2.23

the activists and left-leaning media members were in town for a private meeting to discuss how the left’s well-funded digital media ecosystem failed in the 2024 election.

I spent two years following Barrows and some of those she calls her “clients”  to better understand what it takes to unstick someone who’s been stuck on the streets — or in a park – for a long time. A welter of problems can make someone chronically homeless: addiction, mental illness, disabilities, trauma, poverty, not to mention failures of the system. None are easily or quickly solved, even after the person is housed. To do more than just clear a person off the sidewalk demands persistence, patience, coordination of services, and intense personal engagement. Which raises the difficult question: If this is what it takes to help one person, can the city find the resolve to help the thousands living rough? 

Your enjoyment of a trip will be inversely related to the weight of your luggage. Counterintuitively, the longer your trip, the less stuff you should haul. Travelers still happy on a 6-week trip will only have carry-on luggage. That maximizes your flexibility, enabling you to lug luggage up stairs when there is no elevator, or to share a tuk-tuk, to pack and unpack efficiently, and to not lose stuff. Furthermore, when you go light you intentionally reduce what you take in order to increase your experience of living. And the reality of today is that you can almost certainly buy whatever you are missing on the road.

In this op-ed, AI researcher Louis Rosenberg argues that as conversational AI agents become more interactive and personalized, they will surpass human influencers in their ability to shape our decisions without us realizing it.

The reason, according to multiple sources at the agency when the Gateway was conceived, is that the lunar space station would offer jobs to the current flight controllers operating the International Space Station, which is due to retire in 2030.

Wahlin purchased the remaining assets of a small, bankrupt business in 1961 and founded Stoughton Trailers. Over the course of the next four decades, the company became one of North America’s largest trailer manufacturers.

Generators are installed to protect WPR’s systems for backup when they lose utility power and when those generators attempted to kick in, the transfer switch that transfers from utility power to generator power failed, Hargrove said.

The dollar’s supremacy, already shaky in a world of rising digital currencies, gets a blockchain-powered second wind. AI Killed The Tech Interview. Now What?
How can we do better interviews in the age of AI

Option four and five are likely the only answers in the long term. A lot of companies are doing RTO, but even companies that are 100% in-office still interview candidates from other cities. Spending money to fly every candidate out without an aggressive pre-screen is too wasteful. One of the things we can do, however, is change the nature of the interviews themselves. Coding interviews today are quite basic, anywhere from FizzBuzz, to building a calculator. With AI assistants, we could expand this 10x and have people build complete applications. I think a single, longer interview (2 hours) that mixes architecture and coding will probably be the way to go.

Additionally, if your employer will sign off on you working in Spain, Spain has a 1 year digital nomad visa, renewable every year. After five years, you can apply for permanent residency. If you apply while in Spain on a tourist visa, it’s good for 3 years (one renewal gets you to permanent residency).

When the peace was finally won in 1991, the minor functionaries started hatching new villains, disputes, and even viruses just so they could fight them. Washington turned into a Cold War LARP. The result:  Ukraine is destroyed. The Taliban is governing Afghanistan and ISIS has taken Syria. The pipeline that supplies Germany’s energy supply has been blown up, tanking its economy. And you know what happened last time the West’s guardian of democracy project tanked the German economy. Just sayin’. Ancient Christianity has been expelled from every place in the Middle East where American soft power has meddled. They have set their sights on destroying Catholic-Lebanon (by law, the president of Lebanon must be Catholic – did you know that?) in a proxy war with Iran.

In the winter, Yosemite has 451 people directly employed by the National Park Service, according to government records. In the summer, it has 741. But they fired the only locksmith. Grand Canyon National Park has 382. But they couldn’t find anyone to work the most popular entrance. This is intentional infliction of harm on the public in order to gin up opposition to staffing cuts.

