archive.org link for those who try to avoid Google services
(courtesy of xylogx@lemmy.world who also posted this)
The funny thing is y'all in the US still have a better selection of vehicles available than we do in Europe, it's just mostly not from American marques.
I recently got my hands on a USDM Subaru. It has more options than the EU spec one so I figured I'd look at the US Subaru website and yup, even for current model years, they have WAY more options available in terms of both models and trims. Y'all still get the WRX sedan, we only get the Impreza hatchback with a naturally aspirated engine. We don't get the Ascent either.
You guys also get things like the Toyota 4-runner, Volkswagen Atlas, etc in terms of SUVs that are pretty big, but not gigantic.
Mercedes, Audi and BMW?
I'm sure they're right around the corner, pretty close to the top 10.
Oh, you meant Ford, GM and Chryslerdaimlerfiatstellantis?
Yeah nah, as true patriots, they produce in other countries so Americans would pay for the cars, but not be paid to build them.
You need CUDA and enough VRAM for the model. Unless it's an old ass titan, you're probably out of luck in terms of VRAM.
Chrome is definitely a fork of Safari in a way. Or more accurately, Blink is a fork of Webkit.
Yeah. Case in point: Ghost riders in Motorcycle racing.
Motorcycles also tend to fall down when stationary, yet stay upright without the rider at speed.
Also makes me wonder if just the bike crossing the finish line would be enough to win if you fell off in first place just before the line.
If you read my other comment, basically I've heard from other commenters online that some collective bargaining agreements restrict individual bargaining. That would suck. If the union only sets floors instead of absolutes or ranges, that is another thing entirely and something that I'm very much in favor of.
It's ridiculous.
Numbers are funny, anyway. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang's net worth is closer to yours and mine than it is to Elon Musk (Forbes list currently placing them at ~100 bill and ~250 bill respectively). But that's only in absolute terms. In reality, Jensen's got like 8 or 9 orders of magnitude more wealth than I do depending on how far into the month we are, and on the same order of magnitude as Musk.
Either one losing 99% of their wealth would still be above a billion.
Oh I agree that even 2 billion is too much, but my reasoning is that proponents of capitalism often make the claim that capitalism drives innovation (you try to fill some market niche in order to get rich) so if they are right, then 2 billion should be enough that this still works.
I had yachts depreciating to zero in my example because it's estimated that you have to spend about 10% of its' purchase price annually anyway, so anyone keeping a 20 year old yacht around is going to be spending a lot of money on it that will fuel other parts of the economy.
@boonhet
@lemm.ee