you accidentally knock a hole in your wall,
it’s probably cheaper to buy a flatscreen TV
and stick it in front of the hole
What I recently did is that I 3D-printed an object with PLA that exactly fit the whole and just glued that in with assembly glue.What does the HN panel say? Is it a solution? Or does it have any downside?
The challenge with the example is that “success” is personal preference. With plenty of examples, the success criteria are external.
The only criticism I’d make is that patching drywall is dead simple and cheap and so your solution seems possibly a bit overengineered (and, while I’m at it, that Andreesen’s observation is both facile and meaningless and is probably a reflection more of the bids Marc Andreesen’s house manager gets than anything insightful about labor costs in America).
I’m happy to pay for software, but I really don’t care for subscriptions. (Why no, holding back the tide is not going well at all, why do you ask?)
A person who goes to eg hang a picture frame or shelf there will encounter a different material with different load bearing properties than expected. Pushing into the center of that area with EG a drill bit will not have the same physical response or give, and depending on how it was braced/integrated with the surrounding wall, the patch itself may be pushed or pulled out of place. Similar for anyone that leans on that area if it's at such a height.
The biggest actual problem would be in a fire, the PLA will burn and let the fire into the wall cavity, where drywall would maintain a barrier for much longer - that is why we have drywall in the first place, it is a decent fire barrier.
I suspect that this procedure is faster and easier than taking a 3-D scan of the hole, 3-D printing a PLA patch, and gluing it in, but it does require most of an hour and the appropriate materials on hand.
Crucially, even if you are completely unwilling to take a stab at a fix yourself, hiring a local handyman to patch a hole via some good enough technique should still be far cheaper in most places than buying a nice new TV.
But nothing is gonna ever beat buying a 2nd-hand framed picture or plaque or movie poster or grabbing a flyer from the junkmail on your porch and tacking it over the hole... And if you're determined to fix holes with a TV, you can probably find one used for about as cheap / free as any of the other choices. Which is what makes this such a stupid example - the cost of TVs, like framed images or furniture, spans from $0 to "as much as you're willing to pay". Hiring someone can also be arbitrarily expensive, but can by definition never be 0. So the comparison is rhetorical trickery and demonstrates nothing.
...other than, apparently, Andreessen's dissatisfaction with paying tradespeople.
| 'With radiologists, I’m totally speculating and I have no idea what the actual workflow of a radiologist involves...'
Speculation from a place of ignorance is suitable for bar-side musings, not an article that wants us to take it seriously.
In economics, the Jevons paradox occurs when technological advancements make a resource more efficient *to use*; however, as the cost of *using the resource drops*, if demand is highly price elastic [PED], this results in overall demand [for the resource] increasing.
The cost to use tokens is already zero or deeply negative, depending on your accounting. And the author is mistaking the cost of 'creating/extracting the resource' (token generation economics) with cost of 'using the resource' (calling an API). I don't think we'll understand the true cost of, and demand for AI services for quite some time.
???
Sure, there's zero cost tokens in the form free chatgpt, but negative cost implies that you're getting paid to consume tokens, which I'm not aware of?
Meaning they lose 50 cents for every dollar they spend to send you a token, more if you are a free user. This discounts employees, CapEx, real and imagined (1.4T), overhead, and training (subsidized by M$oft).
Thus, if you have a way to turn every token they give you back into USD, even at a discounted rate, you can and should rob them blind before the well dries up.
Plenty of people work jobs for less money because they enjoy the work more. I’m not sure if it’s worth reading what follows if most of the argument is predicated on this claim.
Says a lot about American politics, figuratively speaking
Is it cheaper than buying a TV, and then having someone come install it on your wall? More meaningless drivel from Marc Andreesen.
how do you sustain attention and thoughtfully review radiological scans when 99% of the time you agree with the automated assessment? i'm pretty sure that no matter how well trained the doctor is they will end up just spamming "LGTM" after a while.
This is also a free source training data over time so market incentives are there.
(this is an unsolved problem that exists in many domains from long before AI)
Also weird that Dutch disease wasn’t mentioned at all, it actually seems more relevant.
https://www.a16z.news/p/why-ac-is-cheap-but-ac-repair-is/com...
Each of these phenomena have a name: there’s Jevons Paradox, which means, “We’ll spend more on what gets more productive”, and there’s the Baumol Effect, which means, “We’ll spend more on what doesn’t get more productive.”
```
I don't think that's exactly right. Jevons says "we consume more on what gets more productive" and Baumol says "the unit cost increases for that which is less productive".
The typical example for Baumol is the orchestra (or live music) which is today much more expensive than in the 1800s. I don't think we spend more in aggregate than we did in the 1800s!
Edit as I continue reading: ```
Other goods and services, where AI has relatively less impact, will become more expensive - and we’ll consume more of them anyway. ```
This definitely NOT the case. Basically the author is saying we will consume more of everything, which is not true! We famously stopped using horses and all the relevant industries.
The unit cost for horses, however, did increase!
What the author should be stating is that the new production bottlenecks will command a higher price and probably play a bigger role in the economy, but not everything gets to be a new bottleneck.
Personally, I’m completely fine with having this be the subject of regulation - even if it’s possibly an overly blunt instrument, this is not an area where I’d be comfortable letting the free hand of the market do its thing. Further, I suspect that universal, subsidized, high-quality pre-K would be a net economic benefit in the long run, but I haven’t done the research to back up this assertion.
The regulations specify that teachers must have completed a certain number of units of a specific type of education. If you create an AI Assistant that means you can hire people with less training and have the same quality, then ... you cannot.
The regulations regulate inputs rather than outputs.
When you buy 10,000 handbags you pay the wholesale price whereas buying a single handbag can be quite expensive.
If there is way lower hose demand (volume of sales), the horse producers will have to charge a higher price per horse.
Thus, society in aggregate spends way less on horses while the price of a horse goes up.
Jevons describes the supply curve moving out, resulting in increased quantity
Baumol describes the supply curve moving back, resulting in higher prices
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/LES1252881600Q
There's a spike and subsequent drop after the pandemic, but that was from service workers being forced out of the labor force by lockdowns. If you exclude that, it follows a steady trend up. And yes, the chart has already been adjusted for inflation.
...
> Why it costs $100 a week to walk your dog (but you can afford it)
Two signs this article is coming from too-privileged a point of view for its observations to be meaningful or useful to 99% of the population.
Here's the question to ask:
Which of these have economies of scale, are scale-neutral, or have diseconomies of scale?
Ta-da!
Three sectors that have diseconomies of scale: education, healthcare, housing.
Essential services aggregate in the red because non-essential services that have diseconomies of scale... wait for it... never achieve scale! Then you have government step in because the services are important (often with hard-to-capture upside, ergo limited incentive for private investment to begin with), and now you have an aggregation of essential, expensive, government-involved services.
I mean the role of you to go jail if something goes wrong is pretty important.... It unfortunately often doesn't work but the lengths at which well paid people go to avoid and then shorten prison sentences really should demonstrate this is the only punishment that works.
We cannot have computers solely in charge of stuff because the computer cannot have responsibility. If you take the radiologist out of the loop then you should take the responsibility.
littlestymaar•2h ago