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Here’s my advice. If you still like working with data then you should look into consulting where you get to work on different projects across different domains. You have to build up your toolkits even within data science. Mastering something like GIS takes awhile and same goes for time-series/finance. And only way to do this is through consulting gigs.


This is my argument too. History teaches us it’s never the people. It’s that one bad apple.

Solution is simple: force Russia to demilitarize. Put sanctions on them until they do.


This is it. Ironic considering that EU/US is unwilling to fight a war that will benefit them the most. Ukraine is fighting this war for their country but they are also fighting to save the world from a very possible WWIII.


Nuclear weapons are really a horrible curse, in every single ways possible. You can see the bully coming after your neighbors and you know, they know, everybody knows you won’t do anything to defend yourself to avoid a nuclear conflict. If we wouldn’t have nukes we would join our neighbors and fight but the real risk of a complete nuclear annihilation freezes all our moves.

Ukrainians and Georgians are indeed fighting our war, defending the European cause, while we are bystanders. The entire situation makes me feel sick.


I agree 100%.

Ukraine deserves all the money that will go toward building back their economy when they finally win this war.


I’m still wondering at which point diplomacy started to fail so spectacularly?


When Ukrainians overthrew Putin’s puppet Yanukovych back in 2014?

My personal opinion is that Putin was never negotiating in good faith. He was negotiating as a stalling tactic while prepared and/or waited for the most opportune time to invade.


Yes, I agree, it has never been in good faith. Putin is a fascist, in the true sense of the world. His ideology is based on a "natural order" in which the strong dominate the weak and a past dream of lost glory. When he's using the "blood and soil" argument or he's talking about fighting against degeneracy it's not by mistake. If you look a bit at the ideology popular among high-ranked Russian, their behavior for the past 15-20 years make more sense.

For example, you can check:

- the book "Foundations of Geopolitics ": https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foundations_of_Geopolitics

- its author and "philosopher" Aleksandr Dugin: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aleksandr_Dugin

Putin has a long-term vision and strategy to build a fascist empire, he has been working on this for decades.


I think it’s 2011 when NATO flipped on Libya. That’s the exact moment Putin stopped being friendly to the West.


So basically he is afraid. Dangerous.


Russia first strike on NATO will cause at most 40m dead in the most improbable scenario of NATO just standing doing nothing.

If NATO will disable the Russian nuclear C&C, they will no longer be able to launch a coordinated attack, and it will be for individual officers in bunkers to decide of fighting an unwinnable war.


"first strike"? The moment America or Russian launches a single nuke on the other the other goes full on last strike by glassing half of earth, the rest of us dying in nuclear winter.

It is called mutual ASSURED destruction (MAD) for a reason.


The EU/US joining would be what causes WWIII.


> The EU/US joining would be what causes WWIII.

There's absolutely no reason to believe that is true.

Russia's military is weak, their economy is extremely weak, their manufacturing base is extremely weak, and their only defensive fall-back is nuclear weapons and masses of bodies to throw at an invading force (it would be very unwise for anybody to bother invading Russia, there's no point to that). The use of nuclear weapons doesn't equate to a world war.

Where would WW3 come from? Russia has very few allies and China isn't joining WW3 on their side (China would stay out of it unless attacked, they'd strategically position themselves to benefit from the damage to their peers).

Belarus is a joke (and that regime would be quickly broken in a conflict). Syria is destroyed. Iran is a non-threat. What else has Russia got on their side?


The nukes are WWIII. That’s why a direct war is a massive risk.


> There's absolutely no reason to believe that is true.

WWIII, in a literal sense (that is, between world-wide alliances), won't happen, since certainly China/India have not reason to enter it.

On the other hand though, Russia vs. the West is not so far fetched. Keep in mind that Putimir announced:

> Russian president Vladimir Putin has ordered military command to put nuclear deterrence forces on high alert after aggressive statements by Nato countries, Reuters reports.

Whether this is a bluff or not, it shows a clearly deranged personality. I wouldn't be surprised if, as a matter of principle, he'd initiate a nuclear war rather than losing Ukraine. After all, invading Ukraine has been motivated entirely by principle.


Europe is not sending a lot of weapons instead of soldiers for a single reason: nukes. Nobody wants to contribute to the end of this Earth and although Putin seems to be playing Nixon's "the president is crazy" card well, you can never be sure how far from reality he is.

Edit: well, that escalated quickly:

https://ria.ru/20220227/putin-1775389742.html

'As stated in the directory on the website of the Ministry of Defense, the strategic forces "are designed to deter aggression against Russia and its allies, as well as to defeat the aggressor (inflicting defeat on him), including in a war with the use of nuclear weapons."'


