500,000 Covid deaths.
It's hell living in a free society and letting people have choices that other people don't like.concordtom said:Paid for by the consumer.SFBear92 said:Tax the manufacturer, not the consumer.concordtom said:
We should tax unhealthy food and subsidize healthy food as a health care initiative.
Duh!!!!
It's basic and simple.
People who don't get that are uninformed.
Same difference?
The objective is to incentivize healthy behavior (eating healthy foods) and dis-incentivize crap, not matter how tasty it might be.
We'd save money on the health care front by a mile. And people would have been quality of life in the meantime.
Oh, but FREEDOM! I can hear the catcalls now.
Sure, go ahead and eat crap. It'll just cost you more. You have the freedom to eat dirt, too.
Taste buds change, habits adjust.
So you're saying you don't drink alcohol or use marijuana?bearister said:
I wish I had the choice of not being on the hook for the healthcare cost of anyone that chooses to smoke, eat themselves into obesity and abuse drugs. Other than that, knock yourself out with your lifestyle choices.
SFBear92 said:So you're saying you don't drink alcohol or use marijuana?bearister said:
I wish I had the choice of not being on the hook for the healthcare cost of anyone that chooses to smoke, eat themselves into obesity and abuse drugs. Other than that, knock yourself out with your lifestyle choices.
Everybody thinks they're a moderate drinker. Except me, because I don't drink alcohol.bearister said:SFBear92 said:So you're saying you don't drink alcohol or use marijuana?bearister said:
I wish I had the choice of not being on the hook for the healthcare cost of anyone that chooses to smoke, eat themselves into obesity and abuse drugs. Other than that, knock yourself out with your lifestyle choices.
Moderate drinker, the consequences of which will cost society nothing. Stopped smoking weed at Cal in 1973. It was not helping me get where I wanted to go.
SFBear92 said:Everybody thinks they're a moderate drinker. Except me, because I don't drink alcohol.bearister said:SFBear92 said:So you're saying you don't drink alcohol or use marijuana?bearister said:
I wish I had the choice of not being on the hook for the healthcare cost of anyone that chooses to smoke, eat themselves into obesity and abuse drugs. Other than that, knock yourself out with your lifestyle choices.
Moderate drinker, the consequences of which will cost society nothing. Stopped smoking weed at Cal in 1973. It was not helping me get where I wanted to go.
So why should I be on the hook for any health consequences you have later from the "moderate" drinking you've done. It's not like it's a healthy product. There's literally no health benefit to it at all and there are some health consequences form using it.
In other words, don't cast stones unless you're a vegan, non-alcohol drinking, non-drugging vision of perfection. i.e. the kind of people no one likes.
It's not free if I have to pay taxes to pay for bombs and bases, or milk or oil - subsidized industries.SFBear92 said:It's hell living in a free society and letting people have choices that other people don't like.concordtom said:Paid for by the consumer.SFBear92 said:Tax the manufacturer, not the consumer.concordtom said:
We should tax unhealthy food and subsidize healthy food as a health care initiative.
Duh!!!!
It's basic and simple.
People who don't get that are uninformed.
Same difference?
The objective is to incentivize healthy behavior (eating healthy foods) and dis-incentivize crap, not matter how tasty it might be.
We'd save money on the health care front by a mile. And people would have been quality of life in the meantime.
Oh, but FREEDOM! I can hear the catcalls now.
Sure, go ahead and eat crap. It'll just cost you more. You have the freedom to eat dirt, too.
Taste buds change, habits adjust.
Bingo!bearister said:
I wish I had the choice of not being on the hook for the healthcare cost of anyone that chooses to smoke, eat themselves into obesity and abuse drugs. Other than that, knock yourself out with your lifestyle choices.
You are changing the subject.SFBear92 said:Everybody thinks they're a moderate drinker. Except me, because I don't drink alcohol.bearister said:SFBear92 said:So you're saying you don't drink alcohol or use marijuana?bearister said:
I wish I had the choice of not being on the hook for the healthcare cost of anyone that chooses to smoke, eat themselves into obesity and abuse drugs. Other than that, knock yourself out with your lifestyle choices.
Moderate drinker, the consequences of which will cost society nothing. Stopped smoking weed at Cal in 1973. It was not helping me get where I wanted to go.
So why should I be on the hook for any health consequences you have later from the "moderate" drinking you've done. It's not like it's a healthy product. There's literally no health benefit to it at all and there are some health consequences form using it.
