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Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: June 16th, 2023

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  • Note it is very nice for me to be able to start the air conditioning in my electric car when it’s 38C out before I leave my desk.

    Other things are mildly convenient, like checking progress of charging, locking/unlocking doors remotely. It happens to be convenient to check problems, but that’s only because the in-car system isn’t very good, and I would happily take the in-car system being better.


  • No, the lock in is not needed for seamless behavior. The lock-in is to secure various revenue opportunities.

    For example, if I connect a displayport cable to a displayport connection, poof, display happens. There’s no ‘tinkering’, there’s no “trying to match vendors”, it just works.

    Similarly, here folks sorted out the protocols in use, and none of the ‘seamless’ users were impacted. VW went out of their way to break them not to ensure a seamless experience, but because they wanted to paywall capability in a reliable way.

    One could easily imagine schemes that didn’t require the lock-in, but would not assure an enduring revenue opportunity.


  • Fun fact, recently had an argument with someone defending the favorable tax situation for the ultra wealthy.

    Their argument was that billionaires did not have as much “real money” as middle class people so of course the middle class people should pay more in taxes…

    Relevant to nothing, but just thinking of favorable billionaire treatment right now triggers that thought…








  • Part of the problem for them is that most of that work involves input that they don’t have a means to capture.

    Think of manual work that becomes too difficult or impossible just by wearing gloves and dulling the touch sensation, and even then you still using how it feels as a significant input. Also output is far more complex and not instrumented, and camera footage doesn’t cut it.

    This is why driving is, comparatively, easier for the machine learning approach. The vast majority of input is visual, some audio. The only outputs that matter are the turn of a wheel and actuating a couple of pedals.

    They’ve been trying with remote operation (the glasses don’t do it, but remote operation ensures all input and output can be captured), but it’s just really hard to remotely do a lot of this stuff without just being able to touch and feel things through.

    Open ended manual work is going to be actually trickier than “knowledge work”, and knowledge work isn’t exactly fantastic as it stands yet either.





  • They failed to transition from technology leader to commodity product.

    Well, Broadcom clearly saw that VMware was on the trajectory to be supplanted by either cloud aligned virtualization solutions or built in operating system virtualization. They failed to really carve out another niche because even in the most dedicated VMware shop, all the advances happened in operating systems by other vendors.

    So Broadcom decided explicitly to gouge the hell out of customers too afraid to migrate losing any chance at new customers (which they probably weren’t going to get any way) and scaring away current customers (I recall some report they felt they could alienate 90% of their customers and still be happy with how hard they were gouging the remaining 10%).

    In short, going exactly according to plan.