NEW: “This case presents the question whether @WisDOJ is for sale.” Lawsuit – and ethics complaint – filed against AG Josh Kaul for taking Michael Bloomberg’s money to prosecute environmental cases against dairy farmers

The most striking aspect of this situation is that every major branch of the U.S. military is in crisis at the same time. All major branches are struggling with recruitment and retention targets, and the problem is particularly acute for the Army and the Navy. All major branches have serious sustainment and maintenance issues due to a combination of aging equipment and general rust inside the industrial base. All major branches are arguably also facing real problems trying to adapt and update institutionalized twenthieth-century thinking to experiences from twenty-first century battlefields (though the Marine Corps is at least undergoing a serious and controversial restructuring in an attempt to alleviate this). Looming over all of this, of course, is the big elephant in the room: the budget contraints resulting from America’s massive fiscal deficts. Interest payments on the federal debt are devouring an increasing share of total federal revenues with each passing year. America is already running a World War II–style wartime fiscal deficit in what is officially a peacetime, near-full-employment economy. Though it’s a common refrain to bemoan waste and fraud inside the DoD budget, the simple reality is that a fifty-plus-year-old aircraft carrier hull like the USS Nimitz cannot be maintained forever. The carrier, just like every other military platform, requires somewhat regular replacement due to mechanical wear and tear over time.1 The U.S. military now has a massive backlog of such aging platforms, and there is simply not enough money to replace them.

I used to work at FICO in the behavior scoring division and this kind of transaction pattern would have totally flipped the fraud switch. So, the question is, do they have their own processing and if so, it should be terminated due to fraud. If not, who are they using, and why aren’t they reporting and stopping the fraud? AND how many of these transactions resulted in a charge back? If not many, then smurfs were used for names but not credit card numbers, so whose numbers were used, and if it was their name, what account was attached…. This should be one of @Kash_Patel first investigations. If we want to clean up elections before midterms we need to get all this unravelled and get back to individual human citizens supporting individual human candidates and that is all.

While America is battling exhaustion and political polarization at home, it is now facing something it’s never faced abroad: it is locked into a security competition against multiple opponents who, when taken together, are in fact vastly superior to America in terms of industrial capacity. This on its own would be an incredibly tough row to hoe, even at the best of times. The times, however, are not particularly good: the U.S. military currently finds itself in a state of acute crisis, beset by a number of intractable problems that neither the political nor military leadership have been able to solve. The most striking aspect of this situation is that every major branch of the U.S. military is in crisis at the same time. All major branches are struggling with recruitment and retention targets, and the problem is particularly acute for the Army and the Navy. All major branches have serious sustainment and maintenance issues due to a combination of aging equipment and general rust inside the industrial base. All major branches are arguably also facing real problems trying to adapt and update institutionalized twenthieth-century thinking to experiences from twenty-first century battlefields (though the Marine Corps is at least undergoing a serious and controversial restructuring in an attempt to alleviate this).

To put it bluntly, the military was given a deeply ideological mission, one that would assuredly result both in failure and damage to or destruction of limited logistical assets. Military leadership, knowing which side their bread was actually buttered on, complied: the mission duly failed, and the limited equipment was damaged and destroyed.

2.16

The calculus for joining government is radically changing. The promise of gaining control of enormous dark money government slush funds and routing them to your friends who stand up totally vague and nebulous NGOs that then launder the money back to you and your other friends, is disappearing before our eyes. People who go into public service will actually have to be motivated by public service, not by kleptocratic, self-enrichment schemes. If they want to get rich, they will have to write a book or “produce” some show or documentary for Netflix that no one watches.

The company’s deliveries in Europe reached 3.8mn vehicles a year — a drop of nearly 1mn compared with when Merkel visited in 2019 — driven by lukewarm interest in its EV line-up.

The human users no longer interact directly with these tools; instead, agents seamlessly work behind the scenes to complete tasks. 

Steve is saying that the knowledge of the backdoor had to have come from Apple (assuming they implemented the backdoor, which again is the only logical conclusion). Whether knowledge of the backdoor was a leak, or intentional, is unknown.

The company planned to sell circuit modules before attempting to sell complete computers, and Olsen had largely worked out the technological side of that. The real first step then was to create the financial plan for the company. Olsen and Anderson did so, and they presented that plan to AR&D who provided them with $70,000 which would be around $786,000 in 2025 dollars. With that money, the infant DEC of three men bought the equipment they would need, made some silk screens, etched boards and dipped them in solder. Everything. They were extremely careful with their money, and they learned quite a bit. While they did learn how to handle accounting and business operations, they chose to spend some of their limited funds on secretaries, accountants, and other supporting roles.

