It's honestly kind of impressive. How does one publication manage to be so exactly wrong about that many topics?
ilinamorato
She's awesome. Really needs to get off Twitter, though.
In recent years, the Forbes 30 under 30 has included Caroline Ellison, Sam Bankman-Fried, Martin Shkreli, Charlie Javice, Chris Bakke, and Elizabeth Holmes, all of whom have been very publicly charged with fraud. Somebody did the math and discovered that the 30 under 30 have collectively defrauded investors of more than four times what they've raised legally.
Forbes also named Silicon Valley Bank as the best in America in 2023, five days before it imploded and caused the second largest bank collapse in US history.
Honestly, I never read the Forbes in my life.
You are smarter and more well-informed for it.
Oh, there is more than enough blame to go around.
"Okay. Just so I understand it, in your wildest fantasy, you are in Hell, and you are co-running a bed-and-breakfast with the Devil."
cheaper,
Once commercial fusion comes out, it's likely to be about half the cost of wind.
[more] reliable
There's absolutely no way to know how reliable human-generated fusion is, but it powers every star in the sky for billions of years, so it could probably last for a few decades here on Earth without much trouble.
and safer alternatives
Nuclear fusion, when begun, creates water as its byproduct. This water is, admittedly, very slightly radioactive; if you drank the "nuclear waste" that is produced by a fusion plant as your only source of water, it would increase your radiation exposure the same as if you flew from New York to Los Angeles and back once per year. Now, that's not nothing, but it is almost nothing.
As for large-scale disasters from nuclear fusion, that's almost impossible—and you can see why by the fact that this very article is news. With a nuclear fission reaction, the difficulty is in containment; get the right things in the right place, and the reaction happens automatically. There are natural nuclear fission reactors in the world, caves where radioactive materials have formed in an arrangement that causes a nuclear reaction. But in order for nuclear fusion to happen on its own, you need, quite literally, a stellar mass. So if something goes wrong in a fusion power plant, where we're manufacturing the conditions that make fusion possible at great energy cost and effort, the reaction just stops unless there's a literal sun's worth of hydrogen hanging around. It cannot go critical, it cannot explode, it cannot break containment; it can only end. It's hard to sustain a fusion reaction, and that's why stories like this are news: because it's a major breakthrough anytime we get closer to a reaction where we can feed enough power that it generates back into the machines that keep it running. Once the power to those machines is cut, a fusion reaction cannot continue.
It's always thirty years away because every time it gets close to 15 years away they cut the funding in half. Zeno's Dichotomy in action.
I'm doubtful about that, to be honest. He's only ever played the world like a game on easy mode, and the money he has is what allows him to do that, so he has to maintain the flow of that money. For most rich people, that's the reason they want more money: because it's the key to influence and power, and that has worked well for rich people for ages.
That's why, even if (as is not impossible) this president is the last democratically-elected president in history, he has to continue to get money: so that he can continue to wield his level of access and control and influence. Trump doesn't care about anything other than his bank account and his personal image among a certain crowd, so once Musk is no longer an asset to one or both of those things, he'll drop Musk.
I don't think Elon loves anyone or hates anyone or cares about the existence of anyone who isn't in his immediate circle. Those are the only real people for him. Everyone outside of that is just game mechanics, and he'll burn through as many as he can to get to the top of the leaderboard. Unfortunately, he has enough money and influence that now he can force other people to play his game, too. Including, currently, the President of the United States.
So, in my opinion, eventually he'll push back on Trump about the tariffs. It may not work (though it probably will), but he's not going to stay silent about that forever. He already got Hegseth to buy a bazillion cybertrucks for the DOD so that he could get them off of his lot. He'll probably start pressuring Duffy to start the money flowing to Tesla to build more Superchargers soon, too.
It reduces his bottom line, particularly when a trade war makes Tesla exports less profitable. Yeah, he'll survive, but his profits will suffer.
Anything can cause people to step up. Hatred, spite, murderous intent. That doesn't make it a virtue.
We don't really have a good UI solution to that anywhere, though.
The closest I've seen is with longform video apps, where scrubbing along the progress bar pops up a little video preview, but it's not consistently available, it's a half-baked idea, and if I had a dollar for every time the preview didn't match up to what you actually got when you hit play, I'd probably have enough to hire someone to fix it.
In podcasts, I think chapters is the best idea going, but it's not well-implemented either.
I think scrubbing along the progress bar is just a bad visual metaphor. I don't know what's better, but I just don't think it's great.
Sure, but they didn't get away with it. That's a key step for the late-stage capitalist; getting caught is like not sticking the landing.