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I'm fascinated by the fact that we study this 31 year old technology and are amazed by the complexity


Indeed! A thought experiment I have some times is to imagine that every machine on the earth was destroyed overnight. We still have mines, people, books. How long would it take to get back to the level of industrialisation and science that would allow us to make (in this case) a 3 million transistor chip?

The vast majority of people have little idea of how much intellectual effort has gone into the current state of technology.


Perhaps decades. Perhaps thousands of years. It probably depends upon why those machines were destroyed. Look at World War II. European nations and Japan rebuilt relatively rapidly then rapidly built upon progress made during the war. On the other hand, we have the decline of the Roman Empire. While we may now acknowledge that the dark ages weren't as dark as our 19th century peers thought, the western world lost the will or the imagination to rebuild at large scales (which the semiconductor industry certainly is).


Indeed. A lady at a bar in Portland once inquired what I thought humanity’s most advanced technological achievement was, after a slight pause I said the modern microprocessor. She laughed in my face at the suggestion. But when I pressed her for an answer of her own, she refueled to say, instead would only insist that my answer was ridiculous. Odd lady.


Haha. I suppose it would be: language. Without it, nothing else is possible.


Sure! Another way you might take it is that the pointy stick is the most advanced: it started out before language, and has had considerably more effort put into modernization.

What’s weird is asking the question and just nope-ing out of the resulting conversation.


I suppose when you answered with a "digital technology" they could have realized you weren't the right person for them. Now that I think about it, it's a great filtering conversation for a date.


I am pretty sure ordinary people will be amazed by this technology even after a thousand years.


Wow I didn't know chargie.org existed! I'm happy to finally see a device like this on the market.

I've had the same idea and created a device exactly like this as a high school project back in 2018, but didn't push it further


They have everything, even on offsite servers, but losing the YT channel itself would be catastrophic


It was a goof about how they have a whole video series on building an enormous petabyte media server. LTT is too big for YouTube to not work with them to fix it, and maybe this will nudge them to develop Floatplane into something more than a backup.


Yes, LTT is popular enough to have contacts with YouTube who will help them recover. It's still scary to see a huge channel briefly blink out of existence, and people running less well-connected channels are probably looking at this situation with some anxiety.


The sad part is that there's going to be a few people who got their YT view spammed with the fake Tesla and they unsubscribed. Even with YT reverting the videos/ratings/etc. I'd be really surprised if they reverted the unsubscribes.


I actually like this product. Would add an option to just buy the generated files; I want to host them myself.


For a DB manager, I use DBeaver, and in the navigation, there is Project->Scripts folder, where I keep most queries which I've written over the past few years and feel like I would need again.


And you don't seem to understand


+1


seems like this machine is sold worldwide under different branding, but i got the same one for 5+ years and it's purrfect


>I'm disappointed by the quality of this discussion.

This whole thread feels like reading r/cryptocurrency


Yes, unfortunately, You were just clickbaited


I enjoyed it though...


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