We have reviewed our writings with respect to Silvergate’s broadly deficient BSA compliance regime, including the anti-moneylaundering (AML) errors it made. We stand by the entire analysis, most particularly the conclusion, which we did not articulate lightly.

The Index’s initial report provides first-of-its-kind data and analysis based on millions of anonymized conversations on Claude.ai, revealing the clearest picture yet of how AI is being incorporated into real-world tasks across the modern economy. We’re also open sourcing the dataset used for this analysis, so researchers can build on and extend our findings. Developing policy responses to address the coming transformation in the labor market and its effects on employment and productivity will take a range of perspectives. To that end, we are also inviting economists, policy experts, and other researchers to provide input on the Index.

Fifty years ago, during the Battle of the Bulge, Bragg drove a stolen German ambulance twenty miles to get the wounded Martz to an Allied hospital in Belgium. The story of Bragg’s heroic drive is recounted in The Bitter Woods, a book written by John Eisenhower, son of former president General Dwight David Eisenhower. “I’m forever grateful to Roland Bragg for saving my life,” said Martz, now 74 and living in Oceanside, California.

The premise of The High Cost of Free Parking, Shoup’s 800-page magnum opus, is as simple as it is provocative: parking is nearly always too cheap. An unfortunate fact about cars is that they occupy a lot of space. Worse yet, they only spend about five percent of their lifespan in motion. The remaining 95 percent of the time, we must find a place to put them. When Americans first started buying cars en masse in the early twentieth century, the solution seemed obvious: park them along the curb. In the most radical shift in city planning in human history, urban streets—once the site of gathering, selling, and playing—were redesigned around moving and storing cars.

A complete list of the top 100 most watched talks of 2024 ordered by the number of views.

While the Jacquard loom gets all the attention for being the first code, the punch card knitting machine transitioned from being a Jacquard attachment on lace and knitting machines in industrial textile production to the kind of local, DIY code that a lot of people in textiles interacted with—many of whom were women. By the 1970s, they were used by people knitting for themselves and their families, for take-home piece-work, and in textile factory settings. The punch card machine was eventually replaced in commercial and, if you can afford it, home contexts by machines that could control individual needles, instead of depending on a punch card’s repeat—but the machines are still in use in a number of hobbyist workshops (like my own!) and are even still in  production (albeit much-reduced). 

When I disclosed my metastatic prostate cancer in Jun-2020, I didn’t expect to live as long as I now have – the 5-year survival (which I am now approaching) is about 30%. However, after exhausting 4 lines of therapy and resorting to experimental treatments that are only available overseas, I have now reached the point where outcomes are measured in months rather than years and my symptoms and side-effects are making it harder to function. I hope to reach 60 in August and all I want for my birthday is another one, but before I become more dysfunctional, I need to make plans for the orderly conclusion of this pro bono, loss-making work rather than leave managing it as a burden for my family. One of the few benefits of knowing that you’re dying is being able to plan the end on your own terms.

The goal of this article is to make clear that the large scale engagement of corporations in open source has happened and is continuing to happen, that it is fueled by natural incentives, and that it must be treated seriously because it is having and will continue to have negative consequences even if every individual involved is participating in good faith.

We were inspired by 9-year-old Memphis’s passion for farming at Evers Dairy with his motorized wheelchair and Radio Flyer wagon. Now, he has a custom-built CLAAS wagon, designed to meet his needs. Memphis shows there’s no barrier to making an impact on the farm. We’re proud to support his dedication to agriculture! More.

Madigan built a system that rewarded his public union cronies with unaffordable benefits, including pension systems so overly generous that taxpayers will eventually need to infuse another $143.7 billion to keep them from failing. The system that paid him nearly $600,000 in a little less than four years is in the worst shape of the five statewide pension systems, with only 24.6% of the money it will eventually need and well beyond what experts see as the point of no return.

The Irvine office will close by 2029, the company said in a release. Snyder said that some of the corporate workers there will move to Baldwin Park, while others will make the cross-country jump to Tennessee, where the company is currently building a new corporate office that’s slated to open next year.