In other words, don't cast stones unless you're a vegan, non-alcohol drinking, non-drugging vision of perfection. i.e. the kind of people no one likes.
concordtom said:Paid for by the consumer.SFBear92 said:Tax the manufacturer, not the consumer.concordtom said:
We should tax unhealthy food and subsidize healthy food as a health care initiative.
Duh!!!!
It's basic and simple.
People who don't get that are uninformed.
Same difference?
LOL.bearister said:
Moderate: one 8 pack of these a day:
It's been a long slow death.okaydo said:
concordtom said:It's been a long slow death.okaydo said:
Maybe a couple years ago I went into the Roseville store and noticed that the product on shelves was next to nothing. I had a 10 min talk with an employee and knew it was only a matter of time. The guy blamed Amazon.
So, for computer stuff, you've got, what? Best Buy? Walmart? Target? (All NOT computer stores)
No more Radio Shack for electronics.
Amazon is the answer?
I have to be missing someone, no?
Speak for yourself. I buy the parts individually every time and assemble them. Especially cause most of the time, I'm happy with 75% of the innards of my current rig. It's only when I need to upgrade a motherboard to run a better processor or get a newer better video card that I need to change something and why would I want to pay for new parts I don't need?Quote:
It's not Amazon's fault. Very few people build computers anymore. Gamers buy consoles or gaming laptops and everyone else uses a phone or a tablet.
He's not speaking for himself, he's speaking to the market. I don't agree with him that people aren't buying computers - and neither do the numbers - but he's not wrong that the market for homebrew computers is small. The fact that you build your own doesn't change that.SFBear92 said:Speak for yourself. I buy the parts individually every time and assemble them. Especially cause most of the time, I'm happy with 75% of the innards of my current rig. It's only when I need to upgrade a motherboard to run a better processor or get a newer better video card that I need to change something and why would I want to pay for new parts I don't need?Quote:
It's not Amazon's fault. Very few people build computers anymore. Gamers buy consoles or gaming laptops and everyone else uses a phone or a tablet.
That article has nothing to do with anything I said.Unit2Sucks said:He's not speaking for himself, he's speaking to the market. I don't agree with him that people aren't buying computers - and neither do the numbers - but he's not wrong that the market for homebrew computers is small. The fact that you build your own doesn't change that.SFBear92 said:Speak for yourself. I buy the parts individually every time and assemble them. Especially cause most of the time, I'm happy with 75% of the innards of my current rig. It's only when I need to upgrade a motherboard to run a better processor or get a newer better video card that I need to change something and why would I want to pay for new parts I don't need?Quote:
It's not Amazon's fault. Very few people build computers anymore. Gamers buy consoles or gaming laptops and everyone else uses a phone or a tablet.
https://www.theverge.com/2021/1/11/22225356/pc-sales-shipments-2020-growth-idc-canalys-remote-work
If is impossible to only pay taxes on the things you support. Per Gallup, 57 percent of Americans polled told Gallup they pay "too much" in federal income taxes; note, though, that 45 percent of Americans pay no federal income taxes at all. Think about that, people who don't pay income taxes are complaining. An astonishing number don't even realize there are tax breaks for many things they may not support, or do support vehemently. In fact most people pay don't even realize they probably pay more in non-income taxes or equivalents, such as payroll, sales, property, governmental fees, etc. Like it or not, we all pay taxes and fees for things we don't like whether it be pork projects or what we think is bad public policy. Being part of a democracy means you get to exercise your right to vote and make changes, including how and where your tax money is being spent, but that is the best most of us get in our form of government.concordtom said:You are changing the subject.SFBear92 said:Everybody thinks they're a moderate drinker. Except me, because I don't drink alcohol.bearister said:SFBear92 said:So you're saying you don't drink alcohol or use marijuana?bearister said:
I wish I had the choice of not being on the hook for the healthcare cost of anyone that chooses to smoke, eat themselves into obesity and abuse drugs. Other than that, knock yourself out with your lifestyle choices.
Moderate drinker, the consequences of which will cost society nothing. Stopped smoking weed at Cal in 1973. It was not helping me get where I wanted to go.
So why should I be on the hook for any health consequences you have later from the "moderate" drinking you've done. It's not like it's a healthy product. There's literally no health benefit to it at all and there are some health consequences form using it.
In other words, don't cast stones unless you're a vegan, non-alcohol drinking, non-drugging vision of perfection. i.e. the kind of people no one likes.
