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it doesn't recognise a url without the scheme? come on!

Will push a fix for this, sorry about that.

the use case i "feel" these are useful are for studying any given topic. having one single page helps avoid many google searches, tangential questions, etc., but i'm always looking out for inaccuracies.


Working on onekontact, the only place you ever have to update your address or phone number when you move.


very exciting tech. also very scary, if we imagine how authority can misuse this.


is there a way to test for this?


Do you still feel like this? Is there anything that helped you?


I wrote a longer comment in this thread about things that helped me, you can find it in my comment history.


I have never had heating problems with a mac since I started using the M1 model(around 2021), with a typical software engineer workload.

I highly doubt M3 macs are any worse.


Same. In comparison, my last job I joined right when the last of the Intel Macs were going away, so my work machine was a fully loaded 16” i9 MBP. Aside from being enormous, and having the battery life of a gaming laptop, it would get absurdly hot unless I disabled Turbo. While the heat wasn’t a physical problem when docked, it would spin the fans up, and sometimes I don’t want headphones on.

I don’t know who thought shoving an i9 into a laptop designed to be sleek and quiet was a good idea, but they were mistaken.

Oh, also, my base (8 GB RAM, 256 GB SSD) M1 Air destroyed the i9 in actual workloads.


Me neither. I've rarely felt my M1/M2 laptops getting hot. On the other hand, Windows laptops like my Intel i7 XPS would get hot just from booting.


> with a typical software engineer workload.

So yours are probably MBPros not Airs. Those have a fan.


"tech company" is an obsolete term now. all companies are tech companies


> "tech company" is an obsolete term now. all companies are tech companies

Just have an ear what many employees talk about at the water cooler or coffee machine:

* technology (in the engineering sense): tech company

* software: software company

* something else: ... company (for example finance company)

In other words: Is producing software the actual goal of the company or a means to an end?

* If software is in the opinion of most employees the actual goal of the company: software company

* Is software a means to the end of producing engineering products: tech company

* Is software written for high-frequency trading: finance company or investment company

etc.


ads don't work without tracking. that's the whole point


So all the ads in newspapers and on television and in sports venues and public spaces and...don't work? Or did you just mean ads are less cost effective without tracking-based targeting?


Ads are much more valuable and higher click through vs impression if they’re personalized.

Small businesses are willing to give more money per ad campaign if they know they’ll get clickthru on a specific target market. These same small businesses don’t have the money to run long ad campaigns which would result in less clicks.


sell the ads in newspapers? is this the 1950s? j/k

Seriously though, what newspaper(s) would you honestly be willing to spend ad dollars with (and for what products) thinking that this would be a good investment? Geritol? Now, if your suggestion is buying newspaper ads would then get ads in their digital versions as well, then maybe. However, seems to me that most viewers of news sites are from link aggregators more than just readers of a website. Not sure how that would affect ad placement.


Ad supported TV broadcasts are a thing and are podcasts that don’t dynamically insert ads.


TV and podcasts are moving towards surveillance based advertising too. Look at the rise of smart TV's, cable, and streaming services that require identification and location as well as the various ad supported podcast players.

Your are correct if you are using over the air TV or Kodi and if you use FOSS podcast players such as Antennapod or Podverse.


>TV and podcasts are moving towards surveillance based advertising too.

Everything is moving this way. It's only a natural desire for those spending money on advertsing to want to know if the money is being spent effectively, or if they'd be just as well off lighting cigars with $100 bills.

The lure of targeting, tracking (ad effectiveness, not people per se), etc is just too inticing for those non-techies that haven't pulled back the curtain to see that the all powerful wizard isn't wearing any clothes (to mix metaphors). Those of a certain age that depended on Nielsen ratings and what not buying TV/Radio ad time were always very interested in knowing how effective the ad buy really was. Then, the digital ads folks come along telling them they can hit exactly the demo they want to target and then show click through rates, etc. It's like a dream come true with a cherry on top under a rainbow with the leprechaun delivering a pot of gold riding on the unicorn's back. They all bit hard hook,line,and sinker.


If you are referring to players like Spotify. Those aren’t “podcast”. A podcast consists of a sound file I can access via an RSS feed.

Spotify exclusives are non pre podcasts than pages that were hosted on AOL.

My smart tv isn’t connected to the internet after registering it. I have an AppleTV connected.


>A podcast consists of a sound file I can access via an RSS feed.

I think podcast has outgrown that definition some time ago.


There is a reason I stopped listening to Gimlet podcasts once they went exclusively to Spotify.


Both Google and Apple have their own podcast players that collect what you listen to.


“Privacy” has never been about the service you are using collecting data for recommendations and even advertising while you are using the service. People aren’t complaining that when you tell FB that you are a married man interested in women that they target advertising for your demographic. It’s about collecting data when you are not on the platform.