China is ready, following these three principles, to build stable, sound, and sustainable bilateral relations with the US and find the right way for these two major countries to live alongside each other on this planet. Of course, we hope that the US will work in the same direction with us. However, if the US is not willing, if it is bent on suppressing and containing China, then we have no choice but to ???? play along to the end. We will resolutely uphold China’s sovereignty, national dignity, and our legitimate development rights, and we will resolutely respond to unilateral bullying practices of the US. We do so also to maintain international fairness and justice and to uphold basic norms of international relations. The Chinese people ???????have never been swayed by fallacies or deterred by intimidation. The People’s Republic of China has grown by overcoming various difficulties and obstacles.

So thrilled to see Xiaomi SU7 Ultra set a lap record at the Shanghai International Circuit, outpacing the Porsche Taycan Turbo GT!

EPA said it is sending Biden’s waivers that green-lit the mandates to Congress for approval. That means the mandates are effectively dead.

What is that “history of use of Nazi language”? The link on that phrase goes to another NYT article, from last May, “German Court Fines Far-Right Leader for Using Nazi Phrase/Björn Höcke, a state leader of the nationalist Alternative for Germany party, used the phrase ‘Everything for Germany,’ a slogan of the Nazi paramilitary wing, during a campaign stop.” Excerpt:

Liberals in 2010 weren’t the same as liberals in 2020. They just weren’t. They changed in comprehensible and expressible ways. And this absolutely dogged insistence that no such change occurred is one of the weirdest, most obviously dishonest political claims of my lifetime. It’s a record of a political and intellectual tendency defined by its powerlessness and directed by people who think that asking them to defend their ideals is a kind of crime. And, just… why? 

the attitude of the US itself to European security was the most ambivalent it had been since before the second world war.

The IMF estimates that Europe’s internal barriers are equivalent to a tariff of 45 per cent for manufacturing and 110 per cent for services. These effectively shrink the market in which European companies operate: trade across EU countries is less than half the level of trade across US states. And as activity shifts more towards services, their overall drag on growth becomes worse…

To be clear, the primary culprit here isn’t the U.S. or Trump: any student of history knows that we live in a deeply unfair world where, as ancient Greek historian Thucydides wrote 2,500 years ago, “the strong do what they can and the weak suffer what they must.” As such the blame lies almost entirely on us Europeans, or more precisely on our immensely incompetent leaders. And I want to stress this last point: they are literally incompetent on a millennia scale, given that they’ve managed to reduce Europe to a position that lacks any historical parallel, where it’s expected to simply accept and implement whatever security arrangements others decide for it. Trump himself does what’s best for the U.S. – “America first”, remember? – and to be fair to him the Biden administration left him with a pretty bad hand. It’s crystal clear that Russia won in Ukraine, despite all of NATO’s efforts, and as such the U.S. very much risked coming out of it looking like the loser that it objectively is.

In what can only be described as a campaign platform, Damian Williams wrote a lengthy column in Jan 2025–shortly after launching his campaign style website and less than 4 months after announcing the indictment against Eric Adams–for a NY publication.

I’m remembering this today because there are times and places when it is made clear to unwilling and horrified participants that the world they are used to, and the assumptions they allow themselves in that world, no longer apply. They have so suddenly been stripped from them. Vice President JD Vance delivered just such a moment in his speech to the collected European great and good at the Munich Security Conference on Thursday 13th February.

2.9

However, on Wednesday, Santa Barbara’s Historic Landmarks Commissiondetermined that the building is not historically significant.  Local developers Jim and Matthew Taylor acquired the Macy’s building for about $63 million in December 2021. The building will be razed and converted into 689 apartment units as soon as Macy’s vacates the store in 2028. 

This new book offers stunning night-time photographs of the Crescent City – and an insightful introduction by Richard Campanella.

I’ve tried cases to Delaware juries, enjoyed friendships with Delaware judges, and taught classes to Delaware lawyers. The Hotel DuPont is a familiar stay, and I’ve bought too many shirts and ties to count at Wright & Simon in Wilmington. And so I share this with affection, not animosity: Delaware is at serious risk of losing its standing as the leading state of incorporation for American companies.

Only in America can a plane flown by a Mexican American airline pilot filled with Korean American adoptees and Chinese American skaters air traffic controlled by a black man be killed instantly by a woke white feminist combat pilot. What a country! ??

Steve Hamm was a mobile technician for 30 years. And this past week, the same farmers who Hamm served for all those years, found a way to show just how grateful they were with a touching goodbye.

