
You do realize that the US alt right propaganda channels like Fox News would salivate over this title, right? They'll gladly use it to imply that Azov is in the United States for some crazy conspiracy theory reason.
I didn't say it was easy. I know how much it costs and it's not an easy proposition. Given the alternative of living in a state where a woman denied her body autonomy I feel that it should put some serious pressure on finding a way to get out of the state when they can.
I, too, have moved states before (on a grad student shoestring budget), and also have have opportunities to move to Europe, so we did the math on the move cost. I've also got adult children who have moved with little more than a packed car trunk and a low paying job at the destination.
The US has such low wages that we don't have "fuck you money". That's enough money on hand to just quit a job and/or move when things go wrong where you're at. The more the rich depress our take home pay the harder it becomes to drop a job or fight against oppression by moving away from it. We're in a bad spot as a nation in many aspects and having too few resources to move when society decides to own your uterus is just one of those problems.
Why women stay in those "some states" is just crazy. Why men who care about any woman in their life don't work to immediately move out of these anti-humanist states is beyond me.
The president can't ban vaccines in the US. Congress can pass legislation banning it and then the president can sign it, but the power lies with Congress here. I know we're moving towards a more powerful Executive Branch, which is bullshit and a path to having a ruler instead of an elected official. Even the language used here is deceptive and designed to speak in terms of a monarchy and any real patriot would fight it tooth and nail.
No gods. No kings. We won't be ruled again!
After watching the Endgame arc, I'm tired of superhero materials that just boil down to them punching each other for a while. I see some kind of conflict start and I start the timer on when they'll be punching away. Rarely does it run long.
It's not a city. It's a parking lot hellscape.
It's a sea of asphalt surrounding the occasional building. I'd never live there in a million years, and due to the car emissions from places like this burning our atmosphere, people won't be living there in 30 years (or fewer).
So the alt right terrorists have moved from shooting power substations to burning postal boxes?
So noted: they're still terrorists, just with new targets.
Voting Republican supports these terrorists. They will gladly use violence to impose minority authoritarian rule over you and your family.
They had to change their venting and airflow system for that building after it formed a cloud and rained inside. When your room can have weather systems, I feel you've entered a whole new category of 'room' by definition.
I got lucky at a conference. They got us a VIP tour of the Boeing Everett factory, which walked on the assembly floor. It was a phenomenal experience. The sheer scale of the operation, the size of the planes, and the detail work was astounding.
I did.
I was there 5 months before heading back to grad school.
I had one interview where they literally got me to fix their Sendmail server while I was there.
If you're a professor with a doctorate in Germany, the official way to refer to you is Professor Doctor [last name]. If you hold two doctorates it's Professor Doctor Doctor.
Professor is also a serious and registered title in Germany. You can't just start a school and start handing out professorships without oversight and approval.
I'm in the "be prepared" group where we usually have a couple weeks of food and water around. We also have two forms of heat for when the power goes out.
Will we survive WW3 on this? No, but it has been very helpful after big winter storms that took out the city power.
Having some supplies to use in the short term is good for everyone. Being ready to go out to help neighbors and get the community back on its feet is how we get through to the next good times.
For a loose definition of "me" and more "my parents when I was young" was a mid-70's Fiat. I have lots of memories where we waited in some parking lot or by the freeway for a tow truck or some other help to arrive.
Run as a right winger, especially an outright neo Nazi, in any EU or US country and they'll ship a briefcase of cash to your door.
In LaTeX, a single hyphen is just - while getting a range hyphen (the longer one) is --. I got chewed out by my graduate advisor for getting that wrong in a research paper. The difference is visibly small, but it does matter for clarity.
The cost of maintaining roads is astronomical
Washington State Department of Transportation is starting to realize that we cannot afford to maintain the sheer volume of roads we build. The maintenance debt that we have built up is bankrupting our governments and it's only going to get worse year by year.
Civilization itself cannot afford to have so many car oriented roads long term.
https://www.thecentersquare.com/washington/article_e69a80be-75f1-11ef-8b50-3babe18f06e9.html
Your neighborly services have arrived
The more car trips taken, regardless of how safe you try to make things, or how much you try to educate drivers, or how many 'be careful' street signs you put up, will always increase the chances of a crash.
Seeking working example of Junit5 and code coverage with maven
This is kind of an open question for me: does any code coverage tool work in Java with Junit5? I'll admit that I'm no Java configuration specialist, so I find the complexity of XML-based configuration systems to be quite opaque. I've got a few simple Maven-based build projects on hand and I wanted to add code coverage to the test harnesses. Unfortunately, I have never managed to get one stood up and running. I do this all the time with Python pytest/coverage tools, but it's been elusive for Java projects.
Could someone here please point me to a working example of any Java project using Maven / Junit5 / [any code coverage system]?
My latest attempt to get a working example came from this howto: https://howtodoinjava.com/junit5/jacoco-test-coverage/
But, it once again gave me the: [INFO] --- jacoco-maven-plugin:0.8.7:report (default-report) @ JUnit5Examples --- [INFO] Skipping JaCoCo execution due to missing execution data file.
As near as I can tell, JaCoCo just never runs. Ever. It's been very frustrating. I've read tutorials, followed suggestions on configuring surefire in various ways. I've pulled misc repo that claim to have it working. I've tried different computers with different OSes, versions of java, different maven installs, etc. There's something somewhere that I'm missing and after months of off and on attempts to get this working I'm at my wit's end.
Please help.
The French capital's mayor hailed a 'clear choice of Parisians' in favor of a measure that is 'good for our health and good for the planet.'
The measure to make vehicles weighing 1.6 tons and over pay 3x the parking rates for the first two hours has passed in Paris.
Now, let's get that in place for London and many other other places to help slow, and even reverse, this trend towards massive personal vehicles.
How Commute Culture Made American Cities Lifeless -- Yet There's Hope
YouTube Video
Click to view this content.
This video outlines some of the relationships between US commuting culture and the perspectives that it's engendered about the role of the city. The, when compared and contrasted to other nations' approach to city design and perspectives shows that it's possible to have a city core that's more than just a workplace.
My city is currently clinging to a small area of interesting downtown core. Everything else has either been bulldozed for parking lots, turned into office buildings with no store fronts, or plowed into wider roads. Every time I show the maps of the city with how car-focused we've made downtown to a city council member they recoil at the desolation, but it's so hard to get change happening.
We need fewer roads, cars, and non-human spaces in our city core areas. Making wider walking paths, biking roads, mass transit (not just busses!), and planting trees to make spaces more attractive will all continue to invite people to come downtown, not just someone desperate enough to drive there, park, hit one store and drive away.
Hoboken, NJ reduces annual traffic deaths to zero
In Hoboken, Mayor Ravi Bhalla has worked to redesign city intersections, install bike lanes and slow traffic. The result? Six-plus years of no pedestrian fatalities.
The mayor of Hoboken, NJ came in with a vision of reducing traffic deaths to pedestrians and cyclists. He instituted several strategies of traffic calming, increasing pedestrian visibility, reducing city wide street speeds to 20 mph with schools and parks down to 15 mph. Within a few years of road improvements and redesigns their pedestrian traffic deaths to zero for several years.
The article does note that half of the streets have bike lanes, they've put buffers between pedestrians and cars, and continue to redesign intersections with a focus on safety instead of just focusing on car speed/throughput.
GPT tool query: seeking desktop application with document support
What I'm looking for is some kind of desktop tool that uses the OpenAI GPT web endpoint. I'd like something where I'm able to upload one or more documents (text files) and then include them as part of the conversation/query.
I have access to the GPT-4 API and I've been writing Python3 code against it for some various applications. I can see how I'd write a tool that takes in one or more documents to include in the total prompt history, but I'm hoping to not have to write it myself, mostly due to time constraints.
Is there some kind of application that has a similar feature set to this that I should look at? Or, is there a wiki/site that lists off the current tools available that I could look over?
wefwef is feeling polished - question about highlighting text for copy/paste
I'm enjoying the wefwef feel, but I have a question about copy/paste with comment text: is it even possible?
When I click on a given comment it collapses. When I click and drag it swipes. Is it possible in the web browser (desktop) to highlight a comment's text at all? It's not rare that I want to copy/paste some text, especially Lemmy links lately, to search/work with them. I'll also want to copy/paste quotes or other material on occasion.
So: what's the trick or instructions, if they exist, to be able to copy/paste text in wefwef?
I'm just so tired of overly expensive textbooks on the market.
I received an email from a textbook salesman. This isn't a rarity, but today this line lept out at me:
>"Ideal for students learning concepts and reasonably priced at $144.95,"
No. Just no. $144.95 is not reasonably priced. This is the first of what is likely a lot of emails that I get to respond with the line in the sand that I've drawn:
>"Reasonably priced" at $144.95?
No thank you. I won't subject my students to materials, including books, equipment, and any online tool licensing, that cost more than $60 per course. Until your offerings are in this range, please do not contact me again.
Even my $60 per course number is high as far as I'm concerned.
A great novel for June - Monstrous Regiment by Terry Pratchett
Given that it's June, my suggested book to read is "Monstrous Regiment" by Terry Pratchett. Yet another wonderful work by one of the best authors in the history of humanity.