But Apple doesn’t make money by advertising based on the podcast you listen to. I doubt they make any real money on their new podcast subscription service. Apple doesn’t even hosts podcasts. They just index RSS feeds. The podcast directory API has been freely available for over a decade and is used by third party podcast players.

Unlike Spotify, you can subscribe to a podcast feed that isn’t in the directory.


I asked about newspapers, and you responded with TV. Huh?


Fair enough. But you do notice that newspapers are still the most popular way for CPG goods like P&G to advertise where they don’t have to target or track.


Eventually, that demographic will age out so to speak, and then what. What are the numbers of new younger subscribers? This is why newspapers are folding/selling.


Some people claim, without much proof, that ads without tracking are less effective. We don't care and would prefer to see their business model fail than to maintain the status quo. That is the point here.


Weren't there even studies showing, that context based advertising is on par with personalized (based on tracking your every move) advertising?

I strongly suspect that might be the case. I also believe that social networks could - in theory - create effective advertising possibilities without the need to target user properties.

Take my experience with Instagram. When I am looking at mostly typography related posts, it tends to work well if they show me paid ads for interesting fonts. But when they show these to me, when I am looking at gardening content, I tend to be irritated and ignore them.

I know - I am talking anecdata here - but maybe there could be a way to not target users, but target topics and hit the users that move through these topics (so to speak).

One problem, though, I see with this approach is when you want to create a longing in somebody who never before had the idea that he/she would like to have a cool new font (to stay with my example). Or the next "hot" stuff from some global brand (or what they believe that i should want to feel cool).

But as said - I can't find the studies I seem to remember right now on the effectiveness of context based advertising compared to personalized advertising. So I am not sure if this was just my imagination.


Who is "we"?

The vast majority of people love ad supported services. They prefer free/low cost to expensive and express this preference regularly. They don't think advertising is evil, and in fact many people voluntarily wear adverts on their own clothes.

Online advertising pays for a massive amount of stuff. If it dies, then the outcome is not "everything stays the same but somehow better". The outcome is that a lot of services we take for granted go away and either don't come back at all, or come back far worse because their market is now much smaller and only rich people pay for it.

To put this in perspective, when I worked at Google they had a prototype internal service that let you "buy" your way out of seeing ads by bidding against yourself in the auction. The idea was to allow people to pay for an ad-free internet, but without making users freeloaders on the services they used (that's ad blocking and exists already). I thought, what a great idea. I'll sign up. Result: to get rid of a just a fraction of all the ads I was seeing online (my guess, ~20% of ads I saw were served by Google) would have costed $200-$300 per month.

After seeing the scale at which advertisers were subsidizing my online experience, I lost interest, as did everyone else. Paying 4x as much as my entire normal internet bill just to see fewer ads, not even get ridding of all of them, just wasn't worth it.

The reality is that the public aren't demanding restrictions on online advertising. They don't care. They like free stuff and they've got nothing against advertisers. This is a war being waged for political and commercial reasons, dressed up as consumer protection, and if/when it actually starts to bite in visible ways, a whole lot of people are going to be mighty shocked at how upset the public will get.


The public would certainly got upset with the idea above. Fortunately that idea has nothing to do with reality - we don’t need to bid ransom to Google to make it stop tracking, same way we don’t have to bid against car thieves to get our cars back.


The most efficient way to solve climate change is to provide every user in the planet the exact amount of goods/services that solves a user's need at the exact time.

This eliminates all the redundant transportation, housing, waste (food, cloths, electronics, equipment)

And the only way to provide is that through tracking (both history and intent).


No, the most efficient way to solve climate change is for people to consume less crap; this reduces far more wasted resources. There is no need to give up your privacy and no need for corrupt middlemen to track you.


It’s been my experience that historical user CTR and historical ad CTR can already produce a really high performing P(click|impression) classifier.


Ads work without tracking, just less efficiently.

On the other hand, misinformation and propaganda also work without tracking, just less efficiently.

Wi'll have to strike a balance somewhere.


I have always been a bit skeptical of off-site data producing serious lift in VCG auction clearing prices for in-feed units, but I’m also pretty out of date.


I’ve found some very relevant services based on host read advertising on podcasts.


inflation is 7%ish, not 5%ish. but generally translates to much higher cost of living increases for the middle class


I don't really buy inflation at 7%. If you drill into the numbers it's mostly (1) energy prices returning to pre-covid levels and (2) huge increases in new & used cars due to chip shortages. The rest of the numbers are a more pedestrian 2-4%


And a large drop in the real value of outstanding debts, which is great for the mortgage-holding, non-credit-extending middle class


And massive payrises to boot


For those able to change jobs or find jobs in the <1yr window yes, for the rest, pay adjustment largely didn't meet inflation, so they got a pay cut. And those that were saving to buy a house or car saw the price of those things shoot away from their efforts while those savings lost value. I also worry that those who took jobs for massive raises will be on shakey ground afterwards. And those that hired in before or after resenting them for it.


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