Now, in the aftermath, I see Angelenos of both parties asking hard questions and demanding answers from L.A.’s liberal political leaders that I haven’t seen before.

Yet despite decades of research, no treatment has been created that arrests Alzheimer’s cognitive deterioration, let alone reverses it. That dismal lack of progress is partly because of the infinite complexity of the human brain, which has posed insurmountable challenges so far. Scientists, funders and drug companies have struggled to justify billions in costs and careers pursuing dead-end paths. But there’s another, sinister, factor at play.

This is the first and likely the last time I’ll retweet an ad, but I love it.

After an eight-year suspension following an accident in 2016, the historic Opicina Tramway resumed service on Saturday, February 1. The reopening marks a significant milestone for the city’s public transportation network, bringing back a beloved connection between Trieste and the hilltop village of Opicina.

Which brings us to accessories (which includes lenses). Nikon had this grand plan—and even shared their goal with the financial community—that they’d achieve two lenses sold for every camera in the Z System. Didn’t happen. Not going to happen. And now with the Chinese producing more lens choices for the Z mount than Nikon, even the current level of lens sales will be challenged. 

“from Jones on airport business and never got a response while she was purportedly working from home, according to the investigation”. Jones’ falsehoods about the position included telling the Airport Commission that smaller airports had similar positions.

There is widespread agreement that aid to Pakistan has not been spent effectively over the past decade. There is less agreement over how to fix it. This paper contributes to the debate in two ways.

A pilot programme of replacing plastic bin bags with sealed containers, hailed by the mayor as ‘trash revolution’, is being credited with reducing rodent sightings

The U.S. Navy is in a fight for survival, a quickening battle being waged from the halls of the Pentagon to the boardrooms of industry to hearings on Capitol Hill. The consequence of this contest will determine if the nation is destined for maritime irrelevance and the laying of its prosperity at the whims of autocrats a world away. At the core of the battle are these questions: What sort of Navy does the nation need; and how can it be built? The last major change to the maritime industry was thanks to two American innovations perfected during and after World War II: modular ship construction and containerization of cargo. Modularization proved critical in World War II by rapidly connecting dispersed U.S. factories. The other innovation that revolutionized shipping was cargo containerization. Containerization was the brainchild of Malcom McLean, who, in 1956, used a repurposed wartime tanker to move 58 truck trailers.

Newly obtained contract shows Hard Rock International paid a consultant a whopping $28 million finder’s fee in 2014 just for identifying Kenosha as the place to build a new casino, a revelation that has major implications for the now-revived project. Here’s why:

Elon figured out that if you control OPM (HR for the entire federal government) and the Treasury payment system (outlays for the entire federal government) you can zap any government program not explicitly authorized by statute and no one can do anything about it

Last year, for example, SpaceX launched 134 orbital missions. Combined, Europe had three. SpaceX operates a massive constellation of more than 7,000 satellites, delivering broadband Internet around the world. Europe hopes to have a much more modest capability online by 2030 serving the continent at a cost of $11 billion.

He added that he envisions Penny, a former Marine, helping to strengthen the firm’s relationships with the Department of Defense and public safety sector. Penny will work in New York for the firm’s American Dynamism practice, a branch of the company that “invests in founders and companies that support the national interest.”

More than two decades ago, the EU unveiled its Lisbon Strategy, which set out to transform the bloc into “the most dynamic, competitive, sustainable knowledge-based economy, enjoying full employment and strengthened economic and social cohesion”. We know how well that worked out. Hardly dynamic, certainly not competitive, the EU has consistently lagged behind other nations across virtually every key economic metric. As the US and China intensify their race for 21st-century technological supremacy, Europe is left watching from the sidelines — beset by economic stagnation, high energy costs, political upheaval and bureaucratic inertia.

This post breaks down some of the pros and cons of Nevada, Texas, and Delaware as well as discusses high level process to leave the state. TradeDesk published a good primer as well. While many companies have physically moved their headquarters from California to other states (Palantir, Oracle, SpaceX, to name a few) most CA-based companies have left their incorporation in Delaware. This is starting to shift as more companies consider moving Incorporation to Nevada or Texas.

