It's a Saturday, so the market isn't even open. Not sure where you're seeing a 17% drop. Regardless, It's trading at $150, and was trading at $130 on 6/15/22.
Swift has indeed achieved one important victory: It has all but replaced Objective-C in many companies. That being said, it hasn’t been able to bite off much off Python’s market share.
Swift's primary goal was to be a better language for Apple's platforms and replace Objective-C. It seems like by that metric, it's been successful. Most programming languages don't become the next Python, even if their community aspires for them to. I'd hardly call a programming language not becoming Python "tanking".
And yet, I set out to find what this thing can do. I read the README.
Today, the most interesting part is about his core and the way he can scale up. He is pretty young but can easily scale to have new features (skills). You can find what he is able to do by browsing the packages list.
Sounds good for you? Then let's get started!
Not all those folders. Try utilities or news or leon or games or social_communication. You could be forgiven for thinking it was all of them, though -- not having anything in weather or music_audio, for a moment I thought so too.
The Autopilot visualization is different than the FSD visualization, and the FSD UI shows significantly more detail. Go search YouTube for some FSD videos and you’ll see what it looks like.
What are the "Human guidelines" from Apple? Do you mean the Human Interface Guidelines (aka HIG)? From what I could see in the examples, this doesn't look very Apple-like.
I watched the video, and agree with all of your points. He strongly implies that Starlink is no better than existing satellite providers. My parents live in a rural area where the best non-satellite internet is 3mb/s DSL. They subscribe to Starlink, since there are no other viable options that allow things like video calling or HD video streaming.
Viasat offers 30mb/s download for $199/mo with a 150GB data cap.
HughesNet offers 25mb/s download for $159/mo with a 75GB data cap.
Starlink offers ~100mb/s download for $110/mo with no data cap.
Viasat/HughesNet have geostationary satellites which results in almost unusable ping (300-600ms), compared to the 50ms ping from Starlink.