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> I can't really imagine a real world event big enough that would shake up Google, Amazon, Apple, etc. all at once

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carrington_Event

Now you can


It's super strange to observe your comment downvoted


Deception


1. Maximization of profits.

2. Attempts to regulate and attempts comply with regulations.

The rest are just forms of these phenomena.


How did python2 python3 (in)compatibility work for you?


I had a similar situation to the person you replied to and it wasn't bad.

I took a project with ~20 top level dependencies and around 5k lines of Python / Flask (plus a lot of tests). I YOLO'd upgrading everything to their latest versions in 1 shot including Python 2.7 to Python 3.7, Stripe API versions and everything.

I did that around 2.5 years ago and it took around 45 minutes. The app was using SQLAlchemy, Celery and had a bunch of things you'd expect to see in a SAAS app (users, custom admin, payments, custom CLI commands, migrations, etc.).


In most cases, I just updated a few exception handling statements.


Because we all are different. Your brain is wired in ways which makes some things easier and some things harder. Look at those who feel bored working with things you feel exited about. Find yourself (in another words whats suits your brain more) and don't try to be who you can't become.

> any advice on acquiring these basic social skills?

Find peoples with similar given and ask what worked for them. Advises from "natural" extroverts won't work for you.


Corporate talk: say correct things and do what you want


Your comment is about as silly as the Soviet Union banning the study of genetics as a "bourgeois pseudoscience", dismissing it as "anti-Marxist".

If that can't convince you, I can't imagine how you imagine your argument work.


I think we're not understanding each other here. Let me rephrase this.

Science and technology shouldn't have a political valence, and efforts to politicize science can end quite badly, like the Soviet Union banning the study of genetics on the grounds of it being "anti-Marxist". Technologies and their use can be debated on ethical grounds, but to assign valences is silly and potentially harmful.


I don't think anyone is taking issue with the Blockchain technology itself, it's about what cryptocurrency manifests in the real world. That's an argument about economics, not technology.


But why? Not every cryptocurrency has rich-get-richer dynamics. Lots of chains have blessed authories or validators involved, and don't incentive holding money. Bitcoin and Ethereum are like this. But there's so much more out there.


> I think we're not understanding each other here. Let me rephrase this.

That's much better. Because to understand what you meant by example one needed to know reasoning behind the example.

> Science and technology shouldn't have a political valence

It should not. I agree.

Do you agree that atomic bomb is political? At which sate atomic bomb development stops being science and starts being political? At theory level? Experiments? First device? First use of device?

At some stage we start observing that cryptocurrencies impact start having great consequences regardless of the science behind them. Great volume of electricity, centralization of power at hands of middlemen, promises of great future where benefits are reaped by early adopters already today.

Some people feel like looking at cryptocurrencies and blockchain purely from technology perspective, advocating for them, brings more harm than good. And I can understand this position of the author well.


> Some people feel like looking at cryptocurrencies and blockchain purely from technology perspective, advocating for them, brings more harm than good. And I can understand this position of the author well.

This is assigning a valence, that's what I mean. We can well debate and choose to ban the mining of PoW energy-heavy cryptocurrencies, but to tar the entire field as harmful is assigning a valence.

> Do you agree that atomic bomb is political? At which sate atomic bomb development stops being science and starts being political? At theory level? Experiments? First device? First use of device?

Fission can be both beneficial (fusion power reactors) or it can be a weapon (nuclear weapons). Should we ban the research of nuclear altogether because of its potential to be used for a weapon? Then comes the question of where to draw the line. Should fission research be banned but fusion research be allowed to continue? Should we stop researching atoms altogether? What if banning research into fission stops us from understanding a key way to generate cleaner energy and overcome climate change and non-renewable energy usage?

This is exactly what happened with the Soviet Union and genetics. Remember that at the time the Soviet Union placed a ban on genetics research, genetics in the West was heavily associated with eugenics. By banning genetic research altogether, the Soviet Union missed out on the chance to derive many drugs beneficial to human health, though their heart came from the right place (banning the idea of eugenics and social darwinism altogether).


It showed me perspective I did not see before. Nice article.


> Application state is a trivial problem to solve.

This is very interesting. Can you show example which you believe trivially solves state?


Nevermind. I saw the code by the link.


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