Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | ConcernedCoder's commentslogin

my money's on him being "suicided" with the cameras off before a public trial can take place...


I dont think so, but it wouldn't surprise me.


this is the correct answer, as long as health care is for-profit we will always be the product instead of the consumer


so who's holding the $750 million?


They spend it as it comes in, mostly on salaries. It’s a large company. Their financials are publicly available if you care to look.


The DOJ are apparently idiots that do not understand tech, let alone anti-trust or monopolies... for instance: I create a useful device that consumers love and use, I sell ads on the device to anyone who will pay, in fact I auction them to the highest bidder... DOJ: you are a monopoly and must sell the device... wtf?


almost like it's a business and they don't want to lose any customers...


Possibly related are silver coins called "trade dollars" that were minted in the usa and used for trade with china which exibit "chop marks" signifying validity: https://www.google.com/search?sca_esv=9cb25f21911ea42e&q=tra...


In theory, couldn't we focus on a perfect spot near a black hole where the light has been warped 180 degrees around it... i.e. if the black hole is 100 light years away, you'd see ( with perfect zoom, of course ) a picture of the earth 200 years ago...?

I understand that we'd have to account for the movement of objects, of course, but with computers, seems like a small hurdle...


ACHIEVEMENT UNLOCKED: "Get'r Done" -- The ability to interate and solve individual hurdles and issues within the constraints of a system to achieve a grand idea.


people still folding@home <shrug>


ask them if they push back the same way with other knowledge professionals like the family doctor or lawyer...


Doctor might not be the best example. There are tons of Facebook groups out there treating all their diseases with crystals and a bit of WebMD. Had to sit an extra 20 minutes at the dentist just this week because some lady refused the XRay and was lecturing the staff and then the dentist about how they should be able to figure out her problem with just their eyes.


Yup. I know a guy who refused a filling because he didn't want "forever chemicals" put in his mouth.


It's also a bad example because most doctors people encounter are overworked, on a budget, and not very smart,* which means they're very frequently wrong.

Assuming the patient is as intelligent as the average on HN, and motivated about their health, they may well be able to learn more about what's going on with their health in the month it takes to get an appointment than the doctor will in the ten minutes they spend with you.

(* Because most people who live in cities, and most people who go into primary care in cities do so because they weren't competitive enough for one of the more interesting and lucrative specialties. It's a similar dynamic as to why most people in the tech industry that people encounter—IT help desk reps—are not usually the cream of the crop.)


This is an insult to the doctors I know who deliberately chose to do primary care because they were more motivated by service than money or prestige. For that matter, I know a developer who chose to work in IT support for a cancer research center because he put more value on helping to cure cancer than making more money. There actually are people out there who value service to the community more than fame or fortune. They deserve praise, not scorn.


It isn't an insult to anyone. I very clearly said "most" and "usually." We also have excellent IT support, done by developers, because we specifically negotiated for it. They are excellent. But we specifically included that in the contract because it is an inarguable, objective fact that most IT help desk support is not staffed with the most skilled people in the tech industry.

Unfortunately, the kind of sacrifice and selflessness you describe is not the norm in our society. As a result, the dynamic I articulated holds for "most"—just like I said.

Your post is deliberately dishonest in its characterization of what I said, and excessively hostile. That kind of behavior is not consistent with the community norms on HN. I urge you to reconsider how you interact with people here.


Yes? It is very common for people to have unqualified legal or medical opinions, and tell them straight to the professionals.


This isn’t a good analogy imo, and I’d argue that it’s often healthy for someone to push back this way.

I’ve been on both sides of this fence as a customer and a developer, and have at times had to straddle the fence as a PM.

The hardness of a problem does not mean the problem can’t or doesn’t need to be solved.

A client pushing back is often their way of trying to ensure that the developer actually understands what they want.

“Pushing back” as a developer is often mostly about setting expectations, i.e. “no, this is very different, won’t benefit from previous work and won’t be easy”.

All of this is necessary to gain a shared understanding, and the end result may still be that the work must be done.


IMO, the "can't you just" people do this with everyone. I can understand why, as it is sometimes effective at queuing people to keep trying and to find a way.

Unfortunately, the part after the "can't you just" is rarely helpful.


If I'm to believe a friend, who'se a family doctor, this is exactly what happens.

Especially since corona. And not a tiny minority, but a big group.

He told me that a few decades ago, there were the occasional homeopathic or other "nutcases". But that today this is common.

What I've read about this, it's a global trend, in a fly-wheel (feedback-loop) effect with mostly populism. Populism feeds distrust in authorities like lawyers, doctors, journalists. And distrust in authorities feeds populism.


There are good doctors and bad doctors just like any other profession. I have gotten plenty of bad advice over the years from doctors. Took me 2 years of going to various doctors to figure out I was having a reaction to mold. My neurologist just had me try all these different medicines, almost all made me worse, but none of them got to the actual problem. This is VERY common. Doctors so often just treat symptoms. That said, there are idiots out there that don't listen to anything a doctor says about politically charged issues like Covid. Homeopathy is mostly nuts. But integrative medicine is also often poo-pooed, but it makes logical sense to treat the whole person, not just symptoms. But I am sure there are plenty of crackpots there too. The waters are muddy my friend, not much is clear.


Sure there are good and bad doctors. But these anecdotes are no "proof" that doctors aren't to be trusted in general. Which is what I was alluding to.


Yes, i feel like the biggest problems getting real treatment are in equal parts, people not thinking of the concomitant factor/asking the right things/being afraid to tell certain things, and doctors having no where near enough time to actually listen to someone and think about their situation.

I try not to fall into the first category but I've known many people who do. Though I've had many experiences with fast talking, eyes glazed, interrupt me to push the first thing that comes to mind type doctors. Once i had to fight with guy to just get him to let me finish a sentence! He changed his mind every 5 words trying to get out of there but it'd've been faster if he just let me talk! It's infuriating, I'll never go back to a doctor like that. Seems like he didn't even wait to leave the room before i was out of his mind, possibly i never even entered it


If they are an "Expert", they can do anything.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BKorP55Aqvg


to be fair, people _do_ push back on lawyers, doctors, architects, construction workers, etc all the time


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: