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Let me put this way: as a non native English speaker, I am fairly confident that I'll do a better job at "summarizing" headlines than Apple Intelligence. Take that however you like.


If history is our guide, that's never going to happen.

> I don’t think higher education has been increasingly regulated for decades.

Because things never made headlines and you never paid attention.

Maybe talk to a professor or an administrator, or ask ChatGPT before posting such ignorant comment.


Thank you for pointing this out. However, it seems that HN crowd really doesn't like this kind of viewpoint. "If you cannot do everything without a smart phone, that's the society's fault, not yours.", as echoed by comments under my (also downvoted) comment.

Many people here seem to have trouble understanding how the world works. If all you do is complain (which will change nothing) instead of adapt, good luck with your miserable life.


Because it's dismissive, sophomoric, and can be applied to literally anything you might complain about - eg "If you don't like how the 'HN crowd' votes, then stop coming here". In reality, Exit is not the only option.

Dude you seriously need to go out in the real world and try to understand how things work.

Complaining on the Internet never does anything. Zero.


When and where is the meatspace protest against the Hacker News community's voting tendencies?

Very weird logic. As the article points out, this is an intentional choice for many people. So you shoulder the consequences, that seems fair to me?

I don't currently drive a car, and to be honest, I have anxiety about driving. I could bitch about how US is hostile to people who don't drive, to the point that it's difficult to go to places/get things done, but that's useless. I can 1) move to NYC and never leave the city 2) get a car, work on my anxiety, and start enjoying life or 3) talk to Guardian and complain all day long. 1) is not actually a bad choice, and literally millions of people choose that, but I am working on 2) because that's the sensible thing to do. If I intentionally choose not to drive, not because of a physical disability or not being to afford a car, I bear the consequences.


We all shoulder the consequences of slowly sliding into a society of lock-in and surveillance, which is what unnecessarily requiring smartphones advances. That there are choices along the way doesn't make it fair - if I let you choose which of your fingers I cut off, am I being fair? Wait a few years, and the "choice" will be between living in the woods, and carrying an always-on telescreen with you at all times.

> if I let you choose which of your fingers I cut off, am I being fair?

That's not what we are discussing here.

You can't use whatever irrelevant analogy you like to prove a point that doesn't exist.


It is not an analogy, it is a proof by example that 'choice' alone does not make something fair, contrary to your assertion.

I do drive and the having do download a bunch of parking apps is a pain the arse. And for each one you have to spend five minutes entering your address card number etc.

Not going to work, otherwise it would already have been done.

People who control or take advantage of cryptocurrency don't want this to happen.


That seems an oversimplification.

Counter example: ownership of Amazon MGM Studios and its parent Amazon.


Selling streaming media is a side business for Amazon (and Apple), an add on as a way to move Amazon Prime and Apple One subscriptions.

They would probably benefit by handicapping Netflix/Disney/WBD/etc.


Did Amazon start a new round of cost cutting, layoffs or something? Yesterday they discontinued Chime. As if Amazon is doubling down on cutting "unnecessary" services

Everyone at Amazon (The only company I have seen using it) hated using Chime, and it wasn't at all on the level of competitors. So I think it was just an unsuccessful product.

Every product has its hate, but everyone is rarely true. Personally (no longer at Amazon) I was impressed by Chime. It was simple, but rock solid, handling large calls well. Teams is still worse for me (>9 people display is bad, even in MS Edge, when on Linux). Zoom has a finicky interface.

Early in the pandemic I had to use many different systems as an academic, when lots of different contacts pivoted online in different ways. Chime was the least of my problems; it just worked when many other systems struggled.

I liked the Chime meeting/calendar integration at Amazon that could ring everyone at the start of the meeting, meaning that most meetings started promptly.


I was also at Amazon (AWS ProServe) we also hated Chime. AWS internally moved to Slack and only used Chime to schedule customer calls.

that's pretty funny. I had no idea Amazon had their own product in this space until my company did an engagement with ProServe.

Slack huddles use chime under the hood.

According to current press releases, the Chime SDK isn't going away just the Chime service sold directly to customers.

> Note: This does not impact the availability of the Amazon Chime SDK service.

https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/messaging-and-targeting/update-...


I could not find a reliable source for this. Got a link?

Right on slack's webpage.

https://slack.com/blog/news/slack-aws-drive-development-agil...

Unofficially, this agreement happened at the same time Amazon started using slack internally



So, what are AWS TAMs going to use to have meetings with customers? Chime was really awful.

First thing I thought of as well. Every time I go to join an AWS call, in my head I'm thinking "oh, right. ugh."

Hopefully they just adopt Zoom and not something even more obscure.


Allegedly, along with Microsoft 365 (my condolences to them) https://www.businessinsider.com/amazon-zoom-main-meeting-app...

On the other hand, at Amazon, people I know like Chime. Sad its going away.

i had to use it when amazon was a client of my employer and it was hot garbage in my opinion

AWS (which isn't Amazon, really, even if they share resources), used to bake the cost of keeping the lights on practically forever, or at least until the last user churns. The product may not see improvements if it didn't get traction, but you could bank on being able to use it forever.

When they did decide to kill something, like non-VPC EC2, you'd get the notice a literal decade ahead. For this specific example, sunset started end of '13, with the last instance shut off mid '23.

This all started to change a couple of years ago, when they became much more aggressive with doing the Googles and just killing a thing with a few months of a warning. Pity.


They're also getting rid of the "Download & Transfer via USB" option for Kindle books, which was the last available option for directly removing DRM. But it does also mean that owners of older Kindle devices without WiFI are basically screwed.

I don't know if I'd reach that conclusion because of Chime - there's also Blink & Ring, a lot of overlap and confusion in cameras & security.

Chime is their online meetings app, not their doorbell camera

Ah I was thinking of Ring Chime. (I'm sure there is a third overlapping with Ring & Blink though, can't recall name.)

Thank god chime is gone

Citation needed.

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