But if you wanted to go full monty, exercise would be mandated.
Sad to see. Fry's was a Bay Area institution. I did some deals with John Fry back in the day (helped them buy some of the assets of Egghead.com when they went bust in the dot com implosion). He was one of a kind. He and his brother had their own 192 acre golf course in Morgan Hill. And when I say "had their own golf course" that's exactly what I mean - he and his brother were the only two members. At one point. He was trying to put a giant castle (like 200,000 square feet) on it and host PGA tournaments. Not sure whatever happened there. He also owned the San Jose Sabrecats arena football team and was an avid fan.okaydo said:
Sebastabear said:Sad to see. Fry's was a Bay Area institution. I did some deals with John Fry back in the day (helped them buy some of the assets of Egghead.com when they went bust in the dot com implosion). He was one of a kind. He and his brother had their own 192 acre golf course in Morgan Hill. And when I say "had their own golf course" that's exactly what I mean - he and his brother were the only two members. At one point. He was trying to put a giant castle (like 200,000 square feet) on it and host PGA tournaments. Not sure whatever happened there. He also owned the San Jose Sabrecats arena football team and was an avid fan.okaydo said:
So rest assured there used to be very good money in selling computer gizmos and shrink wrapped video games (and books and tootsie roles and electric mosquito repellers and whatever other bizarro stuff they threw together). E-commerce and Amazon in particular killed that business.
Palo Alto for me. I was always kind of bummed because we had the Old West theme and other stores seemed to have cooler motifs (Aztecs, space aliens, underwater monsters, etc). But beggars for electronic store kitsch can't be choosers. Definitely a chain unlike any other.okaydo said:Sebastabear said:Sad to see. Fry's was a Bay Area institution. I did some deals with John Fry back in the day (helped them buy some of the assets of Egghead.com when they went bust in the dot com implosion). He was one of a kind. He and his brother had their own 192 acre golf course in Morgan Hill. And when I say "had their own golf course" that's exactly what I mean - he and his brother were the only two members. At one point. He was trying to put a giant castle (like 200,000 square feet) on it and host PGA tournaments. Not sure whatever happened there. He also owned the San Jose Sabrecats arena football team and was an avid fan.okaydo said:
So rest assured there used to be very good money in selling computer gizmos and shrink wrapped video games (and books and tootsie roles and electric mosquito repellers and whatever other bizarro stuff they threw together). E-commerce and Amazon in particular killed that business.
I had no idea the Burbank Fry's, pictured below, only opened in 1995, which is a year before I went off to Cal.
Whenever I'd be home in L.A. from the Bay Area, my dad and I would just go to the Burbank Fry's and just browse around. Sometimes, we'd buy something. Most of the time, we didn't. Other than a trek to the Fremont Fry's, that was the only Fry's I went to.
Adapt or die.Sebastabear said:Sad to see. Fry's was a Bay Area institution. I did some deals with John Fry back in the day (helped them buy some of the assets of Egghead.com when they went bust in the dot com implosion). He was one of a kind. He and his brother had their own 192 acre golf course in Morgan Hill. And when I say "had their own golf course" that's exactly what I mean - he and his brother were the only two members. At one point. He was trying to put a giant castle (like 200,000 square feet) on it and host PGA tournaments. Not sure whatever happened there. He also owned the San Jose Sabrecats arena football team and was an avid fan.okaydo said:
So rest assured there used to be very good money in selling computer gizmos and shrink wrapped video games (and books and tootsie roles and electric mosquito repellers and whatever other bizarro stuff they threw together). E-commerce and Amazon in particular killed that business.
Ironically of course that's why John Fry wanted to buy egghead.com (which was an early progenitor for the online distribution of consumer software). He could absolutely see what was happening to the market. The problem (and it's a classic one) is that he couldn't get the margins online he could get in physical stores and he was unwilling to cannibalize his fat brick and mortar margins. Same reason Kodak didn't want to get into digital photography, or Sun Microsystems didn't want to sell cheaper more modular servers. They were trying to protect their "core" business. The error of course is that if you don't do it someone else will and in the end you'll be left with neither the high margin business or the lower margin one. As you say, adapt or die.calbear93 said:Adapt or die.Sebastabear said:Sad to see. Fry's was a Bay Area institution. I did some deals with John Fry back in the day (helped them buy some of the assets of Egghead.com when they went bust in the dot com implosion). He was one of a kind. He and his brother had their own 192 acre golf course in Morgan Hill. And when I say "had their own golf course" that's exactly what I mean - he and his brother were the only two members. At one point. He was trying to put a giant castle (like 200,000 square feet) on it and host PGA tournaments. Not sure whatever happened there. He also owned the San Jose Sabrecats arena football team and was an avid fan.okaydo said:
So rest assured there used to be very good money in selling computer gizmos and shrink wrapped video games (and books and tootsie roles and electric mosquito repellers and whatever other bizarro stuff they threw together). E-commerce and Amazon in particular killed that business.
