Read it a few years back and found some answers. Generational trauma does exists I believe. As for the article I think it claimed the whole theory was BS without much backing arguments
The article goes through and refutes 25(!) claims from the book. I'm not sure how many more backing arguments you could possibly want from a blog post.
Being 47 and still renting I think the piece missed a big issue, which is most prevalent these days: we cannot afford to buy. Anything. Anywhere.
I reckon I’m fatally doomed to renting.
I travel around the US and Canada in my campervan and I've noticed that it feels like a lot more people live in RV's now, which enables you to buy something and park it nearly anywhere (location wise) that you can find space. There are RV parks all over. Depending on where you decide to be, it probably isn't a bad solution and worth considering if you do want to own something, but don't want or can't commit to a whole house.
Worked for four months as a mountain bike guide on the death road in La Paz.
3600 meters to 4800 getting to the start of the road to about 1000 meters each day, and back. I believe I made many blood cells and nearly died 3 times
iPhone 16 and 16 pro promised to support WiFi 7 but tests show speeds comparable to iPhone 15 pro.
A hidden limitation which does not use the 320 MHz bandwidth.
It is unknown if Apple will ever deliver a fix or update to support it.
Been an Atlassian consultant for a while and I just left (Rather I was let go) from an established Atlassian partner, and I can only feel relief.
I was always more of a data center on prem person and all this cloud nonsense has been going nowhere, except for them.
Those acquisitions are always half baked and you *might see some of it somewhere in a product.
All I can say is I’m happy I’m no longer doing Atlassian consulting.
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