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I was curious about your defense of Matt's behavior in this thread but your empathy makes sense given that you work on a similar project that you describe as:

> A static site that is 100% free and open-source, competing with several businesses operating scammy subscription models.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30295629

Is this a competitor to Wordpress? Can you elaborate more about how the competition in this space uses scammy subscription models? It might help to illustrate the issues in the industry for outsiders like me.

Off topic, but I'm a bit of an amateur musician myself. I try to check out other musicians that I encounter, but I wasn't able to find anything about you or your music online. Do you have a bandcamp or something similar? The contrabass trombone is a really interesting instrument.


Please stop posting low effort LLM summaries of HN text posts. It doesn’t add anything to the discussion and is literally spam.


Odd to see that in a press release like this. Perhaps they were going for “crack team”. Cracked makes it sound like they’re looking for twitch streamers.


This is a recurring theme on the 5-4 podcast. You may want to reference their episode list as a starting point for relevant cases to research.


One team I was on had a bug where the product name was so long that it was being truncated in the about dialog. It was something like:

Microsoft Dynamics® CRM 2011 for Microsoft® Office Outlook® with Offline Access


The idea is that you have a specific entry price in mind and are waiting until it drops to that point. While you wait, you can collect a premium from selling the option. Let's say that based on your assumptions you think stock X would need to drop to $6 for you to make a good enough risk-adjusted return, but it's currently trading at $7. While you're waiting for the price to drop you could sell a Put (generally a cash-secured put) to collect a premium. If the stock price drops below $6 within the duration of your option, you'll get assigned the stock at the price you wanted ($6), but if it stays above this price the option expires worthless and you keep the premium.

There's too much detail to cover in a short comment, but the main risks with a strategy like this is that the price drops well below your strike price and you're forced to buy the stock at higher price than the current market value. For cash-secured puts, you'll also need enough cash in your account to cover the purchase of the stock at your strike price. That said, depending on your mindset and goals, this can be a way to generate income while waiting for the right price.

The opposite side of this also applies for exiting positions. You can sell calls on a stock you own (covered calls) to collect a premium while you wait for the price to reach your chosen strike price. The risk being the potential that the price blows past your strike price, your shares get called away, and you don't get to profit from the extra gains above the strike.


I don't think you should use Apple to put upgrade pricing in perspective. They've used inflated pricing to extract extra money from a captive audience for many years. Other OEMs cannot demand similar premiums for commodity products.


Yes, I know Apple prices are highly inflated.

I was using it to highlight the unreasonable-ness, IMHO of course, of the above request.



The browser that I'm using to read this proposal, for one.


I will be boycotting TurboTax this year. Their latest ad campaign[1] is particularly egregious. It claims that (with TurboTax's help) "people can be good at anything... even taxes". Given the amount of lobbying that Intuit does to make taxes more complicated, this message is disingenuous at best.

[1] https://www.campaignlive.com/article/turbotax-returns-new-ca...


So the dichotomy between the advertising and the actual actions is what caused you to boycott in this particular year? Whereas before you didn't care?


I've actually been avoiding TurboTax for about 3 years now. Mostly due to dissatisfaction with their lobbying policy.


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