The hexagonally tiled cartogram is more than just a creative reimagining of county maps—it’s a powerful visualization tool that reorients our perspective on how we interpret data. By standardizing the shape and size of each county, we place emphasis on the attributes that truly matter, like population density and socio-economic variables. Whether used to highlight urban centers, track public health crises, analyze economic trends, or even understand political dynamics, this approach brings clarity where traditional maps sometimes fall short. And with the added benefit of state or region-specific filtering, this tool becomes even more versatile for anyone looking to dive deep into the data of the United States.

“The Chinese are so fast… we’re late to the party.”

A conversation with Elon Musk recorded last August at West Point Military Academy has just been published. Here’s the full interview covering topics like the future of warfare, AI and innovation.

As suggested by the recent release of a new artificial intelligence model from the Chinese company DeepSeek, we no longer possess technology superiority. The Australian Strategic Policy Institute determined that the United States trails China, for example, in research for 57 of 64 critical technologies. We are not competitive in important products like personal computers, semiconductor manufacturing, solar panels, shipbuilding and much more.

Wright’s justification for the project was quite clever. He argued that the sheer size of The Illinois would encapsulate an entire city within a single building, which would kill two birds with one stone. It would provide the density that people crave, while freeing up the surrounding landscape for his Broadacre City plan, with its parks and low buildings. Essentially, Wright was using the if you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em mentality when it came to the city. Give ‘em their density so they can come together, but concentrate it into one massive structure and surround it with your larger vision for the world-as-one-big-suburb. He envisioned skyscrapers like this built here and there throughout the countryside, taking the place of cities. That way, everyone could live in a suburban paradise, surrounded by green space and ample daylight.

Steve Bannon calls himself a ‘neo-Brandeisian’ and says Lina Khan should have been given more power.

Because DOGE is essentially ending Blue American colonialism. Of course, DOGE is doing this for its own reasons, which include shattering blue power centers and saving money for Red Americans. But it is doing it. And this presents the greatest opportunity for India since the fall of the USSR. It is India’s third independence moment: first from British colonialism, then from Fabian socialism, and now from Democrat-funded leftism.

Let me say at once that I have no desire to discourage anyone from believing in either extraterrestrials or global warming. That would be quite impossible to do. Rather, I want to discuss the history of several widely-publicized beliefs and to point to what I consider an emerging crisis in the whole enterprise of science—namely the increasingly uneasy relationship between hard science and public policy.

Ever wondered where all that PPP loan money ended up? Now you can see it—mapped out, visualized, and easy to explore.

The DO-NOT-PAY list of entities known to be fraudulent or people who are dead or are probable fronts for terrorist organizations or do not match Congressional appropriations must actually be implemented and not ignored. Also, it can currently take up to a year to get on this list, which is far too long. This list should be updated at least weekly, if not daily.

This is frequently left blank, making audits almost impossible.

The legacy media used to be so powerful. But this 60 minutes raw footage is just pathetic. I almost feel sorry for them now.

All friend. Soon america people start their favorite hobby: Watch negro man fight for egg ball.

2.2

If all this is true, the CHIPS Act, which was designed to slow China in the AI race, may turn out to be one of the worst backfires in history. (I tried to warn a number of people in the Biden administration about this possibility in the summer of 2023; instead of listening, they recently doubled down, in one of Biden’s final executive orders.)

Take photos of daily life. I’m stunned by the pictures my father didn’t take. There isn’t a single photo that represents what my parents did for a living. They weren’t the type to attend company picnics, fine. But I found nothing indicating “take your daughter to work” or “Mom typing up a report” or “the building I worked in” or “the woman Mom commuted to work with for 10 years.” That would be more understandable if my parents disliked their jobs, but both of them were passionate about their careers.

100 years of Bell labs

For most protesters, activists, and journalists, your smartphone is an essential tool you depend on for organizing with your peers, accessing and distributing information, and helping others. It also represents a great risk, as a tool that is easily appropriated by authorities for targeted and mass surveillance. The perennial question when it comes to protests is whether you should bring your phone at all. If you leave your phone at home, that is probably the safest your data will get, and you will be at very low risk of being tracked by mass surveillance tools. On the other hand, your phone is a critical resource when it comes to coordinating with others, getting updates on the protest from social media, or simply documenting what is going on with your phone’s camera.