There is no real fear of nuclear apocalypse when a nuclear power attacks a non-nuclear power (especially one that doesn’t have a binding defense agreement automatically activated upon attack/invasion w/ a nuclear power); we’ve seen the US do that with impunity and no repercussions. Risk of nuclear annihilation only comes when one nuclear power attacks another.


We have a much more recent example of a crazy president that would threaten nuclear war than Nixon.


You mean the recent president that signed more peace deals in the Middle East in recent history and was the only president who also hasn’t started a war since probably I’ve been alive? That guy?


...by selling out the Palestinians? And dependent on a fantasy (a demilitarized Israel?!) They were an election-year stunt. Not a real effort at diplomacy.


Yeah the one that would tweet fire and fury and randomly blow up generals on airstrips.


An old senile man is occupying the office that could have stopped Putin.

Putin didn't even call any bluff. Biden admitted on TV that they aren't doing to do anything weeks ago. Putin did exactly what he said he would do, and Biden is doing exactly what he said he would do.

It's no wonder nothing happened when Trump was in office. How many times do we need to learn that appeasement does nothing. If the Allies stopped Germany when they remilitarized the Rhineland, Hitler would've been done without much of a war. Instead, the world appeased Hitler until it was too late.

The world appeased Putin with Crimea, and then the separatists. The world is appeasing this. What's the next escalation?


Elementary Number Theory by David Burton. I started reading this book in 8th grade to get a bit better at math competitions. Oh boy did it open my eyes.

As an adult, it’s Shannon’s The Mathematical Theory of Communication. I read it at least once a year. It’s the most intellectually powerful paper I’ve ever read.


This is a conspiracy theory. Please stop.


I once took a job that I regretted taking on the very first day. I contemplated quitting that same day but stuck it out for many years thereafter. Turns out staying in that job WAS the career ending mistake. It killed my career, family life and even health. It takes a lot of effort to recover from these career mistakes even if you have spectacular resume and background. Number one rule in avoiding this is to never take such a job in the first place.


Oh wow, what was that you saw directly at day 1 that was a dead giveaway „well this is going to suck“?


Bring back the old school Mathematica startup chime!

https://community.wolfram.com/groups?p_auth=F0xHCTqs&p_p_id=...


Link to the forum thread if the direct link doesn't work: https://community.wolfram.com/groups/-/m/t/1983204


To be fair that is 99% of the population.


I’ve been coming here from the beginning. Off and on. Different handles because I rarely saved my passwords. I absolutely appreciate all the gem comments especially from insiders. This is the only place that reminds me of 90s newsgroups.

I want to especially thank Dang for keeping this place consistent.


Was also here on the 1st day, the same day I decided to start-up 15 years ago!

Took me 7 years to create an account though. Wish I had done it sooner!

Especially ALWAYS reading the comments BEFORE the actual articles! Thanks!


how did people hear about it back then?


I've only been on HN since around ~2009 or something like that (11 years), but most people I've met in real-life who are also on HN have been recommended to visit the site first time from fellow hackers, rather than via other websites.


I was a reader of Paul Graham's essays and website, which I believe is where I heard about it. Or it might have been reddit (which I'm sure I heard about via PG). I joined Reddit on January 25, 2006 and HN on February 21, 2007.


From PGs blog, O'Reilly's feed and/or Slashdot.

/.


From reddit and/or PGs blog.


We need Dang as a Guido style BDFL[1]. At least until the community has grown to fully take on and continue the culture. (Which I am assuming why Guido felt he could step down)

Hope they are taking great care of you at YC!

1. For those unaware, Guido, the creator of Python, who remained the Benevolent Dictator for life until 2018.


When I drove across the country in my early 20s what struck me the most was that we have nearly unlimited undeveloped land. I believe we are close to a tipping point in this country, with WFH becoming even more widely accepted, and push for more energy efficient homes, that we will see significant single home developments across rural areas over the next decade. Whether that benefits homebuyers or developers/corporations will be up to regulations and incentives.


I would like to believe this is true, because it's where I want to be in 10 years. I would love nothing more than to sell my house in the city and build a custom house in the country, especially since you can get most luxuries these days even if you're in the middle of nowhere.

There have been big improvements in the following areas, and I'm excited to see them develop further:

1) Solar power and battery technology

2) Water filtering technology

3) Satellite internet

4) Geothermal heating /cooling

5) Insulation

I believe further improvements in these areas will drastically decrease people's reluctance to move out to the country.


Having recently relocated from a fairly populated region to a fairly rural area... A few things to add to your list that some people might not think about until they need it:

1)Doctors/pediatricians/dentists etc.

2)Emergency veterinarian (for those late night "what the hell is going on with my dog" moments)

3)More than 3 lousy restaurants

I'm sure there are many more, but these are the ones that were the biggest shock to our family!


4)Social activities and dating pool for people not in a family unit


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