Leisher wrote: ↑Tue Nov 23, 2021 10:40 am
One question I do have about the car shortage caused by that mass selloff is "Where did they all go?"
People left cities, needed cars. New car production tanked, cars break.
Leisher wrote: ↑Tue Nov 23, 2021 10:40 am
That's the right move for Target. Is one day's sales worth the shitty PR and bad relations with your employees?
A key measure of inflation grew at annualized rate of 5.3% in the third quarter, data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis showed Wednesday. That compares with an increase of 6.5% in the second quarter.
New filings totaled 199,000, a number not seen since Nov. 15, 1969, when claims totaled 197,000. The report easily beat Dow Jones estimates of 260,000 and was well below the previous week’s 270,000.
Like abnormally so.
The decline appeared at least in part to be due to seasonal adjustments. Unadjusted claims totaled 258,622, which actually was an increase of 7.6% from the previous week.
“Every record been destroyed or falsified, books rewritten, pictures repainted, statues, street building renamed, every date altered. The process is continuing day by day. History stops. Nothing exists except endless present in which the Party is right.”
I feel like “more robots hired than ever before” is an inevitable truism. Like “computers 25% faster than ever before.” I mean, duh, we’re always increasing the amount of robotic automation in production and processes.
I still think that somewhere, by the end of 2022, will be tested a McD's with a single employee, just keeping the frozen food hoppers fed while everything else is automated.
Maybe another guy to manage that one guy.
"Be bold, and mighty forces will come to your aid."
McD's already has touchscreen drive thru menus/cashiers they've been testing.
“Every record been destroyed or falsified, books rewritten, pictures repainted, statues, street building renamed, every date altered. The process is continuing day by day. History stops. Nothing exists except endless present in which the Party is right.”
Leisher wrote: ↑Thu Dec 02, 2021 12:02 am
McD's already has touchscreen drive thru menus/cashiers they've been testing.
I went to one of those, and there were NO CLEAR SIGNS that you were supposed to use the fucking things instead of talking to the humans behind the desk.
The real report I need to read is the list of people who needed this explained to them.
“Every record been destroyed or falsified, books rewritten, pictures repainted, statues, street building renamed, every date altered. The process is continuing day by day. History stops. Nothing exists except endless present in which the Party is right.”
GORDON wrote: ↑Mon Dec 06, 2021 6:34 am
high prices are here to stay
Fuck yes they are. Prices never go down. Costs may drop, but prices don't because that's more profit!
I was in a nearby Circle K and they have installed checkout scanners! At a fucking convenience store! Ok, well maybe since they're going to save on staffing costs, they'll reduce the price of their goods. Nope.
Take a look at the gaming industry. Publishers and distributors don't have to pay for shipping, shelf space, and so on anymore, but game prices haven't dropped a single cent.
“Every record been destroyed or falsified, books rewritten, pictures repainted, statues, street building renamed, every date altered. The process is continuing day by day. History stops. Nothing exists except endless present in which the Party is right.”
1 - Deflation is bad. Very bad. It's better to go from moderate inflation to low inflation, than to deflation.
2 - Prices have gone down. But look at real prices (adjusted for inflation), not nominal ones. Video game prices have gone down significantly, while quality has increased as well. Much less the consoles/computers themselves. Nominal prices are meaningless.
Also - who buys fries + drinks at fast food? Those are terrible deals.
TheCatt wrote: ↑Mon Dec 06, 2021 10:26 am
2 - Prices have gone down. But look at real prices (adjusted for inflation), not nominal ones. Video game prices have gone down significantly, while quality has increased as well. Much less the consoles/computers themselves. Nominal prices are meaningless.
Oh horsepussy.
Steam and its competitors expose how prices do not drop even if the distributor's costs do. Games are routinely released for both consoles and digital distribution platforms at the same time and at the same price point.
“Every record been destroyed or falsified, books rewritten, pictures repainted, statues, street building renamed, every date altered. The process is continuing day by day. History stops. Nothing exists except endless present in which the Party is right.”
TheCatt wrote: ↑Mon Dec 06, 2021 10:26 am
2 - Prices have gone down. But look at real prices (adjusted for inflation), not nominal ones. Video game prices have gone down significantly, while quality has increased as well. Much less the consoles/computers themselves. Nominal prices are meaningless.
Games are routinely released for both consoles and digital distribution platforms at the same time and at the same price point.
That still doesn't impact the macro trend of declining real prices of video games. They probably have to have the same price to not upset the other side of the distribution channel.