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"Deal under discussion would lower credit-card interchange fees for merchants, but could make it harder for consumers to use rewards cards at the register"

Surprise! The consumer loses again! It's always somehow benefiting everyone but the consumer. Too much control, not enough regulation. People shouldn't be bilked out of funds by paying to use their own money. We are shouldn't be _forced_ to use these service companies for making payments.


Credit card rewards are not good for consumers. Low fees are good for consumers.


Is there a meaningful difference between what the us has and what the eu has? Is everything 3% cheaper in the eu? What's the actual benefit consumers see


> Is everything 3% cheaper in the eu?

No, because in Europe sales tax is higher and included in the displayed price, so stuff is generally more expensive. But obviously everything is 3% cheaper than it would be if businesses still had to pay 3% fees. (credit card fees used to be really high before EU regulation came in -- the minimum fee was so high that merchants sometimes paid more in fees than they made in profit when a customer swiped a credit card instead of a debit card).

But the much bigger advantage is that reward cards aren't a thing, and credit card usage is much less common. Most people just use their debit cards. Credit card debt is much less of a problem because credit cards aren't advertised like they are in the US. People spend less if they don't always have $3000 of credit available.


He did note that in the article. It's under 1). at the bottom as well.

> "I realize PowerShell is cross-platform (I wrote this on macOS) but good luck evangelizing it to teams used to Linux."

Well, this is about his _own_ use no? So why not just use powershell in Linux? If it's good, tell us why. I actually am in the same boat. I spent a lot of time learning it, and I do know bash, but not as well. If there is a happy medium here, it's nice to hear your experience about that. Not just say 'well good luck convincing others'.


Right? I am personally using PowerShell on Linux, because syntax of Bash feels like a stupid joke to me.


See other comment on that: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44697990#44698111

I’d prefer to invest in languages that are actually useful to my team. I want to eat my team’s dogfood so I can help them with issues.


ok.. so your solution is using at minimum a $5/month service. Yikes, I'd prefer something like pushover before that. :/


You can self-host ntfy.sh but then you need to find a place outside of your infra to host it.


I have AWS based services to monitor (servers/websites/etc) and use my homelab system to monitor resources that I am interested in.

I just use a simple script that is run every 60 seconds and a list of resources to check.


or a shell script


What about all the people that live in the North, like Finland, etc?


Feedback: A way to export data would be nice.


What type of data export would you find most useful?

* Tables as a collection of CSV files, or an Excel workbook

* Contents of streams

* StringPool data dump

* Option to configure file dump to export using either SourceDir paths, or target destination dir paths


Germany drops opposition to nuclear power in rapprochement with France (ft.com) - http://archive.today/7pwlY


"Do not confuse inexperience with creativity"...


I just read it in the referenced book section from the parent comment. It shocked the imaginary bubble where my mind is a bit. I want to reflect more on it.

Somehow, in the midset of all these LLM and diffusion models, the only thing that seems to catch attention is creativity. I've not thought of experience.


Experience makes creativity harder, but that's what mature creativity is. Did anyone tell you it wouldn't be work?

The people who are most awed by LLMs are those people most used to having to be merely plausible, not correct.


You refer to yourself on the website, but we know nothing of you or your story. Also the connection to Finland would be curious too. That said, I have wished similar for some Finnish words when they get 'smushed' together. It's not always obvious that it's two words, and you can potentially break it apart to get the meaning easier.


Sorry to send dense, but it says No-hole surgery. How then, is the 'ink' delivered to the right location for this to work?


My guess is through an injection. Calling a needle injection site a surgery hole is excessively pedantic. A normal person would not call a vaccine injection or a blood test "surgery."


That was a hell of a wiki dive. Thanks. Tragic story :(


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