Walmart and Best Buy recovered just in time to understand the importance of e-commerce. Lack of adaptability killed businesses like these. If regulation, taxes, and higher costs won't kill the traditional small to mid-size businesses, lack of adaptation will.
I mostly objected to you saying "speak for yourself" when he clearly was speaking to a market trend and you were speaking to a niche that isn't growing. I used to build my own computers and spend plenty of time walking the aisles at Frys to do so. I bought my last PC more than a decade ago and still use it occasionally after having upgraded some of the internals (SSD, etc.). I don't think I will ever build another PC but if I were a gamer I might. Regardless, I think it's pretty obvious that there isn't a strong business case for a warehouse size store catering to the DIY PC crowd in 2021 and beyond.SFBear92 said:That article has nothing to do with anything I said.Unit2Sucks said:He's not speaking for himself, he's speaking to the market. I don't agree with him that people aren't buying computers - and neither do the numbers - but he's not wrong that the market for homebrew computers is small. The fact that you build your own doesn't change that.SFBear92 said:Speak for yourself. I buy the parts individually every time and assemble them. Especially cause most of the time, I'm happy with 75% of the innards of my current rig. It's only when I need to upgrade a motherboard to run a better processor or get a newer better video card that I need to change something and why would I want to pay for new parts I don't need?Quote:
It's not Amazon's fault. Very few people build computers anymore. Gamers buy consoles or gaming laptops and everyone else uses a phone or a tablet.
https://www.theverge.com/2021/1/11/22225356/pc-sales-shipments-2020-growth-idc-canalys-remote-work
The reason PC's will never go away is because of heat and the ease of upgrade. Upgrading parts in a laptop is a pain in the butt and the extra airspace in a PC is good for the life of the components. I use a laptop for most things, but when I have a hard-core program to run, it's always the PC.
Of course most people will buy pre-fab stuff rather than build it, but "very few" is not true.
I don't know that there is a strong business case for a warehouse size store for much of anything anymore other than Costco and maybe hardware stores.Unit2Sucks said:I mostly objected to you saying "speak for yourself" when he clearly was speaking to a market trend and you were speaking to a niche that isn't growing. I used to build my own computers and spend plenty of time walking the aisles at Frys to do so. I bought my last PC more than a decade ago and still use it occasionally after having upgraded some of the internals (SSD, etc.). I don't think I will ever build another PC but if I were a gamer I might. Regardless, I think it's pretty obvious that there isn't a strong business case for a warehouse size store catering to the DIY PC crowd in 2021 and beyond.SFBear92 said:That article has nothing to do with anything I said.Unit2Sucks said:He's not speaking for himself, he's speaking to the market. I don't agree with him that people aren't buying computers - and neither do the numbers - but he's not wrong that the market for homebrew computers is small. The fact that you build your own doesn't change that.SFBear92 said:Speak for yourself. I buy the parts individually every time and assemble them. Especially cause most of the time, I'm happy with 75% of the innards of my current rig. It's only when I need to upgrade a motherboard to run a better processor or get a newer better video card that I need to change something and why would I want to pay for new parts I don't need?Quote:
It's not Amazon's fault. Very few people build computers anymore. Gamers buy consoles or gaming laptops and everyone else uses a phone or a tablet.
https://www.theverge.com/2021/1/11/22225356/pc-sales-shipments-2020-growth-idc-canalys-remote-work
The reason PC's will never go away is because of heat and the ease of upgrade. Upgrading parts in a laptop is a pain in the butt and the extra airspace in a PC is good for the life of the components. I use a laptop for most things, but when I have a hard-core program to run, it's always the PC.
Of course most people will buy pre-fab stuff rather than build it, but "very few" is not true.
Big C said:
My kids heard one of Paul Simon's hits the other day and I had to go through a long explanation of what Kodachrome was. The next time my daughter wants to borrow my phone to take a picture, I'm gonna tell her, sorry, it's out of film.