China has a huge and growing trade surplus, as you can see in the chart above. That chart is via Brad Setser, who is really a one-man army in terms of tracking global trade and financial flows. Here’s a thread from Setser with a lot more detail on China’s surplus. Interestingly, China’s exports to the developing world are a lot bigger of a factor herethan its exports to the U.S. and the EU, though the latter are up by a little bit.  This is the Second China Shock. Trade surpluses like this can’t be explained by the good old theory of comparative advantage — a Chinese trade surplus is just countries writing China IOUs in exchange for physical goods. Countries don’t really have a comparative advantage in writing IOUs.1

The two field performance aspects limited the design space for the C Series in general. As a consequence, in my opinion the C Series’ design was not optimised for the larger “more normal” market.

Caldwell is part of a foreign policy movement on the right who call themselves “restrainers.” They believe countering Iran, Russia—and, for some, even China—is not worth the smoke. Caldwell himself told the Financial Times in December that he would not make a commitment to defend Taiwan, or make “more security commitments in the Pacific.” Instead, Caldwell said he believes the U.S. should focus on arming the island in a bid to deter China.

Such is the nature of today’s left—divorced from the working class but intimately connected to the leftist strongholds of the professional class. The latter connection has kept them blissfully unaware of how far outside of the public opinion mainstream their current commitments are and therefore how quickly the hills they are defending could be overrun. That’s happening right now but the left seems determined to fight on to the bitter end.

Visitor visas can be extended for up to nine months, although the ministers warned that working in New Zealand for more than 90 days could require them to declare themselves as a New Zealand tax resident.

In interviews after Boeing posted its detailed financial results Tuesday, new CEO Kelly Ortberg indicated the key priorities for 2025: getting airplane production back up safely, generating much-needed cash, integrating Spirit AeroSystems smoothly back into Boeing — and coping with the realities of the new Trump administration. more.

Cage-free varieties — which are required in Oregon and Washington — are even more expensive. At a Portland Fred Meyer on Monday, the cheapest eggs available were store-brand cartons of a dozen priced at $7.49. Signs at many area grocery stores warn of rising prices and the potential for empty shelves. Some grocery stores have even limited how many eggs shoppers can buy.

This tweet deserves a national holiday.

You just copy the CIA, whatever it might be saying at the time, accurate or not, and call it journalism

“There’s a reason Florida is known as a retirement paradise – it ranks as the best state to retire due to its relatively low taxes for retired people, including no estate, inheritance or income taxes,” WalletHub said. “Plus, Florida receives more funding per senior from the Older Americans Act than all but two other states. This funds things like transportation, homemaker assistance and nutrition programs for seniors.”

“It’s a ‘composite‘ – like @NYMag does.”

Axios’ Mike Allen gets first question at the first White House press room briefing, in the “new media seat. Two weeks ago to Vanity Fair: “We beg our reporters to never go to a White House press briefing.”

Below is the email that was sent to federal employees on January 28, 2025 presenting a deferred resignation offer. If you did not respond to that email and wish to accept the deferred resignation offer, you may do so by following these steps.

A takeover of Intel has become a Gordian knot. The big problem is funding the company’s fabs, which will will require tens of billions of dollars and years to get back on track. Few companies, and no private equity funds, really want to deal with that large of a funding need and time horizon. On the other hand, the US government has given Intel a lot of money, and so simply shutting down the fabs is deeply problematic. No one wants the fabs, but the company cannot be sold without them.

Bagley’s experience is of a piece with the broader trend in retail toward automation and other technological shortcuts. From self-checkout machines to payment by app, technology is rapidly changing the way we buy groceries. Progressive members of Congress are sounding the alarm: Representative Rashida Tlaib of Michigan and 13 colleagues wrote to the CEO of the supermarket behemoth Kroger in November about electronic price tags (often called electronic shelf labels or ESLs). These digital displays allow companies to change prices automatically from a mobile app. Tlaib warned that this so-called “dynamic pricing” permits retailers to adjust prices based on their whims. Just as Uber raises prices during storms or rush hour, retailers like Kroger use ESLs to adjust prices based on factors like time of day or the weather. Supermarkets could conceivably mine a shopper’s personal data to set prices as high as possible. “My concern is that these tools will be abused in the pursuit of profit, surging prices on essential goods in areas with fewer and fewer grocery stores,” Tlaib wrote

But Epic’s implementation doesn’t include the last piece. After easier app registration and record location, they require the patient to log into each health system a record is found. This is a bewildering choice. Even though the record location is a step forward, the architecture adds friction to the process (instead of just using portal credentials, patients have to identity proof and then also log in with credentials). Portal credentials are also not automatically provisioned to patients! So the percentage of patients that can actually use the pattern is a fraction of the total population.

