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Well, I'm going to block the ads anyway (or just leave), so if they're trying to find profitable ads, they may need to revise their strategy.

“I’m going to either steal your work in a way you don’t consent to, or not consume it” isn’t really great. The alternative is paywalls

Steal? Their server gave me some HTML and it’s up to my user agent to present it however I want.

Anything that kills adtech faster is a good thing at this point.

Much of their work consists of poorly sourced articles, sensationalism, disinformation, and bias to sway the audience.

Then the correct stance is to not visit those sites.

In the end, all reasons resolve to either "it's what we had at the time" or "someone thought it looked good."

"Everybody just liked it that way and it costs too much to change it now": https://www.exocomics.com/743/

Not always, for example original CD disks had capacity of 74 minutes to accommodate Beethoven's Ninth Symphony.

That one also turned out a myth :) CD size was determined by Cassette tape dimensions (diagonal, human can still hold one in one hand) and that combined with conservative pits/lands/track pitch choice drove the play time.

thus CD runtime was derived from something "what we had at the time".


The story as told may be inaccurate but it wasn’t simply ‘what we had at the time’ either.

The 74 minute length resulted from Sony rejecting the Philips 60 minute 11.5cm diameter “Pinkeltje” disc size in favor of a 12cm diameter.

It’s quite possible that Sony’s Norio Ohga simply argued that the 9th symphony or various operas fitting would be enough of an advantage for the slight size increase without meaningfully decreasing portability.


Meanwhile the LP crowd was flipping sides like it was Ultima VIII (slight exaggeration). Why would it be critical for a new format to do away with multi-disc releases if the customer base has already grown accustomed to them?

For classical music it's a problem because the long track lengths mean that you'll have to flip the record over in the middle of a piece. This was enough of an annoyance that one French label in the 70s created special records just for classical music with extra tightly packed grooves that could hold close to an hour on each side (https://www.discogs.com/label/184887-Trimicron). The downside of this is that the maximum recording volume is significantly reduced so there's a lot more background noise than on a normal record.

Because it was annoying to flip the disk in the middle of the thing.

You got any source for this?

The symphony story might be a legend, but it's pretty well known that the original design was somewhere in 10-11cm range, but this was eventually increased to 12 cm.

The "diagonal cassette size" seems extremely far-fetched - first, who cares about this? If you are worried about boxes, shelves etc.. you want horizontal size, which 10 cm. And you are worried about holding in hand, 12cm is not very convenient for the smaller hands, a smaller size would be better.


When respectfully handling them out of the box, I always stuck my index finger in the central hole and the thumb on the border. I have large hands but I rarely held them by the borders.

If anything, I'd have guessed that the size of an 8-track in a car stereo was probably a larger influence on potential form factors for CD audio. Since car stereos were at least somewhat normalized in the early 80's. Not speaking to an adapter, just in terms of what would "fit" in a typical stereo hole in a car.

That said, I doubt that's the reality either... it's probably a number of factors. I am slightly surprised that a USB based read-only media format standard for players hasn't materialized, though it seems that online/rental models are what the industry really wants.


Source is Dr. Kees A. Schouhamer Immink. Philips’ principal engineer in the joint efforts of Sony and Philips to develop the Compact Disc (CD) https://www.turing-machines.com/pdf/cdstory.htm:

>The disk diameter is a very basic parameter, because it relates to playing time. All parameters then have to be traded off to optimise playing time and reliability. The decision was made by the top brass of Philips. 'Compact Cassette was a great success', they said, 'we don't think CD should be much larger'.

>As it was, we made CD 0.5 cm larger yielding 12 cm. (There were all sorts of stories about it having something to do with the length of Beethoven's 9th Symphony and so on, but you should not believe them.)

> The 8-14 bit channel code was agreed and all the specifications between them led to a playing time of 75 minutes.


AI means that you cannot defer software design until you've written half code; you cannot defer documentation to random notes at the end.

It has the effect of finally forcing people to think about the software they're making, assuming they care about quality. If they didn't, then it's not practically different from an insecure low-code app or something copy-pasted from 15 year old StackOverflow answers.


> AI means that you cannot defer software design until you've written half code; you cannot defer documentation to random notes at the end.

> It has the effect of finally forcing people to think about the software they're making,

Ah, and all this time I was reliably assured that waterfall, design-upfront, was a broken process...


Single iteration waterfall is a broken process. You really need those late stage usage feedback signals unless your requirements were somehow captured by God.

> Single iteration waterfall is a broken process. You really need those late stage usage feedback signals unless your requirements were somehow captured by God.

Waterfall, as prescribed and as practiced, had feedback signals.


We simply have to make the Internet unusable for them until they stop being lazy.

They will absolutely not migrate to IPv6 until they HAVE to

Probably recent active exploitation

I think people sitting on a handle for 10-20 years without active use is annoying, so I'm fine with them taking them from dormant accounts. I think the selling is sketchy though.

It's less sketchy than third party underground sites, though, which is the alternative.

If OP had known his handle was going to be taken away, maybe he'd have tried selling it himself instead.

Came here to say this.

You’d probably feel differently if you paid $44 Billion for the platform

Can you even imagine?


Hey it's a revenue stream. I guess it's like selling domain names? Better than more ads maybe? Better than selling your data? Who are we kidding, they'll do all of the above.

Governments are deprecating legacy media. Tech oligarchs are in now.

And I thought being a stochastic parrot was limited to LLMs, but apparently they learned it from somewhere...

Man, I hope some of the "negative social consequences" more directly affect some of the politicians involved before they can implement this :)

Don't worry. Google has the training data already; they just don't want others to get it.

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