@lobelia i have not! but i am curious.
@akhilrao i don't think it's a great take. we (in aggregate) want productivity improvements, rather than a high price to keep labor bid into lower productivity work. people in high productivity gigs (according to cost disease assumptions, if not experienced reality) get paid well — that's the reason you have to bid high to keep people in low productivity gigs. it'd be better if everyone was just paid well for high productivity rather than for low, ceteris paribus. 1/
@akhilrao all that said, there are lots of circumstances where "cost disease" shouldn't be taken as a disease at all. for example, a teacher of a small class is, superficially, a cost disease example: holding class sizes and learning pace roughly constant, productivity seems not to have increased. but we would not want productivity in that sense to increase, because the actual value comes from a not-scalable human connection, not anything a MOOC can provide. 2/
@akhilrao the better way of thinking about this kind of case is that there's no cost disease because productivity HAS increased. the value of the kind of education that can only come from direct human relationships has increased as the economy has grown more specialized, complex, and prosperous. so even though the goods delivered are precisely the same, it's not really a cost disease, just maintaining a similar share of value provided. /fin
@akhilrao (epilogue: i think a key question is, would we WANT "productivity" in the tangible-outputs-to-inputs sense to increase in a sector. in the infamous string quartet example, the answer is "no" — by assumption, people don't want recorded music, but an actual live quartet. then it's not really a cost disease, is it? we are perfectly capable playing a streamed recording, but instead we pay up for the quartet. we are valuing the quartet more highly, then, not suffering from cost disease. 1/
@akhilrao contrast that with a construction worker framing a new home with a nail gun. if five workers could be replaced by one person and five robots for half the cost, no intangible value would persuade us to keep the five workers, as long as those workers could find other remunerative things to do. so the construction worker's rising wages for the same framing represents cost disease, while the iconic string quartet example actually does not.) /fin
“The ability of a country or city to build useful infrastructure really does depend on cost, and allowing costs to explode in order to buy off specific constituencies, out of poor engineering, or out of indifference to good project delivery practices means less stuff can be built.” @Alon https://pedestrianobservations.com/2023/10/02/high-speed-2-is-partly-canceled-due-to-high-costs/
@scheidegger not hard to do!
@carolannie It was basically an instructional post on how to install some software. "The next step was getting it to work. This was an interative process with a few hitches." Either word could work! I ended up choosing "iterative". https://tech.interfluidity.com/2023/08/23/getting-started-with-hedgedoc/index.html
Among other gems, this post by @toniogela on crossplatform testing of the @typelevel toolkit includes an example of running scala-cli within a JVM from ordinary #Scala, which could be useful for a bunch of tricks. https://toniogela.dev/testing-typelevel-toolkit/
reviewing an old post, i found a word misspelled, "interative".
i had to decide, was the fix to remove a letter, to "iterative", or to add a letter, to "interactive"?
@hugo i’ve been using @hedgedoc as a collaborative notes platform during meetings. no complaints, it works great. here’s a writeup of getting it setup. https://tech.interfluidity.com/2023/08/23/getting-started-with-hedgedoc/index.html here’s the meeting UI with hedgedoc as an iframe https://www.interfluidity.com/meet/
@Jonathanglick i'm very glad that whether or not he's checked out, he hasn't left us yet.
@Jonathanglick wow! a lot of iconic images there. and nostalgic ones.
@Jonathanglick ha! i looked up Josh Kosh and came up with this.
i'd like to blame Google, but it was Brave Search. recency bias eclipsing important past results is apparently common to both.
@exchgr :disillusioned:
“…workers become accustomed to being active and engaged, having agency over their lives, participating in a common endeavor, and having a voice…unions have been described as helping build democratic muscle…union involvement in the political realm leads to policies that meet working people’s needs; this creates a virtuous cycle in which civic participation seems more worthwhile, as people see that govt can tangibly improve their lives.” @TerriGerstein https://slate.com/business/2023/09/strikes-autoworkers-writers-actors-unions-democracy.html
the great thing about the new RBG stamp is that it’s a rare point of unity, each faction in the US has its reasons to celebrate her memory.
the future is a vast dark ocean, and we are caught in a rip current.
@cshentrup not if you’re a cat!