We investigate whether large language models (LLMs) can successfully perform financial statement analysis in a way similar to a professional human analyst. We provide standardized and anonymous financial statements to GPT4 and instruct the model to analyze them to determine the direction of firms’ future earnings. Even without narrative or industry-specific information, the LLM outperforms financial analysts in its ability to predict earnings changes directionally.

The hostility @RobertKennedyJr experienced at his hearing was directly proportional to how much Pharma money each Senator received. In fact, each of them simply repeated the same attacks we just saw flood the mass media (all of which were blatant lies). ?

Beyond Bernie, 2 of key Committee members — @RonWyden and @MartinHeinrich — built their careers as self-branded privacy crusaders, against spying excesses of NSA/CIA. Trump appoints Tulsi as the first-ever DNI to share those concerns, but they’ll vote NO because Party First.

The Nunes memo, primarily authored by Kash, was not only accurate but actually understated the depth of the corruption. We now know the Russia collusion hoax was completely fabricated—every part of it. Meanwhile, the Schiff memo was a blatant exercise in dishonesty and cover-up.

Remember when Biden claimed that it was Congress’ fault that they couldn’t stop the mess at the border?

A conversation with Morris Chang.

The 21st Century Cures Act was passed in 2016 with numerous provisions promoting the sharing of healthcare data. The ONC Cures Act Final Rule and CMS Interoperability and Patient Access Final Rule implemented interoperability standards in 2020. And yet: in the year 2025 patients are still unable to easily access their own claims and records and share them from doctor to doctor. Accusations of abuses abound, such as Particle Health’s information blocking suit against Epic, and the hundreds of information blocking complaints submitted to the Assistant Secretary for Technology Policy (ASTP) annually. Where there is smoke there is often fire.

This graph is causing a stir in the Danish political debate around mass immigration, and it’s easy to see why. But I think what’s just as interesting as the substance is the fact that Denmark actually collects the data so finely grained!

Trump’s is an understandable impulse. Decades of “free” trade hollowed out American industrial capacity and left us dependent on China’s hostile dictatorship for everything from prescription drugs to iPhones. What’s more, he’s right to want to curb Beijing’s regional influence, squeeze Chinese- and Russian-aligned socialist dictatorships in Venezuela and Cuba—not to mention keep his campaign promises to stop mass migration and drug trafficking.

This is hardly surprising since, on a map, the Arctic Ocean offers notable shortcuts compared to routes going through the Suez or Panama canals. For instance, a voyage from Japan to Europe takes around 22 days via the Suez, but only ten days via the Arctic. However, while distance is one variable, cargo shipping considerations are much more complex. Economic sailing—like “super-slow steaming” where speed is decreased to reduce the amount of fuel needed to complete a journey—and scheduling are much more important than speed alone. Some shipping routes, like Rotterdam to Hong Kong, are actually shorter through the Suez than the Arctic.

In many respects, this is better than working in Photoshop on my Mac. I never expected to say that. The last 5% is due to the pieces that Procreate doesn’t do, that Photoshop does – text, labels, some of the more advanced features. So that’s software, not hardware – and I expect the app store will get a lot more firepower very quickly once developers really get to grips with the Pro. This is a serious piece of kit that will find a central place in an illustrators workflow – but it will not replace a desktop.

This really does deserve to be cast in solid platinum and hung in the Smithsonian.

This is the US effectively saying “our attempt at running the world is over, to each his own, we’re now just another great power, not the ‘indispensable nation’.”. It looks “dumb” (as the WSJ just wrote) if you are still mentally in the old paradigm but it’s always a mistake to think that what the US (or any country) does is dumb. Hegemony was going to end sooner or later, and now the U.S. is basically choosing to end it on its own terms. It is the post-American world order – brought to you by America itself.