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No, a municipality can require nothing beyond a business license to sell services in their jurisdiction.


That is clearly false. Building codes, workplace safety codes, zoning rules, noise ordinances, even aesthetic ordinances exist in most non-rural places.


This just makes me sad.


Nice to meet you, Mr. Vertex Four.


Battle Royales work in the video game world because I can just queue up immediately after elimination.

Can't do that when I'm with my friends for the evening.


>> I feel deranged pointing this out, but hiring triple the headcount you need to run your business is not a progressive social value. I don't know what it is.

There's a certain bay area company that has a large developer office here in my rural state. They've been hiring as fast as they can for the past few years. From all my friends who work there, I get the impression that there are way more people now than there is actual work to do. And yet they continue to hire because I assume head count alone is primary metric.


Please reveal said company.



Nope.


Just wait until there is a BFR supplied gas station in orbit for such an occasion.


The point of the post is that there is no way to opt out. We all understand more datapoints the better. But I also need to not be fucked with when I'm trying to work.


If you know the name of the field trial you should be able to opt-out on the command line provided you use the correct syntax with the --force-fieldtrials option.

However it was not established whether or not field trials (A-B testing) was even the problem merely that they existed on the chromium processes. Even the stable version of the browser will likely have these options on the command line.


> But I also need to not be fucked with when I'm trying to work.

But that's true of shipping any bug and isn't guaranteed to happen with a field trial any more than any new feature.

(and the OP doesn't seem to establish that it has anything to do with the field trial, just that the processes were run with that option? Admittedly I don't know how they actually work :)


I think the point is more about intentional performance degredation versus unintentional; it makes sense that you can't ship a 100% bug proof piece of relatively complex software, and some has to be patched out later, but such performance degredation or workflow interruptions can be planned for. But to intentionally enable an function which knowingly degrades performance or impedes workflows just for the sake of testing without the consent of the user is a bit rude. To repeat the author and other comments, if it were a beta-channel or test build where it was clear this was part of the intended functionality of the build, I don't think we'd be having this discussion.


> But that's true of shipping any bug

The difference is though, that I can choose the time I update Chromium myself.


Not to worry, chromium is open source. Just pop open a text editor and trace the code from the option parser to see where it's used. How hard can it be?


Definitely. We have a lot of different alliances around Montana.

http://www.montanalandtrusts.org/memberdirectory/


One of the great benefits about living where I do (Maine) is that so much land is open for public use. I don't want to derail the thread so I will simply point out that it is really easy to cede your land to a trust, in many areas where that's actually beneficial. Some trusts are set up to accept donations in cash, as well. So, either way helps preserve land for public access in perpetuity.


My daughter is 6 and has a couple of band tshirts she saw at Target. The rule was she had to listen to a couple of the songs before we bought them. Landed on Nirvana and Pink Floyd. Loves those bands now.


Because a midrange sedan in the US is comparable to a cheap Chinese car.


Not sure what your comment is specifically in response to, the article makes the comparison slightly in terms of affordability, not functionality nor luxury.


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