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Granted they are a different company, but this was a huge failure for Microsoft. Different devices have different strengths and weaknesses.


Microsoft has shown themselves to be very pro-open-source in the last 5+ years. Just look at things like VS Code. Microsoft is just the Nickelback of software, its cool to hate on them for no real reason (any more).


In some old security shack next to a Helipad in downtown Baghdad. Writing software to help track training of Iraqi soldiers as a contractor. Surprisingly fun work with people from all over the world.

An occasional explosion or mortar/rocket attack had us put on our armor, but overall it was pretty safe.


Without a comparison of how good the other decisions were, this means nothing :)


that comment made my day xD


That is surely what is happening - a general (not always, I know!) rule in programming is to never delete anything, just mark it as deleted/deprecated/etc. and do not show it.


Just saw my first Rifftrax last week: Samurai Cop! I can't recommend it enough - I was crying.


I figure out so many problems while lifting weights! With the added bonus that now I can now bench, deadlift, and squat well over 300 lbs.


As a real estate investor, I lick my chops when I see news like this. But as a human being it's so terrible to see happen over and over again. Watch "The Big Short" if you haven't - everything will crash again.


So when are you and your fellow investors gonna stick to being human beings? This game has gone on long enough. We're talking about peoples' lives. We're talking about an entire generation of people who can't afford to buy houses because the generation before them gave in to bad credit. We're talking about entire generations of people who are going into a personal debt based economy of fear and coercion. Is that the kind of legacy you want to leave?


There's likely nothing he can do as a single investor. It's like the Prisoner's Dilemma. He could opt out, but now he has to find a new line of work, and meanwhile there's plenty of other investors who will take his place and nothing will change. There's no way to get them all to change their ways at once.

The only solution is government action; it's one of the big reasons we have a government, to fix things that "the invisible hand" cannot or will not. The problem is that our politicians are either totally corrupt or inept. So just like they failed to prevent the 2000s mortgage bubble, and the 1990s dot-com bubble, and the 80s S&L crisis, etc., they're going to fail here too.

In short, if you want to blame someone, the only people to blame are the voters.


When being a human being is more profitable than not. If the incentive structure does not tie individual reward to societal reward then it's the system that's broken, not the people.


"Buy when there's blood in the streets" has always been good advice, but you can't blame a single person - or even a single class of person, in this case a real estate investor - on the immense scale of complexity that has put so many people in such a lousy situation.

A lot of people in this category have jobs, families to support, and so on. It's not like every investor is The Businessman from "The Little Prince."


Don't expect people to not act human. Instead, update the system to incentivize the desired outcomes, given the current peculiarities of human nature.


Unless you think the GP is causing these types of problems, this attitude is entirely unwarranted. Investors buying on a down market soften crashes by providing an infusion of capital when the market indicates it's needed.

If real estate investors took the moral stand you seem to be suggesting here, who exactly would be buying a home from a distressed homeowner? What money would be floating around to cover short sales and prevent foreclosures?


Nonsense.


I downvoted you because that's not a substantive response.


I am not completely familiar with Alexa (I use Google Home) but can't you make a recipe with IFTTT to accomplish this? Though it still does not rely directly on the ALexa OS.


PlayOn is on sale for $50 right now: https://www.playon.tv/playlater

Browse/download any streaming service (that you have access to) easily - I love it.


The concern I have with giving them money is: They're going to get shut down, sooner if not later. Big media have had people raided for less than what they're doing, and laws are written (again, by big media) to put them into a legally gray area.

Morally I don't think what they're doing is wrong. But the US government is in bed with media goliaths, and the two work together to shut down re-hosted content (even in areas where re-hosting MIGHT be fair usage).


Playon doesn't rehost the content. It runs on your computer and automates the process of capturing the video stream from a website. So, you have to _actually wait for the entire video to play_ to have it fully downloaded because its nothing more than a screencapture in essence.

The whole thing is a little flaky, but I'm really pleased with what it cost me ($60 if I remember).


Isn't BitTorrent still free?


Trackers aren't doing so hot right now :(


My ISP wants to charge me for it now. $5,000 they said.


Isn't piracy still illegal?


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