No judgments here, but quick question: have you taken a flight in the last 90 days, what for exactly, and how did you justify taking that risk?
Can't imagine going on a flight for business or pleasure at this point, so only thing I can think of is a family emergency maybe?
MVP requirements for a virtual world, now that the real world is largely inaccessible to us:
1. Any number of people together in one place.
2. Very large live-editable environment.
No one (myself included) has yet achieved this.
I want to express my sincere gratitude to the people of California & to @CAgovernor Gavin Newsom, who sent us 100 ventilators overnight for use by patients here in Illinois.
It's truly incredible to work with elected officials across the nation who are providing real leadership.
The function of governments are to be inefficient, stockpiling extra resources and unneeded latency, for use in emergencies, which businesses and individuals cannot afford to do.
Funny how characteristically each country reacts to the coronavirus. China tracks its citizens' every move. Hungary becomes a dictatorship. The US gives money to businesses. The Japanese conceal the problem. The British bravely but stupidly seek herd immunity.
Already testing traffic lights, stop signs & roundabouts in development software. Your Tesla will soon be able to go from your garage at home to parking at work with no driver input at all.
If you have a Tesla built in past 2 years, definitely try Navigate on Autopilot. It will blow your mind. Automatically passes slow cars & takes highway interchanges & off-ramps.
From implantable chips to temperature-controlled briefs, these gift ideas will inspire bio-savvy friends and family. @raymondmccauley shares his picks: https://t.co/S6EOUJcj7d
Everyone says they want to work on "hard, meaningful problems". But, working on "hard, meaningful problems" means failing to succeed most of the time and feeling like you're failing to succeed most of the time. It's not as glamorous as it seems.