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For some reason ex-Sovient Union population still thinks US is out to get them.

I know because I grew up there and still talk to old friends.

Wake up, Cold War ended decades ago and we live in a global economy now. No matter what you see in movies you don't know anything about this country. You need to live here for at least, I would say, 3 years to understand it.

The article is silly.


So oil dropped almost by half since the article was written. I'm all for development of new energy sources, but just because my family's person-car ration is close to 1 doesn't mean the world will end if gas becomes expensive again.

I think I remember reading another article by this author where he somehow implied that Soviet Union's population was better prepared for financial collapse (due to resourcefulness or whatever). Having lived through that mess myself I disagree. That country had screwed up economy and when fit hit the shan everyone was out for himself and the country was pretty much torn apart and sold by pieces down to tools at factories and telephone wire.

Russia was back in stone age until oil prices picked up. Now they seem to be repeating the same mistake, according to the author, where their economy struggling once that very oil is so cheap.


Listing all the relevant differences between the Soviet Union and the United States in culture, finances, and politics would literally require a book, or even a series of books. I'm all for learning from history, but there's just so many differences between the two that I'm completely unconvinced there's a useful comparison to be drawn.

Which isn't to say there won't be a collapse. Perhaps it will even be worse. I'm simply saying I don't think this argument has much value.

Certainly, if what he described was happening, rather than a run-of-the-mill recession, I would expect commodity prices to be rising, not dropping. Dropping commodity prices are a good thing for the economy; they were probably credit-inflated too.

Not to mention this whole "five stages of collapse" is really just an ass-pull, something this guy said to make it sound like he wasn't just making it up as he goes. See also: The entire self-help book industry, with six-step thises and twelve-step thats.


The article you are referring to is http://www.energybulletin.net/node/23259

But generally speaking I don't think it's possible to agree or disagree with a country's preparedness for an economic collapse unless the said collapse actually occurs, otherwise it's just mere speculation.


Microsoft Mesh (in P2P mode, without storing data on server)?


Try finding a senior-level engineering position that doesn't require knowledge of B-trees or similar computer science topics.


So far in my experience the companies hiring want you to know that sort of thing, but that knowledge is largely wasted at most jobs.


https://www.drproject.org/

Quote: DrProject is a web-based project management portal that integrates revision control, issue tracking, mailing lists, a wiki, and other tools that software development teams need to succeed.

DrProject was originally a fork of a popular lightweight open source portal called Trac.


Welcome to capitalism.


Comparing now with something 8 years ago in computer world?

That's like comparing cars with horse buggies and saying cars are less safe because there are more accidents now.

What happened to growth in users, usage, connectivity, profitability of exploits, etc?


That's silly, because the same keyloggers can recognize sequences of 16 digits as a credit card number, particularly since they can be easily checksummed for confirmation.


I love the "please enter your account number exactly as it appears on your statement" prompts which then require you to skip dashes/spaces which DO appear on the statement.

Burn in usability hell..


http://www.rsnapshot.org works so much better.


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