

You’re so close. It’s like you read 1/2 of the detective novel, thought you knew who did it, then got bored and closed it without finding out you were wrong.


You’re so close. It’s like you read 1/2 of the detective novel, thought you knew who did it, then got bored and closed it without finding out you were wrong.


It was disingenuous to infer that the minor tax increase you linked to above had any meaningful impact on affordability.
If your second link is accurate then your bigger beef is with the provincial liquor boards as they are levying a tax that is certainly notable.
And then to blame immigrants for unaffordability with the old debunked “taking our jobs” argument is just sad. I hope you eventually step out of your conservative bubble and see that it’s capitalism and class inequality that are the problem, not government and your fellow man.


Charlebois predicts the tax will increase the price of a single beer by one cent, while the finance ministry told Global News in a statement that the amount would be three-quarters of a cent.
Oh no? Even in the worst case the taxes are clearly not the issue.
Beer Canada said since the tax is a production tax imposed on the brewer at the point and time of production, “it is then magnified by other fees and taxes imposed by distributors, retailers, and provinces, including sales taxes,” making the impact on a 12-pack likely closer to 20 cents.


And all from natural gas. Literally a 24/7 365 burn. The environmental community never could have predicted the regressions of the last few years. There’s no hope anymore.


The bike argument doesn’t forget these factors at all, in fact it makes them better. No one says everyone MUST bike. You can still have a car, and with more people biking there will be less people on the road, reducing congestion.


Take a look at this video, he goes over why this is actually possible: https://youtu.be/Uhx-26GfCBU
Essentially if you have a society that actually focuses on alternative transportation; it gets prioritized. Bike rides are the norm and don’t feel like a chore, so when it’s cold out people still reach for their bikes. Coupled with the municipality clearing bike paths BEFORE roads and you have the infrastructure to support it.


The built in GPU of any sem-modern Intel CPU can do that for you no problem. Probably even the older ones in those corporate computers. Just check for QuickSync support. If you want something seriously low wattage that can still do one or two 4K streams, get one of those mini PCs with an Intel N100 for cheap.


Ah, got it, it’s for VM migrations. That makes a lot more sense.


Neither DDG or Google has any idea what nvidronfor means. Please explain.


Everyone knows Libs caused COVID.
Jokes aside it’s very easy to criticize any decision during COVID after the fact, but it’s much harder to make the case you could have done it better with the facts at the time.


Can you quickly run me through how USB over IP is helping you out? I get it for devices that are physically distant, but how is the abstraction helping you for reboots? Isn’t it just the server you’re rebooting that talks to the USB device anyway?


There used to be a lot more wars and skermishes you know, like a lot. We are living in an age of relative peace, with the exception of the last few years. We need to get back on track or the world will start to destabilize and we’ll be back to wars being the norm.
Canada is a NATO partner and that comes with financial and military obligations. We need to keep up those obligations AND tackle housing and affordability. Canada has problems, you and I know we do, and we need to work on them, but things would be so much worse in a chaotic world where countries are invading each other all the time.
Sticking our head in the sand until problems are on our doorstep is NOT the answer. That’s what the US is currently doing and it’s absolute insanity. The US went through huge efforts to get the world on their currency, get military bases all over the world, fund aid programs, all to project soft power. It’s cheaper and better for everyone to not have the war in the first place. They used to understand this. Now they’re throwing all that into the woodchipper to become isolationists? They’re shooting themselves in the foot and we don’t want to reach for that same gun.


That’s short term thinking. I totally get where you’re coming from, but the world has let Russia get away with too much already. They need to be stopped or it’s going to be so so so much more painful for all of us than the funding cuts we’re talking about. If Ukraine falls we won’t have a war on our doorstep tomorrow, but it’s a domino that will destabilize the peace we prosper from and may very well bring about the next big war. Clearly that’s bad for Canada.
Too often we find ourselves in these zero sum mindsets. If we do X we could have been investing in our own Y. We can and should do both. We don’t need to drag Canada into the war and start converting our automotive plants into tank factories, that’s way too far, but we do need to pay our fair share (the amount we agreed to if not more) to make sure that we keep this era of peace alive. It’s the right thing to do, and it’s good for Canada in the long run too.
The world is a complicated place with lots of things going on simultaneously. We have to be able to tackle multiple issues at the same time. If the Liberals are saying we need to cut our social programs to fund the military, then say fuck no, fund the military AND the social programs. Tax the wealthy more, nationalize an industry that has gotten too fat, find a way to bring in money not at the cost of citizens. If we have to cinch our belts a little in the short term so be it, but it’s not my preference and we shouldn’t let our politicians give us these binary options.


That sounds like way too much, unless you have a really congested network or interference in the area. Should be able to get it at least 10x faster, unless you’re taking the web server page load time into account in your latency numbers and not just the network.


Well, I mean it kind of is a solution. It’s a cloud backup solution. OneDrive doesn’t just keep a single version of your file, there’s versioning, retention policies, etc.
Cloud makes a lot of sense for businesses with small IT staff and a lot of users because while it’s not fully in your control, it comes with all the things being discussed here “out of the box” and scales infinitely.
For self hosters there’s some fun and power in doing everything yourself, but even then adding cloud as part of your backup (if done securely) is usually a pretty good idea.


It’s so weird to me what sticks with voters and what doesn’t.
Someone making an unpopular choice during a bad time: blemished for decades.
Someone constantly acting against the interests of voters, one scandal after another: that’s fine.


I have a really good career here, but if that were to change for some reason… yeah I don’t see why I would stay. I would seriously look at moving because Alberta seems determined to get worse.


Surface parking, yes. Roads, no. Solar roads, while cool, are vaporware and will not work.


I just want to say thank you for not letting the personal impact change your position. Too many people will drop a good cause because of a slight inconvenience. Strikes and protests have to inconvenience people, because it’s the only leverage they have.
I hope you get home safe, and on a plane where everyone is well paid for their work.
As usual the UCP is all talk and fluff. They’ve been talking about improving this for a long time because it keeps happening and making the news, but they know all they need to do is say they’re working on it and people will forget.
We need to tax these companies more and we need to make them pay for cleanup up front, as other have said. Anything less is doing nothing.