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Since moving to America from the UK, 8 years ago, I am completely baffled by the whole system. You could blame capitalism but the reality is that it seems to be where the government intervenes that causes the problem, every time they try to do something they cause unintended incentives and break more of the system.

The government needs to take charge of insurance like we have in the UK, at the very least they need to stop doing stupid things that break the system.

Nothing is worse in my opinion than some sort of half capitalist, half arsed regulation, it’s the worst of all the worlds, it’s not free markets and it’s not socialist, it’s Frankenstein.


This is very true. I worked in healthcare and the US system is a bizarre mix of government regulations and half-measures that actually make the system worse.

A great example is the 340B law. It forces drug makers to give hospitals that have a high proportion of indigents (low income patients) massive discounts.

So what happened? Hospitals saw a cash cow and bought up a ton of small oncology clinics and brought them in house. The cost of providing oncology care in a hospital system is more expensive.

Basically the law did nothing for passing savings to patients and actualy drove up healthcare costs.

It one example of many in the US system.


> The government needs to take charge of insurance like we have in the UK

Let's compare outcomes. Do you personally think the healthcare received by the average UK citizen is better than the US? It is easy to whinge about the problems. It is hard to find solutions. For all the glaring deficits of the US systems - maybe it works okay? Democracy is the worst system...

I'm in NZ. The public healthcare system has its benefits but it definitely has its costs (I've recently been dealing with expensive private healthcare providers in a situation where the public system wasn't achieving the outcomes we needed).



The US also has a huge uninsured population and a 50% higher obesity rate. Life expectancy tells us nothing about healthcare quality without correcting for confounders.


What are the top five factors for life expectancy?

How active you are? Dietary choices? Your childhood? Bad life choices? Drugs, fast cars, unsafe activities? Work environment? Shift work, lung exposure to harms?

What percentage of life expectancy is due to good healthcare?

Noticably we can get some extra years at the end, but they can be low quality years.

High quality years come from your context and life choices outside of doctoring.


> Let's compare outcomes. Do you personally think the healthcare received by the average UK citizen is better than the US? It is easy to whinge about the problems. It is hard to find solutions. For all the glaring deficits of the US systems - maybe it works okay? Democracy is the worst system...

Our life expectancy is falling (and is worse than the UK), people are afraid to go to the hospital because of bankruptcy and we pay far more than other nations on healthcare. In all aspects of outcome our healthcare system costs more for less. The only exception is if you're extremely wealthy, and the gap between wealthy and not has widened. I, as a fairly well-off software engineer could be bankrupted by healthcare costs if a hospital decides I'm out of network during an emergency.


> Do you personally think the healthcare received by the average UK citizen is better than the US?

Objectively it is. Average US healthcare outcomes are towards the bottom end of industrialized countries, comparable to Czechia or Turkey. And they pay a hell of a lot more for it. US outcomes for "I can pay as much as it takes" wealthy people are very good - but they're very good in the UK too (private medicine does exist in the UK, it's just not very popular because why waste money on something you can get for free?).


I've taken to calling it Americanism. That wraps up so many of the weird cultural issues, because it's not capitalism to have basically no monopoly abuse protection, regulated-but-not-markets, and exclusivity and non-compete agreements. It's closer to anarchy or fedualism, with a veneer of "let's not devolve into mad max" on top.


It's definitely not closer to anarchy. Feudalism is much closer. The problem is the regulations we have are the ones that prevent competition rather than preserve it, and then people want to call it capitalism but capitalism without competition is shit.

And then people don't want to pay attention to the details and pretend that the solution is some generic political ideal like "more regulation" or "less regulation" when in fact what you need is to remove the regulations that inhibit competition and preserve or bolster the ones that protect it.

Then we do the exact opposite and continue to pile on regulations that impair competition, the effects of which corporations use to justify removing ones that preserve it, the consequences of which are used by regulators to keep piling on the ones that destroy competition.

They're not all the same. It's not about "regulation" or "deregulation" -- it's about promoting competition instead of destroying it. You need to keep costs low on small businesses while inhibiting corporation consolidation.


Perhaps crapitalism would be a better name?


Everybody is different. We recently had 2 Fridays off a month and it just dropped back to 1 Friday off a month. I feel more productive, actually, contrary to what most people are saying. Fridays are mostly clear of meetings so I can actually focus more unlike other days of the week.


If all your meetings take 20 hours per week and you're left with no time to do deep work, no wonder you feel more productive with an extra 100% focused day.

Kind of like squeezing all your clothing from two closets into one won't make your room feel less cramped unless you cut half your clothing as well. Most people could do without that extra half and be better for it.


I run Asahi Linux on my M2 MacBook, initially I was quite impressed but agree with other comments here that development seems to have stalled. Nothing really impacting my daily life has changed for 6-12 months. I don’t use it as my main os but I occasionally boot into it, update it and see if anything has changed.

Lack of external monitor support and built in speaker support are by far the most needed features imo.


Development hasn't stalled. There's a bunch of features that they have been making a lot of progress on. I'd expect to see quite a few of them before the end of the year.


Also, I guess it is an 80-20 thing - as they progress, a unit amount of change will be less user-noticeable.


LOL - I wondered if I had just travelled back to 2001 when I saw this.


In 2001 package names were different…


And instead of annotations, you had to write lots of XML to build an application.


> LOL - I wondered if I had just travelled back to 2001 when I saw this.

In 2001 the product wasn't called GlassFish yet, and even the Sun ONE Application Server name wasn't there yet.

The name GlassFish wasn't introduced until 2005 and had its first release the year after that.


Sadly “The Winstons” received no money for the sample. Tragic that the genius behind this revolution got absolutely nothing.


Last remaining member received $22k. Not enough.

https://www.vice.com/en/article/rmje4q/amen-breakbeat-fundra...


Interestingly ta very rare that someone would say the same about some open source project where nobody gets anything. Why are you guys so biased when it’s about music?


On the other hand, if they have actively tried to get loyalties from the Amen Break then barely no one would have tried sampling it, and wouldn’t have the kind of influence it has today.


Interesting thread, looks like a lot of labs are on the charge to replicate this https://twitter.com/alexkaplan0/status/1684554551481835520?s...


I've been following this twitter user since this started and he is very much on the hype side.


www.DavidGeorgehope.com


Ha!! Agreed. I had a little chuckle the other day playing a steam game that said “Windows Build” .


So pleased with my steam deck.

So far I have played a bunch of old classics I brought 10 years or so ago which worked flawlessly, now playing “Return to Monkey Island”.

I cannot spend time sitting at a PC playing games these days with kids around, being able to pick it up and put it down on demand is frankly amazing. It is the best thing I’ve owned for years.


A good thread here explaining a more likely scenario for Twitter with very detailed descriptions of how expert teams prevent catastrophic system failure.


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