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IMO in the long term this is the pattern that will emerge. Switching costs are almost non-existent.

I was pleased to discover recently that Ubuntu is supporting my NVidia Jetson going forward after NVidias official support period ends:

https://canonical.com/blog/ubuntu-now-officially-supports-nv...

So there is at least one ARM devkit with long term Linux support.


Jetson is such a confusing product and it's difficult to tell exactly what they're supporting. Looking at the image download page it seems to be only Orin and newer?

https://ubuntu.com/download/nvidia-jetson


Yeah. I have the Orin devkit

> It seems like Apple's hardware design is universally loved with much acclaim, why is their software getting progressively worse?

It's not so different from the rationale for many consumer electronics products: novelty for marketing's sake rather than functionality. Similarly, notice the ridiculous trend of removing most physical buttons from car dashboards, started by Tesla and mindlessly aped by the other carmakers.


> Indeed, they were not only bound by a thicket of obligations and customs, but authority itself is only legitimate when it is just, a view that is traditional;

Ultimately they were bound not by tradition, but by the reality that they may lose their heads, often at the hands of a competing relative, but also at the hands of starving subjects.


> Crime rates also statistically correlate with demographics, but if I assume a specific person is a criminal based on that stat, I would (rightly) be called racist.

Who said anything about a specific person? They are talking about a neighborhood, in a urban area in a region known for the endemic poverty in black-majority areas due to the long shadow of slavery and Jim Crow.

As a wise character once said, "poverty is a condition, not a crime".

> > Expecting people to assume 'historically black' == 'poor' similarly feels racist.

There are a few historically black communities in the US that are middle-class and prosperous, and Black Americans have made huge advances, but to this day, concentrations of Black American community prosperity tend to be the exception rather than the rule.


> How can such an overcapacity be possible ? Is that a massive failure of market analysis ?

Partially. Turns out that the cost, size, impracticality, and look turn off most people who would buy an EV.

But then there is also the active brand sabotage by the CEO, whose state of mind the Cybertruck seems to originate from and embody.


Without the private sector utility company, there wouldn't be a mechanism to raise funds from and pay profits to shareholders.


Sure there would be; raise funds: tax, pay profits: reduce tax / tax breaks. The real differentiator is in the ability to choose who your shareholders are with less scrutiny.


I tend to agree, but that's a collective decision and action problem, which we have difficulty with as a society today.


Junior vs senior is the wrong framing. It's "can use LLMs effectively" vs "can't use LLMs effectively".

It's like expecting someone to know how to use source control (which at some point wasn't table stakes like it is today).


> Look Michigan needs the jobs, just a little common sense would go a long ways.

There will be few jobs created after construction is complete, and the ones created won't pay anything like typical tech comp.


Maybe you should calibrate your definition of what "typical tech comp" means and what roles that applies to, and at what companies.

Median US Salary for a Data Center Technician is around 80k.

Median US Salary is $63,360.

Median household income is around $75,763 (Detroit CSA #s).

There's a lot of people out of work right now.


How many people work in a modern data center?


How much will the local energy prices rise due to the datacenter? More than that offset by the employees they hire I bet.


Only as many as are needed to physically rack the hardware and do hand-on maintenance. The people actually using the servers shouldn’t be located on-site.


A giant datacenter of AI scale will have a dozen or so contractors for physical plant on-site pretty much every single day as long as the thing is in operation. More if a refresh project is ongoing, which after a few years will be more less all the time.

They certainly are not high density employers, but these huge hyperscale facilities typically employ 150-300 people directly, and probably at least that many on average in contracting roles. They are massive facilities.


Most people will be very happy with a fraction of the typical tech comp if they have a job.


Most people who need a job won't have that job at that data center.


I have known what kind of jobs a data center needs. Are these highly qualified people or do you just need to install some parts?


> Are these highly qualified people or do you just need to install some parts?

They're not software engineers or data scientists if that's what you mean by "highly qualified".

Datacenters techs do the physical parts of the job we once called "system administrator". That definitely requires skill and attention to detail, not just the ability to "install some parts".

When the tech industry transitioned from on site systems to datacenters and big compute / big data, "system administrator" got split into "site reliability engineer" and "datacenter technician" as they scaled independently, with datacenter tech being focused on manufacturing and physical troubleshooting.

They have always been the "blue collar" workers of tech, both in terms of pay and prestige. Like tech support, the job is considered more of a stepping stone into the operations (not R&D) side of big data companies.

That all said, the qualifications of applicants for a job depend a lot on the labor market, in particular, the desperation of applicants. During the dotcom bust, a lot of CS grads (including me) were applying for technician jobs.


> ChromeOS commonality is the Linux kernel, not userspace.

ChromeOS has a Linux userspace fully integrated via it's Crostini VM.


Partially, because not everything actually works, depending on the Chromebook model.

Great if everything that one wants from their GNU/Linux experience is a command line and TUI.

Starting a 3D accelerated GUI app? Well, it depends.


> Great if everything that one wants from their GNU/Linux experience is a command line and TUI.

Regular GUI apps work fine on ChromeOS. There's a flag to enable the GPU in the VM and with it, 3D accelerated GUI apps also mostly work. It's not optimized for gaming if that's what you are referring to though.


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