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> My friend's Fitbit works way better than my Apple watch.

My husband has a Fitbit and it's so buggy he left it sit on the shelf most of the time - the only times he'd wear it is for exercise.

Siri is bad though, but I have found Google Voice Assistant and Alexa both really have become bad over time, to the point of us just giving up on them completely. My husband is on Android and I'm really surprised how bad voice assistant is despite all the Gemini launches! (mind you he has an Australian accent)


I have a Kiwi accent and it's fine...probably best to ensure you set correct language in settings too.

$250 per child, at 5% interest rate, compounded in 18 years, you'd get $601.65.

Even in today's money, I wouldn't call it a "head start"


Trivial for a lot of people, sure, but imagine the difference between not knowing what an investment account is and knowing that you've got $250 in one that you can contribute more to.

So..a 401k At least the 401k is pre-tax. This on the other hand is taxed on both ends. Maybe I am missing something, but I really don’t see the upside.

It's more like a 529, but can also be used for first home purchase as a qualified withdrawal.

It's also tax-free growth (not that the average <18 y/o would incur any tax on $250-$1250 of principle)


Yes. You know, like the kind of 401k a seven year old has.

If you add in the 1000$ that treasury plans to invest starting next year, that is $1250 compounded at 5% annually after 18 years to $3008.27. It's probably still not a "head start" given that inflation is assumed to nominally rise at 2.5 to 3.5% annually and will take a bite out of what the real value is worth in 18 years. Good intentions but misplaced as others have stated. Investing in other ways to provide upward economic mobility will provide much better ROI for the society than allowing most of the wealth to accrue to a handful of people

> If you add in the 1000$ that treasury plans to invest starting next year, that is $1250

This is largely separate from your point, which is good, but the $250 is for kids that won't get the $1000. The $1000 only goes to kids born between 2025 and 2028.


Real quick, the $1000 530A account, if you put in just $1/day, $30/mo, on top of that account, then you get out ~$12,000 at the end of 30 years (assuming 5% interest rate). Which, yeah, that's enough to start a very small business (lawncare, blacksmithing, etc).

The stock market is at ~9.5% returns historically, inflation is likely at ~3% historically, so assume a little higher at 6.5% and that $1000 with a dollar a day increase is then ~$14,800, inflation adjusted.

If you go up to ~$100/mo at 6.5%, then you get ~$42,000, which is an honest start to a small business or college tuition.

The little extra per month really adds up here!

I may not like the administration for a lot of things, but this is one thing that I can really get behind.


Yes, but if you then put in just $5.00 / mo , it jumps to ~$2,300 , a 3.8x increase.

If you put in $30.00 / mo , a dollar a day, then it goes all the way up to $10,700 , a 18x increase (42x over the $250)

Look, we can play with numbers all day long here.

The fundamental difference is the additional contribution amount. Finding just a little bit here and there makes a huge difference.

And getting people into the habit of putting a set amount away each month is the key. Priming this habit, getting folks to look past the next 2 weeks, to just consider the adult they are raising, I think that will be hugely affective.

I may not like what the current administration is doing in a lot of things. But for this little one thing, I can at least applaud this little one thing. I think it will really help out a lot of people in more than just the pure cash.


A little help for millions likely ends up mattering for some of them. It’s a head start in that it removes a single minor issue, shows the value of compound interest in a more tangible way, or possibly gets them to retirement weeks/months earlier.

Obviously many people are happy to spend whatever, but with 25 million people you’ll see a wide range of personalities and life situations. Imagine an otherwise identical life without 600 dollars of credit card debt, that’s a worth quite a bit over time and will likely apply to some of these individuals. Perhaps a musical instrument or similar purchase will end up really helping someone kid, you never really know.


One of the most important benefits will be the example being set.

People will have a visible example of the power of compounding. It’s just a shame there isn’t more time in the equation so they could see the real magic happen.

Did you know that at typical market rates, someone saving $1000 at age 20 would have $64,000 at age 62?

Even more illustrative, if the same person waited until age 27 to save the same $1000, they would only get 32k. If they started at 34, they’d only get $16k!

The importance of time as the secret ingredient is the best kept secret ( that’s endlessly explained by people like Warren Buffett ). Hopefully these accounts will help the message stick.


Enough for one college textbook.

If that’s all that’s ever added, but keep in mind the idea is to provide the foundation for making easy, low-drag contributions going forward.

one of my kids is a senior in high school. they'd be quite content to have an extra $600 in their pocket. also...

> beginning next year, the U.S. Treasury will contribute $1,000 to the Invest America account of every baby born on or after January 1, 2025

hopefully more people/organizations will decide to contribute as well.


Maybe if we grovel hard enough!

For a single kid, maybe.

But what if 10 or twenty of them want to start a company? Maybe they have some savings or can get parents to chip in or a grant, but they can’t open a store and work it, or start a landscaping business or a software company.


If there was a wealth tax on every billionaire, it could be a factor of 100 or 1000 higher.

I mean you could buy books your first semester of your $75k/year freshman year of college though! Think of all the new Calculus that'll be in the 23rd edition of the standard textbook that costs $150. /s

I'm confused. I checked out the repo and I don't think the notebook itself - the equivalent of Jupyter is open source yet:

https://github.com/deepnote/deepnote/

What's the equivalent of `jupyerlab run`?

> You'll soon be able to:

> Take the UI you're used to from Deepnote Cloud and run it locally > Edit notebooks with a local AI agent > Bring your own keys for AI services > Run your own compute


What's wrong with `workflows` - out of curiosity?

Also, AFAIK, Observable is only JS - this is a Python notebook solution that we are talking here.

I'm just an observer - their claim of being successor to Jupyter is definitely hyperbole.


There is an extra F "worFkflows". I don't mind it, but they should fix it anyway.


I can read Kanji (Japanese) and sometimes I will understand the sentence but can't pronounce it (Japanese Kanji rules are quite arbitrary). Your brain definitely handles information differently with Chinese letters


and if you master the skill, it will speed up your reading dramatically.

Ideograms could help you establish meanings to graphs directly, skipping the "vocal serialization" single-thread part.


It's actually an important practice to have a docker image cache in the middle. You never know if an upstream image is purged randomly from docker, and your K8s node gets replaced, and now can't pull the base image for your service.

Just engineering hygiene IMO.


> You never know if an upstream image is purged randomly from docker, and your K8s node gets replaced, and now can't pull the base image for your service.

That doesn’t make sense unless you have some oddball setup where k8s is building the images you’re running on the fly. Theres no such thing as “base image” for tasks running in k8s. There is just the image itself and its layers which may come from some other image.

But it’s not built by k8s. Its be built in whatever is building your images and storing I. Your registers. That’s where you need your true base image caching.


This isn't just context optimization. Not much different from agent-to-agent workflow IMO.


> I'm pretty sure a majority of us aren't really on a "side",

Many of us don't vote either. And our two party systems have created extreme partisanship. I wish it could be different because I do love this country, but our politics are so broken by the two party system, fueled with misinformation through these partisan news networks + social media algorithms (the way Youtube turns one person into an extremist of either side is an example...)


Why do you need to be a billionaire? That's a very different goal from retiring comfortably by the way.


And it’s still slow on my phone (and I’m not a logged in user)


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