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How, though? Does the TPU team (literally or logically) map to owning IPU h/w successfully?

(I miss having these kinds of convos on twitter as networkservice ;)


There's a lot more silicon at Google aside from the TPU team, including their own previous NICs.


Not that my memory is ironclad, but I don’t recall any custom IP or even FPGA attempts at Google re: host networking or NICs. Any good search terms I should try to enlighten myself? thanks!




I believe they have other custom silicon beyond TPUs so it wouldn't be crazy to take this in house if Intel really cans it.


no one seriously uses Evo in the way JunOS powers things. they’ve managed to package FreeBSD inside some Linux flavors. it’s wild, imo.


Guess I'm nobody, I think the PTX line is great ¯\_(ツ)_/¯.


great tool, clever techniques, surpasses Chrome browser levels of eating memory :(


Yeah, that looks odd 32GB recommended, also 256 GB HDD.


which federal privacy law were you thinking of?


this is precisely the kind of shitposting that 10x my understanding of things I don’t fully through…traditional methods


god forbid you learn anything about where your food comes from today


Can't reap it if you don't sow it.


I would implore you to read anything on the history of unionization.


Hard to find anything remotely unbiased, or that does even a passable job at trying to remove confounding factors between the rate of unionization and commonly cited benefits like the rise in worker safety (which is overwhelmingly driven by rising standard of living). Got any economically literate reading recommendations?


Historical events are biased?

Read about the Great Railroad Strike of 1977.


> Historical events are biased?

It would be a mistake to take historical accounts at face value. They are written by humans, not some objective entity.


No the data collection and analysis are biased.

If your argument is “consider this anecdote”, and you can’t imagine historical analysis of economic questions other than through non-quantitative hand-selected case studies, you’re falling into the same trap.


except there is absolutely zero anything on permanent establishment rules. The Greek tax authorities could write one memo saying “hiring a director in Greece does not trigger permanent establishment” and that digital nomad visa program would really pop off.

alas…nothing


I don't condone nonlegal actions, but do they really check your source of income? Usually with such sorts of tax authorities I'd imagine they'd only pay attention if they notice large incomes or many people citing the same contracting source.

IANAFA and not clued up on Greek tax myself.


the digital nomad visa requires you to have a contract with a company outside greece. while you can establish your own local entity, that’s a different visa process. if you have your own domiciled outside GR and even spring for a “nominee director” you still trigger permanent establishment (the tax people aren’t the same as immigration people) and it’s still a very real risk.

now be a senior level IC having an opportunity at a global company that doesn’t have a GR office? yeah, the first year legal rep is gonna do a hard no.

and all the tax people need to do is stamp a memo…


precisely. this simply inflammatory


fuck tail latency, as well.


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