Let grok explain:
• US wealth concentration is higher: The US has a Gini coefficient around 41.8 for income inequality, notably higher than the EU average of ~30, with tech billionaires and venture capitalists playing a major role in funding frontier innovation through concentrated capital.
• Europe prioritizes public services: Many European countries deliver universal healthcare (with lower per-capita spending but better average outcomes like life expectancy), extensive high-speed rail networks spanning thousands of km, and low or free university tuition for residents, reflecting different fiscal and social choices.
• Trade-offs in systems: The original post highlights US advantages in tech productivity, liquid capital markets, and talent concentration driving rapid innovation and wealth creation, while the reply accurately notes Europe’s social infrastructure strengths but underplays Europe’s relative lag in venture-backed tech dynamism.
@Sushilk91 Claude is not good at frontend. It always makes the same website: Orange/yellow gradient background, headers with two different oversized fonts (non serif and serif mixed) and rounded corner images.
GPT needs some guidance but that’s it.
@BenjaminDEKR Isn't it like this in all the companies? We've become experts on overselling small wins and minimizing problems (sorry, opportunities) to the CEO, so we can survive another week.
@JustinBleuel@ChatGPTapp Since you are at it, can you make it easy to change the local folder name/location of a project so I don't need to create a new one and lose track of my previous chats?
@Gavel_on_X AI is great for many things. It does amazingly well and fast 80% of the tasks. It still fucks up the other 20%
Also, going all in with AI means creating a strong dependency with a third party that is bleeding money.